UK study suggests Delta subvariant less likely to cause symptoms
Published by maria gbaf
Posted on November 18, 2021
2 min readLast updated: January 28, 2026

Published by maria gbaf
Posted on November 18, 2021
2 min readLast updated: January 28, 2026

A UK study finds the Delta subvariant AY.4.2 is less symptomatic and cases have dropped since October. Booster doses cut infection risk by two-thirds.
By Alistair Smout
LONDON (Reuters) – A subvariant of Delta that is growing in Britain is less likely to lead to symptomatic COVID-19 infection, a coronavirus prevalence survey found, adding that overall cases had dropped from a peak in October.
The Imperial College London REACT-1 study, released on Thursday, found that the subvariant, known as AY.4.2, had grown to be nearly 12% of samples sequenced, but only a third had “classic” COVID symptoms, compared with nearly a half of those with the currently dominant Delta lineage AY.4.
Two-thirds of people with AY.4.2 had “any” symptom, compared with more than three-quarters with AY.4.
AY.4.2 is thought to be slightly more transmissible, but it has not been shown to cause more severe disease or evade vaccines more easily than Delta.
The researchers said that asymptomatic people might self-isolate less, but also that people with fewer symptoms might spread it less easily through coughing and also may be unlikely to get severely ill.
“It is preferentially appearing to be more transmissible,” Imperial epidemiologist Paul Elliott told reporters. “It does seem to be less symptomatic, which is a good thing.”
Imperial had previously released interim results that showed COVID-19 prevalence was at its highest on record in October, with infections highest among children.
The full results of the latest round of the study, conducted between Oct. 19 and Nov. 5, confirmed what daily recorded cases and other prevalence surveys have shown – that infection levels dropped from that peak, corresponding with a half-term school holiday in late October.
Elliott said that there was uncertainty over whether that drop had continued, and the next few weeks would establish whether cases were rising again with the return of schools.
The REACT-1 study also found that booster doses reduced the risk of infection in adults by two-thirds compared with people who had two doses.
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
The main topic is the UK study on the Delta subvariant AY.4.2, which is less likely to cause COVID-19 symptoms.
AY.4.2 is slightly more transmissible but causes fewer symptoms compared to the dominant Delta lineage AY.4.
Booster doses reduce the risk of COVID-19 infection in adults by two-thirds compared to those with only two doses.
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