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Avian Influenza Shoreland, Inc. April 2006. Taipei ‘Wet Market’. China--Backyard Farms. Pandemic Influenza. Next pandemic inevitable in the near term Wide agreement by WHO, CDC, others Current H5N1 “bird flu” or another strain Worldwide spread within 2-3 months possible
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Avian Influenza Shoreland, Inc. April 2006
Taipei ‘Wet Market’ China--Backyard Farms
Pandemic Influenza • Next pandemic inevitable in the near term • Wide agreement by WHO, CDC, others • Current H5N1 “bird flu” or another strain • Worldwide spread within 2-3 months possible • Initial quarantine may close borders for weeks to months • Highly contagious • Humans have no immunity to new strains • Vaccine availability will lag by months • Insufficient anti-viral drugs currently available • Significant mortality • 1% of world’s population (30 million) died in 1918 pandemic • 1-2 million died in 1957 & 1968 pandemics • Similar mortality possible if no effective intervention
H5N1: Confirmed Cases in Humans, Wild Birds, & Poultry (April 4, 2006)
H5N1: Confirmed Cases in Humans 192 cases / 109 deathsWHO counts only lab-confirmed cases
WHO Pandemic Phases • Inter-Pandemic Period • Phase 1: Animal virus present; no human transmission • Phase 2: Animal virus with features posing risk of human transmission • Pandemic Alert Period • Phase 3: Human infection through animal contact but no human-to-human spread (rarely, spread to a close contact) • Phase 4: Small clusters of limited human-to-human transmission; highly localized • Phase 5: Larger clusters of human-to-human transmission but still localized • Pandemic Period • Phase 6: Worldwide human-to-human infection; increased and sustained transmission in general population
Terminology: Pathogenic Avian Serotypes(defined according to disease caused in birds) • Influenza A has many subtypes, classified according to 16 “H” and 9 “N” proteins • Poultry cases • H5 (generally highly pathogenic) • H7 (high or low pathogenic varies by strain) • H9 (always low pathogenic) • Human cases • H5 (generally severe) • H7 (mild disease even if highly pathogenic in birds) • H9 (mild disease; only 3 cases documented)
Avian Influenza A (H5N1) • Occurs primarily in poultry, waterfowl, or other birds • Mammals are susceptible to infection--ingested chicken • Become ill and die • Thus far don’t serve as natural carriers • 2004: pigs (China); tigers & domestic cats (Thailand) • 2006: domestic cat, stone marten (Germany) • Emerged in Asia sometime before 1997 in poultry • 1997 - Mutated into highly pathogenic form • Infected 18 humans (6 deaths) in Hong Kong • 2003 - Re-emerged in poultry • Mutated slightly to “Z” strain • Current wave of bird to human cases since Dec. ‘03
Reasons for Concern for Pandemic H5N1 • H5N1 can infect many avian and animal species • Facilitates geographic spread • Recombination event is not necessary for a pandemic • 1918 strain pure avian virus that underwent ~10 spontaneous mutations, became infective for humans, and was exceptionally virulent • Several similar mutations present in currently circulating H5N1 virus • NS1 gene possible virulence factor: one variant of a specific NS1 gene present in all AI isolates (plus 1918 strain), but no human influenza A
H5N1 Outbreaks in Birds Countries with H5N1 Outbreaks in 2005-06 Asia Africa Europe Cambodia Cameroon Albania Serbia & Montenegro China * Egypt Austria ** Slovakia Hong Kong Niger Bosnia & Herzegovina ** Slovenia ** Indonesia Nigeria Bulgaria ** Sweden India Burkina Faso Croatia Switzerland** Kazakhstan Denmark Ukraine Malaysia France United Kingdom** Mongolia Mid-East Germany Pakistan (H5) Azerbaijan Greece** Russia Iran** Hungary Thailand Iraq Italy** Viet Nam Israel Poland** Georgia** Jordan Romania Burma (Myanmar) Turkey * Cases were reported in birds in the following provinces or autonomous regions during 2005 and/or 2006: Anhui, Guizhou, Hubei, Hunan, Inner Mongolia, Jiangxi,Liaoning, Ningxia, Qinghai, Shanxi, Sichuan, Xinjiang, Xizang (Tibet), and Yunnan. † H5 confirmed in poultry with further tests pending; however 1 human case has been confirmed as H5N1. ‡ Affected birds exclusively wild/migratory species to date. Countries with outbreaks in 2003 and/or 2004 but not in 2005-06: Japan, Korea, Laos
Transmission • Spread by domestic ducks, poultry, wild migratory birds • Transmitted bird to human through: • Direct contact with sick / infected birds • Surfaces contaminated with droppings, respiratory secretions, ocular secretions • Possibly: eating under-cooked eggs & poultry, duck blood • Human-to-human transmission non-existent or rare with existing H5N1 strain • Incubation period unknown -- 2-8 days • Pandemic virus (after human adaptation) likely 1-4 days
Transmission (cont’d) • Mainly large droplet spread • 3 feet • Emphasis on social distancing • Environmental contact (H5N1 viruses can survive for up to 6 days) • Airborne transmission possible? • Isolate first cases with airborne precautions • Infectious period • 1 day before onset of symptoms to 5 days after in adults and 3 weeks in young children • Big contrast to SARS • Seasonally unclear; winter may be still be higher
H5N1 Clinical -- Symptoms • Initially cannot differentiate from other cases of severe influenza • Presents with fever and influenza-like symptoms, cough, sore throat, rhinitis, muscle aches, headache • Conjunctivitis • Rapid onset of viral pneumonia, ARDS • H5N1 mouse studies indicate diffuse extrapulmonary involvement, macrophage activation, cytokine storm effect • Severest mortality in young adults • Other symptoms, e.g., severe diarrhea, encephalitis, etc. (see notes)
Use of Antivirals • Stand-by treatment • For use (after medical consultation) after becoming ill in an outbreak situation • Dosing as per treatment regimen on “Treatment of Avian Influenza” slide • Prophylaxis • In an outbreak situation, antivirals to be taken as instructed before becoming ill
Types of Antivirals • Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) -- recommended • Active against H5N1 in vitro and likely effective in vivo (mice) • Shelf life: at least 5 years • Supplies limited; not currently in retail stores • Until this year 2 million doses per year • U.S. current stockpile of antiviral drugs: 5.5 million treatment courses • an additional 12.4 million treatment courses of Tamiflu and 1.75 million treatment courses of Relenza due by Sept 2006 • ? production issues • Zanamivir (Relenza) -- may also be effective • Taken via inhalation - less convenient to use • Amantadine, rimantadine: H5N1 is resistant to these drugs
Treatment of Avian Influenza • Need to start antiviral treatment in first 48 hours • Reduce mortality / complications • Non-severe cases • 75 mg oseltamivir (Tamiflu) po bid for 5 days • 2 Vietnamese cases with oseltamivir-resistant mutation developing during therapy with death. • Higher dosing may be necessary • Resistant virus not necessarily infectious OR • 10 mg zanamivir (Relenza) inhaled bid for 5 days • Almost none currently available • Severe cases • 150 mg oseltamivir po bid for 7-10 days • Consider adding inhaled zanamivir (Relenza) • Consider po/IV ribavirin
Prophylaxis of Avian Influenza • Oseltamivir 75 mg po once daily during period of exposure and for 7-10 days after last exposure • If staying in an area of on-going epidemic with no vaccine available, this could mean taking prophylaxis for 2 months or longer. • Prophylaxis of general public not in current HHS plan
Prevention for the Traveler: Pre-travel • Check for any travel restrictions • Prohibit travel with a fever to/from H5N1 areas • Educate & provide handout on avian influenza • Provide travel health kit • Supply antivirals (e.g., oseltamivir) if traveling to H5N1-affected area (Freedman DO, Leder K. J Trav Med 2005; 12: 36-44) • Vaccinate with conventional influenza vaccine • Does not protect against H5N1 but may decrease chance of confusing human influenza with H5N1 • Identify in-country health care resources
Education: Preventive Measures During Travel • Avoid contact with birds, animal markets / farms, bird droppings or secretions, and potentially contaminated surfaces • Frequent thorough hand washing • Carry and use alcohol hand sanitizer / wipes • Need for paper towels in washrooms • After shaking hands • Ingestion of eggs and poultry that are well cooked • Good respiratory hygiene • When possible, change of airplane seats to avoid travelers with respiratory symptoms; masks when appropriate • Seek early medical consultation for any fever or influenza-like symptoms during or after travel to H5N1 areas
Travel Kit for H5N1 Areas • First aid and medical supplies • Oral thermometer and probe covers • Household disinfectant • Disposable gloves and plastic storage bags • Alcohol-based wipes / hand sanitizer • Masks (2- or 3-ply surgical, N95, others) • Consider antivirals (e.g., oseltamivir)
Masks • Surgical masks 2- or 3-ply • Benefit controversial but may be cultural mandate • N-95 masks • Fit testing required; some limitations but may be good stand-by protection and useful on airplanes • N-95 or N-100 with exhalation valve • Alternative to N-95 • Exhalation valve increases comfort, temperature, and “wetness” of mask • May be difficult to ensure compliance unless high risk exists
Employees/Visitors After Return from H5N1 Areas • Employees/visitors with fever or respiratory illness < 10 days from H5N1-affected area should inform appropriate contact point by telephone and have their illness assessed by the corporate or other health care provider before going into the workplace
Pandemic Planning Assumptions • Two or more waves in same year or in successive flu seasons • Second wave may occur 3-9 months later; may be more serious than first (seen in 1918) • Each wave lasts about 6 weeks in a given community
Community-based Containment Measures • Slow spread locally; allow for preparation • Slow spread to other communities • Local containment plan • Care, food, services to the isolated or quarantined • Legal preparedness • Flu/fever clinics hotlines • Community communication & cooperation • Voluntary quarantine can work
Pandemic Public Health Measures • Respiratory etiquette • Cover mouth/nose with sneeze/cough • Use tissues • Dispose of tissues • Immediate hand hygiene • Avoid large gatherings • Surgical masks in public controversial • Social distancing (3 feet) more effective • Symptomatic individuals to wear masks • Snow days; Closure of public places • “Cordon sanitaire”
Avian Vaccines - Poultry • Avian vaccines used in poultry • Used extensively in several locales, including China • Feb 2004 to Jan 2005: China inoculated 2.68 billion birds • Not currently thought to be an effective control measure
Avian Vaccines - Human Human monovalent H5N1-only vaccines undergoing trials in U.S. and elsewhere • Sanofi: 2 doses were needed at 90 µg given 1 month apart--only 50% of subjects protected (seasonal flu vaccine contains 15 µg) • GSK: Human trials have begun in Europe with low antigen content vaccines with adjuvants • 8 million H5N1 doses on hand by 2/06 (4 million people) • NIH long-term project (MedImmune) to develop seed virus strains against all known H types, including H5N1 • Egg technology: Long time-line (3-6 months) for additional doses once decision made, current capacity 5 million doses / month • Cell culture techniques; new investment, several years off • Priority plans: HCWs at top • 50% of the population that are healthy and 2-64 years at bottom • Current flu vaccines do NOT include avian strains and offer no partial or cross-protection
Eliminate pandemic virus strain at source? • Recent mathematical models of massive antiviral administration in a localized epidemic situation • “Ring eradication” feasible if: • Low to moderate transmissibility (R0 < 1.8) • Chemoprophylaxis of 90% of population within 1-3 weeks • 1-3 million courses of oseltamivir needed • Movement restrictions; high compliance
Recombined pandemic H5N1 strain vs. SARS • Much more explosively contagious than SARS • Airborne spread • Easy in-flight spread compared to SARS • More difficult to contain with simple quarantine measures than SARS • Will still more rapidly lead to definitive international travel prohibition • May not be seasonal