Title: Emerging Infections
1Emerging Infections
- Angela McLean
- Institute for Emergent Infections of Humans
- James Martin 21st Century School
- Zoology Department
- Oxford University
2Definition Emerging infections
- More cases of an old infection (eg TB is
re-emerging) - Newly discovered / detected (eg Helicobacter
pylori has been around for ages, but only
recognised in the last couple of decades) - Genuinely new
- SARS
- HIV
- BSE
- H5N1 flu
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520th Century Adult Mortality Rates in the UK
- Males Females
- Deaths per million population
6Causes of death in Chile1909 and 1999
Weiss McMichael 2006
7Life expectancy at birth 8 countries 1950 - 2005
Weiss McMichael 2006
8Significant events in public health
925 years of HIV/AIDS
10Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases
1996 - 2004
11Monthly summary of EID events
12EID events December 2007
Influenza H5N1 China, Egypt Indonesia,
Myanmar Pakistan, Vietnam, UK
CJD UK
Brucellosis China
Coccidiodo mycosis USA
Rift Valley Fever Sudan
Undiagnosed neurological illness USA
Chikungunya Indonesia
Psittacosis Netherlands, Brazil, USA
Ebola Haemorrhagic Fever Uganda
Plague Uganda
Trypanosomiasis, foodborne Venezuela
13Three Big Questions
- Whats out there?
- In humans already
- Known in animals
- Unknown
- Which are likely to trouble humans?
- Making new contacts with new infectious agents
- What are species barriers
- Understanding pathogenesis
- How do pathogens adapt to humans?
- If they do, could we control them?
- Establishing good surveillance
- Making drugs and vaccine
- Understanding speed of spread
- Calculating minimum or optimal interventions
14What is out there?
- In humans already
- How should we deal with known infections of
humans (eg HIV, TB, malaria, dengue, MRSA - Known in animals
- How do we plan for the emergence of novel
infections that we know, expect, and cannot
prevent influenza - Unknown
- What can we do that is cautious and proportionate
about unknown infections that may emerge in the
future? -
15Which are likely to trouble us?Environmental
change
- New situations for human contact with novel
agents - Bushmeat
- xenotransplantation
- Better situations for the spread of novel agents
that have crossed into humans - increased sexual contact for HIV
- rapid international travel for SARS
- Environmental change affecting vectors
16Which are likely to trouble us?Genetic change
- Mostly we can just classify, but after the fact
- We dream of being able to predict sequence change
that would enable cross-species transmissions - Even for influenza, the determinants of what
strain will emerge next are not understood - We are remarkably ignorant about why some
infections make us sick and others are without
symptoms
17Will we be able to control future threats?
- Developing good surveillance
- New drugs and vaccines
- Understanding how fast infections spread and
evolve - Calculating sufficient interventions to control
spread or the likely impact of the best we can
manage
18Three Big Questions
- Whats out there?
- In humans already
- Known in animals
- Unknown
- Which are likely to trouble humans?
- Making new contacts with new infectious agents
- What are species barriers
- Understanding pathogenesis
- How do pathogens adapt to humans?
- If they do, could we control them?
- Developing good surveillance
- Making drugs and vaccine
- Understanding speed of spread
- Calculating minimum or optimal interventions
19Further Reading
- 6 pages
- Weiss McMichael (2004) Social and Environmental
risk factors in the emergence of infectious
diseases Nature Medicine vol 10 pp S70-s76 - 40 pages
- The world health report 2007 - A safer future
global public health security in the 21st century
http//www.who.int/whr/2007/en/ - 750 pages
- Laurie Garrett (1996) The Coming Plague Newly
Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance
20Which viruses will we work on?
- HIV
- Dengue
- Hepatitis C Virus
- Influenza
21Why those four?
Estimated deaths from viral infections 2003
22Why study adaptation to humans?
- 3 steps to emergence
- New transmission to humans
- Some transmission amongst humans
- Adaptation to become an efficient pathogen of
humans - Evidence that step 1 is not highly unusual
- H5N1 currently few clusters
- Simian Foamy Virus in zoo keepers
- SARS immunity in Hong Kong wet market workers