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The dangers of a global bird flu pandemic
By Frank Gaglioti
4 November 2005
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Health authorities around the world are warning that humanity
could face the first global influenza pandemic of the twenty-first
century. The spread of the H5N1 strain of avian influenza through
poultry stocks in Asia and recently into Europe raises the prospect
that the virus will mutate so that it can be transmitted from
person to person, resulting in millions of deaths. In spite of
the constant warning from scientists, governments in wealthier
countries have responded in an uncoordinated and belated manner,
largely leaving poorer countries to their own devices.
So far the H5N1 avian influenza has mostly affected poultry
stocks in Asian countries and has resulted in the culling of over
120 million birds within three months. This has been a huge blow
to poor rural communities that depend on their flocks of chickens
and ducks as a major source of protein.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), so far there
have been 117 confirmed cases of human infection and 60 deaths,
with Vietnam the worst affected with 91 cases and 41 deaths. Most
of the cases have been in previously healthy children and young
adults. Although the infection rate among humans is relatively
low, scientists fear that the large populations living in close
proximity to infected poultry creates the conditions for the virus
to mutate and become highly infectious to humans.
Scientists estimate that sometime prior to 1997 the H5N1 strain
began to establish itself in Asian poultry populations. The virus
at first seemed to pose little threat as it only produced mild
symptoms such as ruffled feathers and reduced egg production.
However, it mutated into the current highly pathogenic form capable
of killing birds within 48 hours and with a mortality rate close
to 100 per cent. The first outbreak of this new potent virus was
in 1997 in Hong Kong where 18 people were hospitalised and six
died. Authorities destroyed 1.5 million birds to remove the source
of infection.
The next outbreak was in South Korea in 2003 where a number
of commercial flocks were devastated. Health authorities began
to raise concerns that a global pandemic was in the making. In
January 2004, the H5N1 virus was found in poultry in the southern
provinces of Vietnam and was also responsible for the death of
several children in the capital Hanoi. Some 400 poultry outbreaks
in Vietnam have affected at least 3 million birds. At the same
time, the virus was found on a single farm in Japan.
This January a WHO report entitled Avian influenza: assessing
the pandemic threat concluded that all prerequisites
for the start of a pandemic had been met save one, namely the
onset of efficient human-to-human transmission. Should the virus
improve its transmissibility, everyone in the world would be vulnerable
to infection by pathogenpassed along by a cough or a sneezeentirely
foreign to the human immune system. According to WHO estimates,
the virus is now endemic in bird populations in parts of Asia
and is becoming more pathogenic in mammals.
The H5N1 virus has continued to spread to central Asia and
Europe. Recent assessments published in the science journals Nature
and Science speculate that the virus is being transmitted
by an unknown species of wild migratory bird. Scientists first
suspected that the poultry trade and other human activities were
responsible for the spread of the virus but two months ago 100
wild fowl killed by H5N1 were found at a remote lake in Mongolia.
US Department of Agriculture scientist David Suarez concluded
that there is much stronger evidence that wild birds are
spreading the virus and that it will be difficult
or impossible to control the spread from country to country.
In April the virus killed about 6,000 migratory water birds at
Lake Qinghai in northwestern China.
In the next few weeks, migratory birds, including possible
influenza carriers, could hit the sub-Saharan wetlands. On October
19, UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) veterinary officer
Joseph Domenech said that if the virus becomes endemic in Africa,
the chances of it mutating to spread between humans, potentially
triggering a pandemic, will increase. The possible consequences
are serious, as many African countries are not equipped to even
monitor the virus, so it could go undetected for some time. The
WHO report also raised the possibility of the avian flu interacting
in some unknown and potentially deadly way with a population already
devastated by HIV.
Influenza viruses
It is not clear how or even if the H5N1 virus could become
more transmissible in human populations. The WHO report stated
that a possible mechanism could involve stepwise changes that
occur as the virus mutates during infection of humans or other
mammals that gradually would allow the virus to improve its transmissibility
to humans.
Viruses are very simple parasitic microorganisms consisting
of a protein case containing a piece of genetic materialeither
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) or Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Viruses
have no life functions of their own and have to infect a host
cell in order to reproduce, ultimately killing the infected cell
and producing symptoms of the infection.
There are three types of influenza virus known as types A,
B and C. Only type A influenzas cause pandemics and can infect
birds, pigs, horses, seals and whales as well as humans. Type
A viruses are further classified according to two proteins on
their surface called hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA).
Many variations of the two proteins are known to exist, which
are designated according to their surface protein subtype.
Type A viruses are notorious for their ability to change. They
mutate by two processes. One is known as antigenic driftsmall
changes to the genetic makeup which alter the influenza virus
in minimal ways. In this case, humans have some resistance to
the altered virus. The second is antigenic shifta
major change in the viruses genetic structure to which victims
have little or no resistance. If the antigenic shift produces
a virus that is easily transmissible to humans then a pandemic
can occur.
The WHO report stated that viruses of the H5 subtype have probably
never infected humans previously or not within the lifetime of
the current generation. This means that vulnerability to
an H5N1-like pandemic virus would be universal. Pandemics
are always global events and in the past have spread around the
world in less than a year.
There were three pandemics during the twentieth century. The
worst was the 1918-1919 Spanish influenza that killed between
20 million to 50 million people worldwide. This was many times
the total casualties during World War I. During the pandemic an
estimated 30 percent of the worlds population fell ill.
In the US, 28 percent were affected and the average life span
fell by 12 years in 1918. Medical authorities were unable to cope
and were not even aware of the cause of death, as viruses were
not isolated and identified until 1933.
By the time of the 1957-1958 pandemic, which started in Hong
Kong, medical authorities had access to vaccines and antibiotic
treatments that could be used to relieve secondary complications
such as bacterial pneumonia. It took six months for the virus
to circle the globe. The total death toll was about 2 million.
The 1968-1969 pandemic broke out in south-eastern China and killed
about 1 million globally.
In 1976 another pandemic was expected and a mass immunisation
campaign was instigated in the US. The pandemic did not occur
and the immunisation program sparked extensive litigation.
Genetic studies have shown that the influenza virus is made
up of eight genes. If two viruses, such as the avian H5N1 and
the human H3N2, infect the same cell they can swap genes resulting
is a highly transmissible influenza strain. The 1957 pandemic
was caused by the mixture of three genes from the avian virus
with five genes from the circulating human strain. With the 1968
influenza virus, a similar reassortment of genes occurred. It
is suspected that the reassortment first occurred in a pig and
was then passed on to humans in a new more lethal form.
The 1918 influenza virus
A recent study published in the October 6 issue of Nature
detailed the final three genes of the 1918 influenza virus. The
other five gene sequences had already been published. The viral
material was obtained from the frozen lung tissue of victims of
the 1918 pandemic who had been buried in the permafrost of Alaska,
thus preserving the virus. The first attempt to resurrect the
virus from frozen victims was made in 1951 but scientists were
not able to culture any viable material.
In the latest study, scientists found that mice infected with
the 1918 virus died more quickly than with any other known human
influenza virus. The work to sequence the genome of the 1918 influenza
virus began 10 years ago. The full sequence provides strong evidence
that the 1918 flu virus is derived wholly from one that originally
infected birds. Jeffery Taubenberger, a scientist at the Armed
Forces Institute of Pathology in Maryland, recently commented
that the virus was the most bird-like of all mammalian flu
viruses.
Pennsylvania State University virologist Eddie Holmes said
the research was a landmark: Not only is this
the first time this has been done for any ancient pathogen, but
it deals with the agent of the most important disease pandemic
in human history. Scientists are attempting to identify
the mutations in the 1918 virus that allowed it to become infectious
in humans. Such work may offer some strategies to prevent a reoccurrence
of a human pandemic.
It is difficult to predict how the H5N1 virus will evolve,
if a pandemic will emerge at all or how virulent it will be. The
general consensus among scientists, however, is that a pandemic
is long overdue. On June 30, WHO officials revealed that they
had been considering raising the threat level for a global pandemic,
from the current 3 (human infections have occurred, but there
is little evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission) to
4 (small localised clusters of human infection) or even 5 (large
clusters of infection and just short of a pandemic). The scale
has six points.
The trigger was a report in Vietnam that many people had mild
cases of influenza. Those in contact with them were testing positive
for the H5N1 strain, indicating the virus was being transmitted
from human to human. The situation in Vietnam remains uncertain
but the cases were not confirmed by subsequent analysis. WHOs
Western Pacific director Shigeru Omi warned that H5N1 remained
at a tipping point. The National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) stated that the last influenza
pandemic swept the globe in 1968; many public health officials
believe the world is overdue for another one.
An editorial in the May 26 issue of Nature concluded:
National governments performance is half-hearted,
incomplete and far too slow. International organisations are working
with their hands tied behind their backs, for bureaucratic and
diplomatic reasons. In short, the level of current efforts is
not commensurate with the threat we face.
The WHO report considered mainland China as the epicentre
of influenza virus activity and the birthplace of pandemics.
But little is being done to prevent an outbreak in southern China,
where people of economic necessity live side by side with poultry
and pigs, providing the perfect breeding ground for a new highly
transmissible virus. Although scientists now have the capacity
to track the genetic changes taking place in the H5N1 virus, there
is no funding to help affected countries build effective surveillance
programs.
In wealthy countries, the response of governments to the pandemic
danger has concentrated on stockpiling the anti-viral drug Tamiflu
(oseltamivir). But the stockpile of drugs is only sufficient to
protect a small percentage of people, leaving the remaining population,
particularly the poorest layers, highly vulnerable. In the rest
of the world, the impact of a deadly bird flu would be even more
devastating.
See Also:
Lack of government preparation
for flu pandemic
[20 October 2005]
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