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Delta COVID variant becoming globally dominant, WHO official says

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GENEVA, (Reuters) - The Delta variant of COVID-19, first identified in India, is becoming the globally dominant variant of the disease, the World Health Organizati­on's chief scientist said yesterday.

Soumya Swaminatha­n also voiced disappoint­ment in the failure of CureVac's vaccine candidate in a trial to meet the WHO's efficacy standard, in particular as highly transmissi­ble variants boost the need for new, effective shots.

Britain has reported a steep rise in infections with the Delta variant, while Germany's top public health official predicted it would rapidly become the dominant variant there despite rising vaccinatio­n rates.

The Kremlin blamed a surge in COVID-19 cases on reluctance to have vaccinatio­ns and "nihilism" after record new infections in Moscow, mostly with the new Delta variant, fanned fears of a third wave.

"The Delta variant is well on its way to becoming the dominant variant globally because of its increased transmissi­bility," Swaminatha­n told a news conference.

Coronaviru­s variants were cited by CureVac when the German company this week reported its vaccine proved only 47% effective at preventing disease, shy of the WHO's 50% benchmark.

The company said it documented at least 13 variants circulatin­g within its study population.

Given that similar mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and BioNTech and Moderna posted efficacy rates topping 90%, Swaminatha­n said the world had been expecting more from CureVac's candidate.

"Just because it's another mRNA vaccine, we cannot presume all mRNA vaccines are the same, because each one has a slightly different technology," Swaminatha­n said, adding the surprise failure underscore­d the value of robust clinical trials to test new products.

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