BA.4 and BA.5, two new Omicron variants sweeping South Africa, detected in U.S.
Fortune · Waldo Swiegers, Bloomberg via Getty Images

Two new Omicron variants sweeping South Africa—likely able to evade vaccines and natural immunity from previous infections—have been identified in the U.S., multiple COVID-19 researchers told Fortune.

“BA.4 sequences have been identified in samples from multiple U.S. states,” Andy Pekosz, virologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told Fortune, adding that the variant is clearly circulating in the U.S., “it's just not clear precisely how widely.”

Madison Stoddard, a COVID-19 researcher at drug development firm Fractal Therapeutics, confirmed Friday that there were 12 cases of U.S.-sequenced BA.4 in GISAID, an international research database that tracks changes in COVID and the flu virus, with the earliest collected on March 30. There were also five cases of BA.5 sequenced in the U.S. as of Friday, with the earliest collection date of March 29, they said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. But the agency’s COVID Data Tracker states that cases of BA.4 and BA.5, in addition to BA.1, original strain of Omicron, and BA.3—as well as their sublineages, except for BA.1.1 and its sublineages—are all listed under the same variant, B.1.1.529. In sum, they total less than 1% of U.S. cases from April 17-23 but are labeled as variants of concern.

More infectious than ‘stealth Omicron’

BA.4 and BA.5 appear to be more infectious than BA.2, also known as “stealth Omicron,” which was more infectious than the original Omicron, BA.1, Bloomberg reported Thursday, citing South African COVID expert Tulio de Oliveira, the head of the institutes at the universities of KwaZulu-Natal and Stellenbosch.

The two new variants have “mutations in the lineages that allow the virus to evade immunity,” he told Bloomberg. “We expect that it can cause reinfections and it can break through some vaccines, because that’s the only way something can grow in South Africa, where we estimate that more than 90% of the population has a level of immune protection.”

Cases are surging in South Africa despite the fact that almost all South Africans have been vaccinated or had COVID, he said, signaling that these strains are more likely to be capable of evading the body’s defenses.

South African public health officials on Friday said that the country may be entering a fifth COVID wave, due to BA.4 and BA.5, as the number of positive tests rises. Hospitalizations are also rising, they said. Deaths have not yet, Bloomberg reported, though they’re considered a “lagging indicator” by public health officials.