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Avian Influenza Frequently Asked Questions
Oct. 17, 2005 - The following questions and
answers were prepared by the World Health Organization in response to
the heightened interest in the avian (bird) flu that many see is the
threat of a worldwide pandemic. This information was current on October
14, 2005. They also have released "Ten Things You Need to Know
About Pandemic Influenza," which you can read - click here.
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What is avian influenza?
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Which viruses cause highly pathogenic disease?
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Do migratory birds spread the disease?
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What is special about the current outbreaks in poultry?
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Which countries have been affected by outbreaks in poultry?
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What are the implications for human health?
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Where have human cases occurred?
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How do people become infected?
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Does the virus spread easily from birds to humans?
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What about the pandemic risk?
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What changes are needed for H5N1 to become a pandemic virus?
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What is the significance of limited human-to-human transmission?
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How serious is the current pandemic risk?
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Are there any other causes for concern?
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Why are pandemics such dreaded events?
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What are the most important warning signals that a pandemic is about
to start?
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What is the status of vaccine development and production?
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What drugs are available for treatment?
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Can a pandemic be prevented?
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What strategic actions are recommended by WHO?
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Is the world adequately prepared?
What is avian
influenza?
Avian influenza, or bird flu, is a contagious
disease of animals caused by viruses that normally infect only birds
and, less commonly, pigs. Avian influenza viruses are highly
species-specific, but have, on rare occasions, crossed the species
barrier to infect humans.
In domestic poultry, infection with avian influenza
viruses causes two main forms of disease, distinguished by low and high
extremes of virulence. The so-called low pathogenic form commonly
causes only mild symptoms (ruffled feathers, a drop in egg production)
and may easily go undetected. The highly pathogenic form is far more
dramatic. It spreads very rapidly through poultry flocks, causes disease
affecting multiple internal organs, and has a mortality that can
approach 100%, often within 48 hours.
Which viruses cause highly pathogenic disease?
Influenza A viruses1 have 16 H subtypes
and 9 N subtypes2. Only viruses of the H5 and H7 subtypes are
known to cause the highly pathogenic form of the disease. However, not
all viruses of the H5 and H7 subtypes are highly pathogenic and not all
will cause severe disease in poultry.
On present understanding, H5 and H7 viruses are
introduced to poultry flocks in their low pathogenic form. When allowed
to circulate in poultry populations, the viruses can mutate, usually
within a few months, into the highly pathogenic form. This is why the
presence of an H5 or H7 virus in poultry is always cause for concern,
even when the initial signs of infection are mild.
Do migratory birds spread highly pathogenic
avian influenza viruses?
The role of migratory birds in the spread of highly
pathogenic avian influenza is not fully understood. Wild waterfowl are
considered the natural reservoir of all influenza A viruses. They have
probably carried influenza viruses, with no apparent harm, for
centuries. They are known to carry viruses of the H5 and H7 subtypes,
but usually in the low pathogenic form. Considerable circumstantial
evidence suggests that migratory birds can introduce low pathogenic H5
and H7 viruses to poultry flocks, which then mutate to the highly
pathogenic form.
In the past, highly pathogenic viruses have been
isolated from migratory birds on very rare occasions involving a few
birds, usually found dead within the flight range of a poultry outbreak.
This finding long suggested that wild waterfowl are not agents for the
onward transmission of these viruses.
Recent events make it likely that some migratory
birds are now directly spreading the H5N1 virus in its highly pathogenic
form. Further spread to new areas is expected.
What is special about the current outbreaks in
poultry?
The current outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian
influenza, which began in South-east Asia in mid-2003, are the largest
and most severe on record. Never before in the history of this disease
have so many countries been simultaneously affected, resulting in the
loss of so many birds.
The causative agent, the H5N1 virus, has proved to
be especially tenacious. Despite the death or destruction of an
estimated 150 million birds, the virus is now considered endemic in many
parts of Indonesia and Viet Nam and in some parts of Cambodia, China,
Thailand, and possibly also the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic.
Control of the disease in poultry is expected to take several years.
The H5N1 virus is also of particular concern for
human health, as explained below.
Which countries have been affected by outbreaks
in poultry?
From mid-December 2003 through early February 2004,
poultry outbreaks caused by the H5N1 virus were reported in eight Asian
nations (listed in order of reporting): the Republic of Korea, Viet Nam,
Japan, Thailand, Cambodia, Lao Peoples Democratic Republic, Indonesia,
and China. Most of these countries had never before experienced an
outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza in their histories.
In early August 2004, Malaysia reported its first
outbreak of H5N1 in poultry, becoming the ninth Asian nation affected.
Russia reported its first H5N1 outbreak in poultry in late July 2005,
followed by reports of disease in adjacent parts of Kazakhstan in early
August. Deaths of wild birds from highly pathogenic H5N1 were reported
in both countries. Almost simultaneously, Mongolia reported the
detection of H5N1 in dead migratory birds. In October 2005, H5N1 was
confirmed in poultry in Turkey and Romania. Outbreaks in wild and
domestic birds are under investigation elsewhere.
Japan, the Republic of Korea, and Malaysia have
announced control of their poultry outbreaks and are now considered free
of the disease. In the other affected areas, outbreaks are continuing
with varying degrees of severity.
What are the implications for human health?
The widespread persistence of H5N1 in poultry
populations poses two main risks for human health.
The first is the risk of direct infection when the
virus passes from poultry to humans, resulting in very severe disease.
Of the few avian influenza viruses that have crossed the species barrier
to infect humans, H5N1 has caused the largest number of cases of severe
disease and death in humans. Unlike normal seasonal influenza, where
infection causes only mild respiratory symptoms in most people, the
disease caused by H5N1 follows an unusually aggressive clinical course,
with rapid deterioration and high fatality. Primary viral pneumonia and
multi-organ failure are common. In the present outbreak, more than half
of those infected with the virus have died. Most cases have occurred in
previously healthy children and young adults.
A second risk, of even greater concern, is that the
virus if given enough opportunities will change into a form that is
highly infectious for humans and spreads easily from person to person.
Such a change could mark the start of a global outbreak (a pandemic).
Where have human cases occurred?
In the current outbreak, laboratory-confirmed human
cases have been reported in four countries: Cambodia, Indonesia,
Thailand, and Vietnam.
Hong Kong has experienced two outbreaks in the
past. In 1997, in the first recorded instance of human infection with
H5N1, the virus infected 18 people and killed 6 of them. In early 2003,
the virus caused two infections, with one death, in a Hong Kong family
with a recent travel history to southern China.
How do people become infected?
Direct contact with infected poultry, or surfaces
and objects contaminated by their faeces, is presently considered the
main route of human infection. To date, most human cases have occurred
in rural or periurban areas where many households keep small poultry
flocks, which often roam freely, sometimes entering homes or sharing
outdoor areas where children play. As infected birds shed large
quantities of virus in their faeces, opportunities for exposure to
infected droppings or to environments contaminated by the virus are
abundant under such conditions. Moreover, because many households in
Asia depend on poultry for income and food, many families sell or
slaughter and consume birds when signs of illness appear in a flock, and
this practice has proved difficult to change. Exposure is considered
most likely during slaughter, defeathering, butchering, and preparation
of poultry for cooking. There is no evidence that properly cooked
poultry or eggs can be a source of infection.
Does the virus spread easily from birds to
humans?
No. Though more than 100 human cases have occurred
in the current outbreak, this is a small number compared with the huge
number of birds affected and the numerous associated opportunities for
human exposure, especially in areas where backyard flocks are common. It
is not presently understood why some people, and not others, become
infected following similar exposures.
What about the pandemic risk?
A pandemic can start when three conditions have
been met: a new influenza virus subtype emerges; it infects humans,
causing serious illness; and it spreads easily and sustainably among
humans. The H5N1 virus amply meets the first two conditions: it is a new
virus for humans (H5N1 viruses have never circulated widely among
people), and it has infected more than 100 humans, killing over half of
them. No one will have immunity should an H5N1-like virus emerge.
All prerequisites for the start of a pandemic have
therefore been met save one: the establishment of efficient and
sustained human-to-human transmission of the virus. The risk that the
H5N1 virus will acquire this ability will persist as long as
opportunities for human infections occur. These opportunities, in turn,
will persist as long as the virus continues to circulate in birds, and
this situation could endure for some years to come.
What changes are needed for H5N1 to become a
pandemic virus?
The virus can improve its transmissibility among
humans via two principal mechanisms. The first is a reassortment
event, in which genetic material is exchanged between human and avian
viruses during co-infection of a human or pig. Reassortment could result
in a fully transmissible pandemic virus, announced by a sudden surge of
cases with explosive spread.
The second mechanism is a more gradual process of
adaptive mutation, whereby the capability of the virus to bind to human
cells increases during subsequent infections of humans. Adaptive
mutation, expressed initially as small clusters of human cases with some
evidence of human-to-human transmission, would probably give the world
some time to take defensive action.
What is the significance of limited
human-to-human transmission?
Though rare, instances of limited human-to-human
transmission of H5N1 and other avian influenza viruses have occurred in
association with outbreaks in poultry and should not be a cause for
alarm. In no instance has the virus spread beyond a first generation of
close contacts or caused illness in the general community. Data from
these incidents suggest that transmission requires very close contact
with an ill person. Such incidents must be thoroughly investigated but
provided the investigation indicates that transmission from person to
person is very limited such incidents will not change the WHO overall
assessment of the pandemic risk. There have been a number of instances
of avian influenza infection occurring among close family members. It is
often impossible to determine if human-to-human transmission has
occurred since the family members are exposed to the same animal and
environmental sources as well as to one another.
How serious is the current pandemic risk?
The risk of pandemic influenza is serious. With the
H5N1 virus now firmly entrenched in large parts of Asia, the risk that
more human cases will occur will persist. Each additional human case
gives the virus an opportunity to improve its transmissibility in
humans, and thus develop into a pandemic strain. The recent spread of
the virus to poultry and wild birds in new areas further broadens
opportunities for human cases to occur. While neither the timing nor the
severity of the next pandemic can be predicted, the probability that a
pandemic will occur has increased.
Are there any other causes for concern?
Yes. Several.
Domestic ducks can now excrete large quantities
of highly pathogenic virus without showing signs of illness, and are now
acting as a silent reservoir of the virus, perpetuating transmission
to other birds. This adds yet another layer of complexity to control
efforts and removes the warning signal for humans to avoid risky
behaviours.
When compared with H5N1 viruses from 1997 and
early 2004, H5N1 viruses now circulating are more lethal to
experimentally infected mice and to ferrets (a mammalian model) and
survive longer in the environment.
H5N1 appears to have expanded its host range,
infecting and killing mammalian species previously considered resistant
to infection with avian influenza viruses.
The behaviour of the virus in its natural
reservoir, wild waterfowl, may be changing. The spring 2005 die-off of
upwards of 6,000 migratory birds at a nature reserve in central China,
caused by highly pathogenic H5N1, was highly unusual and probably
unprecedented. In the past, only two large die-offs in migratory birds,
caused by highly pathogenic viruses, are known to have occurred: in
South Africa in 1961 (H5N3) and in Hong Kong in the winter of 20022003
(H5N1).
Why are pandemics such dreaded events?
Influenza pandemics are remarkable events that can
rapidly infect virtually all countries. Once international spread
begins, pandemics are considered unstoppable, caused as they are by a
virus that spreads very rapidly by coughing or sneezing. The fact that
infected people can shed virus before symptoms appear adds to the risk
of international spread via asymptomatic air travellers.
The severity of disease and the number of deaths
caused by a pandemic virus vary greatly, and cannot be known prior to
the emergence of the virus. Under the best circumstances, assuming that
the new virus causes mild disease, the world could still experience an
estimated 2 million to 7.4 million deaths (projected from data obtained
during the 1957 pandemic). Projections for a more virulent virus are
much higher. The 1918 pandemic, which was exceptional, killed at least
40 million people. In the USA, the mortality rate during that pandemic
was around 2.5%.
Pandemics can cause large surges in the numbers of
people requiring or seeking medical or hospital treatment, temporarily
overwhelming health services. High rates of worker absenteeism can also
interrupt other essential services, such as law enforcement,
transportation, and communications. Because populations will be fully
susceptible to an H5N1-like virus, rates of illness could peak fairly
rapidly within a given community. This means that local social and
economic disruptions may be temporary. They may, however, be amplified
in todays closely interrelated and interdependent systems of trade and
commerce. Based on past experience, a second wave of global spread
should be anticipated within a year.
As all countries are likely to experience emergency
conditions during a pandemic, opportunities for inter-country
assistance, as seen during natural disasters or localized disease
outbreaks, may be curtailed once international spread has begun and
governments focus on protecting domestic populations.
What are the most important warning signals that
a pandemic is about to start?
The most important warning signal comes when
clusters of patients with clinical symptoms of influenza, closely
related in time and place, are detected, as this suggests human-to-human
transmission is taking place. For similar reasons, the detection of
cases in health workers caring for H5N1 patients would suggest
human-to-human transmission. Detection of such events should be followed
by immediate field investigation of every possible case to confirm the
diagnosis, identify the source, and determine whether human-to-human
transmission is occurring.
Studies of viruses, conducted by specialized WHO
reference laboratories, can corroborate field investigations by spotting
genetic and other changes in the virus indicative of an improved ability
to infect humans. This is why WHO repeatedly asks affected countries to
share viruses with the international research community.
What is the status of vaccine development and
production?
Vaccines effective against a pandemic virus are not
yet available. Vaccines are produced each year for seasonal influenza
but will not protect against pandemic influenza. Although a vaccine
against the H5N1 virus is under development in several countries, no
vaccine is ready for commercial production and no vaccines are expected
to be widely available until several months after the start of a
pandemic.
Some clinical trials are now under way to test
whether experimental vaccines will be fully protective and to determine
whether different formulations can economize on the amount of antigen
required, thus boosting production capacity. Because the vaccine needs
to closely match the pandemic virus, large-scale commercial production
will not start until the new virus has emerged and a pandemic has been
declared. Current global production capacity falls far short of the
demand expected during a pandemic.
What drugs are available for treatment?
Two drugs (in the neuraminidase inhibitors class),
oseltamivir (commercially known as Tamiflu) and zanamivir (commercially
known as Relenza) can reduce the severity and duration of illness caused
by seasonal influenza. The efficacy of the neuraminidase inhibitors
depends on their administration within 48 hours after symptom onset. For
cases of human infection with H5N1, the drugs may improve prospects of
survival, if administered early, but clinical data are limited. The H5N1
virus is expected to be susceptible to the neuraminidase inhibitors.
An older class of antiviral drugs, the M2
inhibitors amantadine and rimantadine, could potentially be used against
pandemic influenza, but resistance to these drugs can develop rapidly
and this could significantly limit their effectiveness against pandemic
influenza. Some currently circulating H5N1 strains are fully resistant
to these the M2 inhibitors. However, should a new virus emerge through
reassortment, the M2 inhibitors might be effective.
For the neuraminidase inhibitors, the main
constraints which are substantial involve limited production
capacity and a price that is prohibitively high for many countries. At
present manufacturing capacity, which has recently quadrupled, it will
take a decade to produce enough oseltamivir to treat 20% of the worlds
population. The manufacturing process for oseltamivir is complex and
time-consuming, and is not easily transferred to other facilities.
So far, most fatal pneumonia seen in cases of H5N1
infection has resulted from the effects of the virus, and cannot be
treated with antibiotics. Nonetheless, since influenza is often
complicated by secondary bacterial infection of the lungs, antibiotics
could be life-saving in the case of late-onset pneumonia. WHO regards it
as prudent for countries to ensure adequate supplies of antibiotics in
advance.
Can a pandemic be prevented?
No one knows with certainty. The best way to
prevent a pandemic would be to eliminate the virus from birds, but it
has become increasingly doubtful if this can be achieved within the near
future.
Following a donation by industry, WHO will have a
stockpile of antiviral medications, sufficient for 3 million treatment
courses, by early 2006. Recent studies, based on mathematical modelling,
suggest that these drugs could be used prophylactically near the start
of a pandemic to reduce the risk that a fully transmissible virus will
emerge or at least to delay its international spread, thus gaining time
to augment vaccine supplies.
The success of this strategy, which has never been
tested, depends on several assumptions about the early behaviour of a
pandemic virus, which cannot be known in advance. Success also depends
on excellent surveillance and logistics capacity in the initially
affected areas, combined with an ability to enforce movement
restrictions in and out of the affected area. To increase the likelihood
that early intervention using the WHO rapid-intervention stockpile of
antiviral drugs will be successful, surveillance in affected countries
needs to improve, particularly concerning the capacity to detect
clusters of cases closely related in time and place.
What strategic actions are recommended by WHO?
In August 2005, WHO sent all countries a document
outlining
recommended strategic actions for responding to the avian influenza
pandemic threat. Recommended actions aim to strengthen national
preparedness, reduce opportunities for a pandemic virus to emerge,
improve the early warning system, delay initial international spread,
and accelerate vaccine development.
Is the world adequately prepared?
No. Despite an advance warning that has lasted
almost two years, the world is ill-prepared to defend itself during a
pandemic. WHO has urged all countries to develop preparedness plans, but
only around 40 have done so. WHO has further urged countries with
adequate resources to stockpile antiviral drugs nationally for use at
the start of a pandemic. Around 30 countries are purchasing large
quantities of these drugs, but the manufacturer has no capacity to fill
these orders immediately. On present trends, most developing countries
will have no access to vaccines and antiviral drugs throughout the
duration of a pandemic.
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1 Influenza viruses are grouped into three types, designated
A, B, and C. Influenza A and B viruses are of concern for human health.
Only influenza A viruses can cause pandemics.
2 The H subtypes are epidemiologically most important, as
they govern the ability of the virus to bind to and enter cells, where
multiplication of the virus then occurs. The N subtypes govern the
release of newly formed virus from the cells
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