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The Pandemic Potential of the Avian Influenza H5N1 Virus

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Title: The Pandemic Potential of the Avian Influenza H5N1 Virus


1
The Pandemic Potential of the Avian Influenza
H5N1 Virus
  • Jill Taylor, Ph.D.
  • Deputy Director, Wadsworth Center, NYSDOH

2
Presentation Agenda
  • Influenza Facts
  • Seasonal influenza
  • Avian Influenza
  • Pandemic Influenza
  • Pandemic Preparedness

3
What is Influenza?
  • Acute, febrile respiratory illness affecting
    upper and lower respiratory tract
  • Epidemics caused by influenza viruses A and B
    (not C)

4
How You Get the Flu?
  • Typical incubation 2 days Range 1-4 days
  • Viral shedding
  • Can begin 1 day before symptom onset
  • Peak shedding first 3 days of illness
  • Correlates with temperature
  • Subsides after 5 days in adults, can be 10 days
    in children
  • Transmission is predominately droplet spread

5
The Burden of Influenza
  • Seasonal Influenza
  • Globally 250,000 to 500,000 deaths each year
  • In the United States each year
  • 36,000 deaths
  • gt200,000 hospitalizations
  • 37.5 billion in economic costs from influenza
    and pneumonia
  • Avian Influenza
  • 256 human cases (including 151 deaths) in 10
    countries (as of October 16 2006)
  • Pandemic Influenza
  • An ever-present threat

6
If a Pandemic Happens What to Expect
  • At the peak of a moderately severe pandemic
    influenza outbreak (i.e. 35 attack rate, 6 week
    duration), New York State (excluding New York
    City) can expect
  • 14,916 influenza-related hospital admissions per
    week
  • 3,728 influenza-related deaths per week
  • 2,609 deaths in the hospital

7
Seasonal influenza
http//www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/
8
Influenza Pandemics 20th Century
1918 Spanish Flu
1957 Asian Flu
1968 Hong Kong Flu
A(H1N1)
A(H2N2)
A(H3N2)
20-40 m deaths 675,000 US deaths
1-4 m deaths 70,000 US deaths
1-4 m deaths 34,000 US deaths
9
Influenza A Virus
  • 16 Antigenically distinct HAs
  • (H1-H16)
  • 9 Antigenically distinct NAs
  • (N1-N9)
  • Nomenclature
  • A/NY/5/04 (H3N2)
  • A/Chicken/HK/122/04 (H5N1)

10
Natural Distribution of HA and NA
11
Roles of Influenza HA and NA
  • HA (Agglutinates RBCs)
  • Surface Antigen
  • Trimer
  • Type I
  • Binds SA
  • Promotes Entry
  • Fusion
  • Cleaved
  • pH 5
  • NA (Dissociates agglutinated RBCs)
  • Surface Antigen
  • Tetramer
  • Type II
  • Cleaves SA from Galactose
  • Promotes Release
  • Removes SA
  • E.R., Cell Surface, Virus

Also very important in pathogenesis !
12
How Influenza Viruses Change
  • Antigenic Drift
  • Small changes in virus over time
  • New strains appear and replace older strains
  • May not be recognized by antibodies to older
    strains
  • Antigenic Shift
  • Abrupt, major change (reassortment)
  • Results in novel strain or new subtype
  • Can cause pandemic influenza

13
Influenza A Virus Evolution Drift
Antigenic Drift
Gradual antigenic (genetic) change without a
change in subtype
  • Point mutations
  • HA and NA
  • Immune pressure
  • 36,000 deaths per year in US
  • Continuous process

14
Antigenic Shift
Complete antigenic (genetic) change due to HA
and/or NA subtype substitution
15
Reassortment of RNA Segments from Different
Viruses
256 Possible Combinations
16
Interspecies Transmission of Influenza A Virus
17
Pigs Are Mixing Vessels for Influenza A
Viruses
255 otherpossibilities
18
Pandemic Strain Emergence Direct Infection
Avian virus
Avian Reservoir
19
Timeline of Emergence of Influenza A Viruses in
Humans
20
Antigenic Shift and Human Pandemics
1918 H1N1
1957 H2N2
1968 H3N2
SCIENCE VOL 306 15 OCTOBER 2004
  • Direct interspecies transmission
  • Reassortment between 2 co-infecting strains
  • Reappearance of a previous strain

21
Avian influenza (H5N1)
  • Hong Kong 1997
  • First direct avian-to-human infection and serious
    disease
  • 18 confirmed cases, 6 deaths
  • Risk factor live poultry markets
  • Hong Kong 2003
  • HK residents returning from S. China
  • 2 confirmed cases, one death
  • Source of infection unclear

22
Avian influenza
23
Avian Influenza A (H5N1) Outbreak
151 fatal human H5N1 Cases (1-04 to
11-06) (Updated November 3, 2006) Azerbaijan (5)
Cambodia (6) China (14) Djibouti (0) Egypt
(6) Indonesia (55) Iraq (2) Thailand (17) Turkey
(4) Vietnam (42)
httpwww.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/count
ry/cases_table_2006_10_16/en/index.html
24
Evolution of H5N1 Viruses
SCIENCE306, 2004
K. S. Li, Y. Guan, Nature 430 (6996)209-213,
2004.
25
Pathogenicity of avian influenza strains in
domestic birds
  • Low pathogenicity
  • Invades only respiratory and digestive tract
    tissues
  • Causes mild illness
  • May mutate to high pathogenicity
  • High pathogenicity
  • Invades many tissues
  • Causes severe illness and mortality
  • H5 and H7

26
Avian influenza virus
  • Outbreaks not uncommon in domestic poultry
  • 28 outbreaks globally since 1959
  • 7 in US
  • 4 involved LP to HP transition
  • Frequently found in wild birds 10 isolations in
    US since 8/06 - all low-path

27
AVIAN INFLUENZA
Surveillance Consortium which will Track Avian
Influenza along major flyways
28
Contact between wild and domestic birds
29
Proximity of birds and humans
30
Economic losses
31
Will it happen here?
  • H5 outbreaks have already occurred
  • Very efficient surveillance network
  • Very different husbandry practices
  • But..remember SARS in 2003

32
Spread from Hotel M, Hong Kong February 2003
Guangdong Province, China
A
A
Hotel MHong Kong
A
Hong Kong SAR 95 HCW
H,J
H,J
gt100 close contacts
33
(No Transcript)
34
R0 basic case reproduction number On
average, for each primary case, to how many
secondary cases will that infected person
transmit disease? (if that person is not
isolated) For SARS, R0 3 gtgt possible to
control by isolation and quarantine
procedures For influenza, R0 10
35
What is our strategy?
36
How do we diagnose influenza?
  • Multiple levels of testing to determine
  • Virus - Influenza A
  • Subtype H3N2
  • Strain A/NY/1452/06

37
Antigen detection assays rapid tests
  • More sensitive for pediatric than adult
  • Fast but sample dependent
  • Expensive
  • A positive result is meaningful
  • A negative result may only mean not enough virus
    to enable detection

38
Conventional virus culture
39
Evaluation of virus growth
40
Evaluation of virus growth
41
PCR molecular amplification
42
Conventional RT-PCR assay for sub-typing
influenza virus
  • Amplification of HA and NA genes
  • Requires gel analysis
  • Amplicon can sequenced for strain identification
  • TAT about 12 hours

Controls
Specimens
HA1 HA3 Infl B
43
Real-time PCR
44
Influenza A real-time RT-PCR assay
97 Efficiency Y-intercept 35.4 R2 .995
Slide courtesy of Dr. Amy Dean
45
Control methods
  • Vaccination
  • Anti-virals

46
Control of Seasonal Influenza Vaccination
  • Much of morbidity/mortality can be prevented by
    annual vaccination
  • In young adults, vaccine 70-90 effective
  • In elderly and immunocompromised, vaccine less
    effective in preventing influenza infection but
    very effective in reducing illness severity,
    complications (70) and death (85)
  • In nursing homes, 50 decrease in
    hospitalizations, 80 decrease in death

47
Pandemic Vaccine Supply
  • Assumptions
  • No vaccine currently available production will
    need to be specific for pandemic strain
  • 4-8 months until first vaccine doses available
  • At least two doses will be needed for protection
  • U.S. manufacturing capacity
  • Estimated production 5 million doses/week
  • Implication less than 2 of the population may
    be protected per week

48
Antiviral Medications
  • Treatment target M and N proteins
  • Can decrease duration of illness (by 1-3 days)
    and severity of uncomplicated seasonal influenza
  • Some strains of flu no longer respond to the most
    common antivirals (Amantadine, Rimantadine)
  • Newest generation of antivirals (Tamiflu,
    Relenza) remain in limited supply
  • Should be initiated within 48 hours of symptom
    onset
  • Treatment after 48 hours may have no benefit

49
Pandemic Antiviral Supply
  • Antivirals in the Strategic National Stockpile
  • Oseltamivir (Tamiflu)
  • Federal plan increase stockpile, in
    collaboration with the States, to treat 25 of
    US population (at least 81 million treatment
    courses)
  • Oseltamivir production
  • Limited worldwide and U.S. production capacity
  • U.S. supply chain being established
  • Expected production capacity 1.25 million
    courses per month

50
Pandemic Influenza Doctrine Saving Lives - 1
  • Prevent or at least delay introduction into the
    United States
  • May involve travel advisories, exit or entry
    screening
  • For first cases, may involve isolation short-term
    quarantine of arriving passengers

51
Pandemic Influenza Doctrine Saving Lives - 2
  • Slow spread, decrease illness and death, buy time
  • Antiviral treatment and isolation for people with
    illness
  • Quarantine for exposed
  • Social distancing
  • Vaccine when available
  • Local decisions

52
Individual Infection Control Strategies
  • Respiratory hygiene/cough etiquette and hand
    hygiene are effective strategies to stop the
    spread of germs.
  • We should make good hygiene a habit.
  • Our health is in your hands!

53
Individual and Family Preparedness is Crucial!
  • We might have to take care of ourselves and those
    around us
  • Would you be ready?

54
Public Health PreparednessA Shared
Responsibility!
  • Local - state - federal
  • Domestic international
  • Public private
  • Multi-sector
  • Animal human
  • Health protection homeland security economic
    protection

55
In a severe pandemic... actions of individuals,
businesses, and community organizations,as much
as those of government, will greatly determine
the outcome!
56
Will Avian Flu Cause the Next Pandemic?
  • No one knows!
  • The H5N1 virus could change to spread more easily
    among humansbut it might not
  • It could swap genes with another animal virus,
    or with a human flu virus
  • Death rate may or may not be lower than with
    current human H5N1 cases
  • What about other subtypes?

57
Avian flu comes to Florida
58
More information..
  • http//www.pandemicflu.gov
  • http//www.nyhealth.gov
  • http//www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en/
  • http//www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/
  • http/www.usda.gov/birdflu
  • http//www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza
    /avianflu/
  • My e-mail jxt07_at_health.state.ny.us

A number of slides in this presentation were
graciously provided by Lora Santilli and Drs.
David Wentworth, Kirsten St. George and David
Spiro
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