NICOSIA (Reuters) – More than a quarter of COVID-19 cases detected in Cyprus are of a highly contagious variant of the virus first identified in Britain last autumn and may explain a recent spike, authorities on the island said on Thursday.
Cyprus sent a number of positive samples to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) detected in January and February, with 25.7% of them found to be the British variant, the Health Ministry said.
The island first reported cases of the strain, known as B.1.1.7, in early January, after tests on positive samples taken in December 2020.
The strain is between 30% and 100% more deadly than previous dominant variants, researchers reported on Wednesday in the British Medical Journal.
Cyprus’s health ministry said the variant was considered about 50% more contagious than the more common COVID-19 strain. It was also likely to be fuelling a recent surge, with higher transmission among younger people noted over the past 10 days, it said.
Cyprus has been reporting peaks and troughs in the COVID-19 outbreak for the past 12 months. After a relative lull, infections have been climbing for about two weeks.
The island has reported 38,065 cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic started, and 235 deaths.
(Writing By Michele Kambas; Editing by Hugh Lawson)