WNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • World
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • World
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
No Result
View All Result
WNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

What to Know About the New COVID-19 Variant XFG

July 8, 2025
in News
Yahoo news home
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Credit – Getty Images

With summer travel at an all-time high, new COVID-19 variants are brewing. Officials at the World Health Organization (WHO) recently added another one to its list of variants under monitoring: XFG.

XFG is spreading most widely in Southeast Asia, although cases have been reported in 38 countries. In the U.K., it accounts for 30% of COVID-19 infections, and in the U.S., 14% of confirmed cases are XFG, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). (These data are likely incomplete: the CDC notes that since less data are being reported, the variant trackers are not precise.)

Here’s what we know so far about XFG.

It’s a “variant under monitoring“

This designation is the least urgent of WHO’s variant categories, which escalate from “variant under monitoring” to “variant of interest” to “variant of concern.” But while variants under monitoring pose a low immediate risk to people, they show signs of being able to grow and potentially spread more easily than other circulating variants that don’t get an official WHO designation. WHO is watching XFG closely, but it is so new that experts aren’t sure yet what the health consequences of such growth might be.

Read More: Still Not Feeling the Same After COVID-19? You’re Not Alone

XFG is different from existing variants

XFG is still in the Omicron family. It derives from the JN.1 Omicron group, which is the target of the latest COVID-19 vaccine. XFG is a combination of two other variants that have recombined: LF.7 and LP.8.1.2.

It is growing globally. Samples of XFG sent to the global database of genetic virus sequences jumped from 7% of all COVID-19 samples in May 2025 to nearly 23% a few weeks later, according to WHO. Compared to the variant NB.1.8.1—which is currently dominant in many countries, including in the U.S.—XFG contains nine additional mutations in the spike protein.

Vaccines seem to work against it

Scientists are currently studying how well people are protected against severe disease from XFG. Researchers conducted lab studies using human cells and a “pseudovirus” stand-in for XFG, as well as animal studies, and found slightly lower immune responses to XFG.

While the data aren’t complete yet, those results are encouraging since they suggest that existing vaccines used in the U.S., which target JN.1, should continue to provide some protection against severe disease and hospitalization—even if it’s less robust than protection against the JN.1 variant specifically. WHO says the genetic analysis of XFG also shows that antiviral drugs nirmatrelvir (Paxlovid) and remdesivir (Veklury) should also be effective.

Contact us at [email protected].

The post What to Know About the New COVID-19 Variant XFG appeared first on Time.

Tags: TimeWorld Health OrganizationXFGYahooYahoo News
Share196Tweet123Share
Yahoo news home
News

It ‘Tears My Guts Out’

July 8, 2025

Many in the MAGA movement are in a state of anger and disbelief over the Justice Department and FBI’s memo ...

Read more
News

Latest Tariff Pause Shows Limits of Trump’s Frenzied Dealmaking

July 8, 2025
News

Republicans plot a strategy to fend off Democratic onslaught against Trump megabill

July 8, 2025
News

Rubio impersonator used AI in calls to foreign ministers, cable shows

July 8, 2025
News

Banking’s Newest CEO Plots a Comeback for Most Unloved Stock

July 8, 2025
Yahoo news home

RFK Jr. promoted a food company he says will make Americans healthy. Their meals are ultraprocessed

July 8, 2025
Yahoo news home

Netanyahu says he nominated Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize. From there, it’s a secretive process

July 8, 2025
Yahoo news home

Who’s to blame for Texas flooding tragedy? There is a lot of finger pointing.

July 8, 2025

© 2025 WNyuz.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • World
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Tech

© 2025 WNyuz.com