Title: Avian Influenza
1Avian Influenza
- Saad Gharaibeh DVM, PhD, Dip ACPV
- Dept. of Pathology and Animal Health
- Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
- Jordan University of Science and Technology
- Irbid 22110, Jordan
- saadgh_at_just.edu.jo
- 02/720-1000 ext 22059
2Avian InfluenzaHistory
- 1878 Fowl plaque was described (Italy)
- 1901 Fowl plaque is caused by a virus
- 1955 It is type A influenza virus
- 1970 AGP test introduced
- 1972 Waterfowl is a reservoir
- 1979 Virulence and hemagglutinin cleavability was
established - 1997 Direct transmission of H5 AIV from birds to
humans
3Avian Influenza Virus
- Orthomyxoviridae
- Pleomorphic RNA viruses, single stranded,
negative sense genome. - Has glycoprotein projections HA, NA
- Three antigenic types A, B, C (Avian influenzas
are all type A) - 8 gene segments code for 10 proteins
- Vary in pathogenicity
4NI test
HI test
AGP test
ELISA test
Jong et al., 2000, Journal of Infection
5HI test
ELISA test
NI test
AGP test
6Nomenclature
- A/chicken/Hong Kong/220/97 (H5N1)
- A Type of virus A, B, C
- Chicken Host of origin
- Hong Kong Geographic origin
- 220 Strain Number (Case number)
- 97 Year of isolation
- (H5N1) H N subtype
7Infectious Virus
- Needs HA0 cleaved into HA1 HA2
- Intracytoplasmic
- Furin-like enzyme (ubiquitous proteases) HP
- Trypsine-like enzyme All AIV
8Cell Types for Replication
- All AIV (trypsine-like enzymes)
- Respiratory epithelium
- GI epithelium
- HP AIV (Furin-like enzymes) Variety of cells
resulting in a systemic infection.
9Approaches Used to Characterize AIV Pathogenicity
- In vivo methods
- Laboratory Inoculation of chickens
- Chicken embryo lethality
- In vitro methods (evaluation of HA cleavability)
- Plaques or CPE assays (CEF does not have trypsin)
- Direct detection of cleaved HA
- Nucleotide sequence of HA cleavage site
- Direct measure of pathogenicity potential
- Identify pathogenicity increases during virus
passage in chickens under controlled conditions - Virulence in mice and ability to infect other
mammals
10Criteria for HP
- AIV lethal for 6,7, or 8 / 8 four-to-six-week-old
susceptible chickens within 10 days following IV
inoculation with 0.2 ml of 110 dilution of a
bacteria free, infectious allantoic fluid. - H5 or H7 has amino acid sequence at the
hemagglutinin cleavage site compatible with HPAIV - Non-H5 or H7 that kills 1-5 chickens and grows in
cell culture w/o added trypsin
11Signalment Clinical Signs(Low pathogenic AI
disease)
- Respiratory signs
- Diarrhea
- Drop in egg production 7-10 days 5-30
- Mild increase in Mortality (2o bacterial
infection will increase mortality)
12Gross Lesions (Low pathogenic AI disease)
- Catarrhal rhinitis / tracheitis
- Ocular discharge
- Airsaculitis
- Ovarian involution and hemorrhage
- Yolk peritonitis
- Swollen kidney and urates
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15Signalment Clinical Signs(Highly pathogenic AI
disease)
- Sudden onset of high mortality (up to 100)
- Depression
- /- nervous signs
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19Gross Lesions (Highly pathogenic AI disease)
- Edematous to necrotic comb and wattles
- Edema, necrosis, and hemorrhages in different
organs
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22High Path Avian Influenza Diagnosis
- Clinical features in commercial poultry give a
tentative diagnostic - Sudden death and high mortality rate
- RT-PCR and sequencing
- Virus isolation and identification is the gold
standard but very few laboratories in the world
can handle such a virus capable of infecting
humans. - Commercial antigen capture ELISA (lack
sensitivity and will cross react with other
endemic subtypes) - Serology AGP, ELISA, HI, NI
23RT-PCR
- Testing can be performed in one day for multiple
agents. - Sensitivity is very high and comparable to virus
isolation. - Can be applied on samples from any species.
- Decrease the chance of contamination with live
virus.
24RT-PCR Diagnostics in JUSTSafety Considerations
25RT-PCR Diagnostics in JUSTChicken Respiratory
Disease viruses
APV
IB
ND
AI
MWM
26Serologic Testing and Surveillance
- AGPT Type specific (available at JUST)
- ELISA Type specific (available at JUST)
- HI Subtype specific (available at JUST)
- NI Subtype specific
- Antigen capture ELISA (available at JUST)
- RT-PCR Surveillance and diagnosis (available at
JUST)
27Agar Gel Precipitation
28ELISA Readings
Positive Flock
Negative Flock
29Hemagglutination Inhibition
30Control Prevention
- Biosecurity
- Stamping out infected flocks
- Vaccination of flocks at high risk
- Killed vaccines
- Viral vector vaccines
- Live attenuated vaccines are not licensed for
poultry
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33Drastic measures in some Asian countries
www.animalactivism.org/ documents
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37AI crossed Species Barrier into
Humans A/chicken/Hong Kong/220/97 (H5N1)
38What conditions favor AI spread?
39Densely populated countries
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41Very popular Live-bird markets
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43Free Range Poultry
44Is H5N1 AI bad for economies?
Disease Country Year Impact Cost (US)
mad cow UK 1990-98 Beef export 9 billion
Cholera Peru 1991 Seafood export 770 million
Plague India 1995 Tourism, trade 2 billion
H5N1 flu Hong Kong 1997 Loss of poultry (1.5 million birds) 22 million
Cholera Tanzania 1998 Seafood export 36 million
Nipah Malaysia 1999 Loss of swine (0.9 million pigs) 540 million
West Nile US 1999 400 million
SARS Worldwide 2003 Tourism, trade 80 billion
H5N1 flu SE Asia 2003-05 Loss of poultry (140 million birds so far) 10 billion? (and growing)
Sources WHO, Institute of Medicine, FAO, OIE,
Asian Development Bank, World Bank
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46High Risk Areas in Jordan
47Should we start vaccinating poultry against H5N1?
48Killed Vaccines
- Will result in only humoral antibody response
against all viral proteins except NS1. - Will significantly reduce shedding of the
challenge virus. - Will interfere with AGP, ELISA, HI, and NI if
(homologous). - If sequence of the HA gene is identical to the
challenge virus it may eliminate shedding
completely.
49Swayne et al., 2000, Veterinary Microbiology
50Advantages of Vaccines
- Reduces the number of chickens from which AI
challenge virus could be reisolated. - Decreased the titers of virus detected in the
cloaca and oropharynx (up to 99.99) - Reduced environmental contamination and prevented
subsequent bird to bird transmission. - The use of killed H5N2 vaccine in the face of
HPAI H5N1 virus challenge was able to protect
chickens from disease and interrupt virus
transmission.
51DIVADifferentiating Infected from Vaccinated
Individuals
- The use of killed vaccine and unvaccinated
sentinels leaving 0.5-1 of the flock
unvaccinated and marked (wing band) and these
individuals will be subjected to serological
monitoring. - Heterogonous killed vaccine Screen for field
infection using NI. - Measuring serological response to NS1 by ELISA or
western blot.
52Vaccine / Industry / Politics
- The use of vaccine to aid in the control of AI is
a political issue and different people have a
different say on this. - In some countries financial constrains preclude
stamping out policy. - In some countries, export markets are not an
issue to prevent vaccination. - In some countries, stamping out attempt may be
unsuccessful. - With the ubiquitous nature of AI in wild birds
it may be vaccination the most feasible tool to
soften the sting of AI Beard 1981
53Vaccine / Industry / Politics
- Field results have not shown vaccine to increase
the risk of undetected infection in fact, field
experience has shown that vaccination greatly
enhances a control program. Halvorson, 2002,
Avian Pathology - There is no way a vaccinated flock can be a
greater threat to disease control than a
non-vaccinated flock that breaks with AI.
Halvorson, 2002, Avian Pathology - Epidemiological observations have shown that
serologically positive birds are not associated
with AI transmission. (Kradel, 1992) - Should the government set the rules when no
indemnity (compensation) is paid?
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