| Scientists fear mild swine flu could mutate |
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| Wednesday, 06 May 2009 18:47 | |||
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TOKYO--Swine flu has reached Asia, with South Korea reporting its first suspected case yesterday. Like the vast majority of other cases outside of Mexico so far, it is mild, but virologist Kennedy Shortridge warns that is no reason for complacency. He says that the farther the virus spreads, the more chance it will mix, or reassort, with other flu viruses in circulation and turn into something more lethal. "The prospects for change [in the virus] are considerable and worrying," he says. Shortridge is a professor emeritus at the University of Hong Kong, where he led investigations into the initial emergence of H5N1 avian influenza in 1997, when it killed six of the 18 people it infected. The city squelched that outbreak by slaughtering all 1.4 million chickens and ducks in the territory. H5N1 re-emerged in 2003 and since then has claimed 257 lives while devastating poultry flocks throughout much of Asia and parts of Africa. Shortridge has long advocated global cooperation in the surveillance of circulating flu viruses to spot emerging new strains so that public health officials could plan a response and drug companies could get a head start on making vaccines. He was among the first to suggest that pigs might act as mixing vessels for new combinations of viruses. And the swine flu, now spreading from Mexico, "fits into the mixing vessel hypothesis," he says. Analysis of flu specimens by Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg and at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, have found that the virus is made up of pieces of human, swine, and avian viruses from North America, Europe, and Asia. The mixture "gives an order of complexity we really don't understand at this point," Shortridge says. In particular, he says he is concerned that this patched-together virus might not be stable and could easily reassort with other viruses encountered in a human or animal host. The virus has now spread to Asia, where the H5N1 virus is circulating. Shortridge says there are strains of human H1N1 in circulation in many areas that are resistant to Tamiflu, the drug of choice for treating the disease in humans. He speculates that swapping one or more genes among these viruses could result in a virus that is more pathogenic or more easily passed from person to person or both. As a precaution, Shortridge suggests sequencing as many viral samples as quickly as possible to watch for any telltale changes in the virus--a massive job requiring worldwide cooperation. He says such cooperation seems to be off to a good start, thanks to the experience of dealing with the 2003 SARS crisis and recent efforts to prepare for an influenza pandemic. "There is a success story in this in that the world is alert" to the possibility of a pandemic, he says. Still, he adds, even better collaboration and communication will be required in the face of a threat that could change overnight. Note: Destruction of livestock, swine or poultry in impoverished regions of the globe, where animals exist in close proximity with humans does not represent the solution to emerging infectious disease challenges. OIE/FAO must be consulted in relation to preventing unwarranted mass depopulation of livestock, while the WHO and United Nations need to focus on establishing a humanitarian support system for all countries that are in the midst of an international economic emergency. What is our current state of surveillance, containment and control, focusing on the United States as our global public health reference point? Earlier in the day, I watched the CDC press conference on CNN, the director noted their strategy to provide broader access to tests because up to this date the CDC lab is the only lab in the U.S. that has had the tools to conduct these tests. CNN cut the coverage of the press conference after that comment. Once again I emphasize, these emerging infectious microbial challenges are important aspects of the co-infection challenge in both veterinary and human public health. At Los Alamos (Future of Biodetection Systems http://www.lanl.gov/bioscience/biodetection.shtml : 2006), a key topic discussed in the breakaway group led by Hong Cai and myself (Final Workshop Analysis http://www.lanl.gov/orgs/b/Biodetection_Proceedings/Biodetection_Futures_Analysis.pdf : Pg. 11-13) , was the importance of access to microarray capability, analysis of the sample and accessible genomic level bioinformatics information broken down for clinical interpretation. We are in desperate need for a pathway to fast track the production of (1) reagents for molecular diagnostic tests and (2) access to molecular diagnostics capability (human/veterinary): In our view, a federal or state official equipped with an Internet-linked detection device should be on the site of any suspected foreign animal disease outbreak in the U.S. within 4 hours or less of notification so that vigorous informed control measures backed by positive diagnosis can be implemented nationally within 6 hours. -- U.S. Agricultural and Food Security: Who Will Provide the Leadership? http://www.humanitarian.net/biodefense/fazdc/usaha_fadp.html , Centaur Science Group, Washington DC, 2003. I would like to see this objective accomplished in all 192 member states of the United Nations.
Stephen M. Apatow Founder, Director of Research and Development Pathobiologics International Humanitarian Resource Institute Stephen M. Apatow President, Director of Research and Development, Humanitarian University Consortium Graduate Studies Center for Medicine , Veterinary Medicine and Law
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