Title: Avian Influenza / Pandemic Influenza
1Avian Influenza / Pandemic Influenza
- Neyla Gargouri Darwaza, M.D.
- Surveillance Department
- Directorate of Disease Control
- Ministry of Health, Jordan
2Outline
- Influenza virus
- Avian influenza
- Influenza pandemic
3Influenza viruses
- Orthomyxoviruses
- Influenza virus  A, B, C Â
- A birds, pigs, humans
- B C humans
4Influenza virus type A
- 16 different HA and 9 NA
- All subtypes found in birds
- Only H5 and H7 caused severe disease in birds
- Human disease caused by H1, H2, H3, N1, N2
5Influenza virus type A
- 2448 hours or hard non porous surfaces
- 812 hours on cloth, paper, tissue
- 5 min on hands
- 4 days in water 22ºC
- 30 days at 0ºC
- 30 min at 60ºC
- Inactivated by 70 alcohol, chlorine and
disinfectants
6Genetic reassortment
7Pandemic influenza strain
Migratory water birds
8Understanding pandemic influenza
- Pandemics occur when a novel influenza strain
emerges that has the following features - readily transmitted between humans
- genetically unique (i.e., lack of preexisting
immunity in the human population) - increased virulence
Very widespread epidemic that affects a whole
region, a continent or the world.
9Previous pandemics
Death million Strain Flu Year
50 H1N1 Spanish 1918
2 H2N2 Asian 1957
1 H3N2 Hong Kong 1968
10Avian influenza H5N1
- Since mid-2003, H5N1 virus has caused the largest
and most severe outbreaks in poultry on record.
11H5N1 among poultry or wild birds
- Cambodia
- China
- Croatia
- Indonesia
- Japan
- Kazakhstan
- Laos
- Malaysia
- Mongolia
- Romania
- Russia
- South Korea
- Turkey
- Thailand
- Ukraine
- Vietnam
12Global risk of avian influenza outbreaks
Category 1
Category 2
Category 3
Category 4
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14Why is H5N1 very dangerous?
- Present in healthy waterfowl (e.g. ducks), shed
in feces - Very lethal to poultry and other animals
including humans - Big impact on trade and economics
- Crossed species barrier in 1997 in Hong Kong,
caused 18 human cases 6 deaths
15Cumulative Number of Confirmed Human Cases of
Avian Influenza A/(H5N1) Reported to WHO
16Cumulative Number of Confirmed Human Cases of
Avian Influenza A/(H5N1) Reported to WHO
10Â January 2006
Total number of cases includes number of
deaths.WHO reports only laboratory-confirmed
cases.
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18Pandemic alert
- H5N1 currently lacks ability for efficient spread
among humans - But, continual H5N1 transmission in animals (and
humans) - increases viruses in environment and chances of
humans being infected - increases chances of mutations/reassortments to
create pandemic virus
19Present situation
20Influenza pandemic
- Once a fully contagious virus emerges, its
global spread is inevitable - Given the speed and volume of international
travel today, the disease could reach all
continents in less than 3 months - 2 waves of 6 weeks each
21Influenza pandemic
- Worldwide
- 30-50 human population
- 2 to 7.4 million deaths (conservative estimates,
based on 1957 pandemic) - In Jordan
- 1.75 million cases (AR 35)
- 10,000 deaths (CFR 0.6)
Attack rate Case fatality rate
22Influenza pandemic
- Recent studies1,2 suggest that 1918 H1N1 and H5N1
are similar - macrophage activities with high levels of
cytokine production maybe a factor in the lung
and other organ damage (cytokine storm)
1Kobasa et al Nature 2004431703 2Peiris et al
Lancet 2004363617
23If influenza pandemic takes place
- It will take several months before any vaccine
becomes available - Vaccines, antiviral agents and antibiotics will
be in short supply unequally distributed - Medical facilities will be overwhelmed
- It will affect essential community services
- It will cause social and political disruption and
considerable economic losses
24Can a pandemic be prevented?
- Theory
- antiviral drugs can contain/eliminate pandemic
virus - soon after it develops ability to spread human to
human - WHO antiviral stockpiles for rapid deployment in
initially affected countries
25Can a pandemic be prevented?
- Requirements
- good surveillance and rapid reporting
- rapid response teams
- stockpile of antiviral drugs, PPE, etc.
Personal protective equipment
26Can a pandemic be prevented?
- Challenges
- limited money
- limited staff and training
- limited planning, coordination, cooperation
within government and with other countries
27Which antiviral?
- M2 protein inhibitor amantadine, rimantadine
- up to 30 resistance, one passage in cell culture
- not effective against H5N1
- Neuraminidase inhibitors oseltamivir,
zanamivir - multiple passages in cell culture required to
produce resistance - effective against H5N1
- Susceptibility or resistance to antivirals of the
new strain of influenza virus???
Tamiflu, Relenza
28Suspected case of H5N1
- Symptoms
- Flu illness or respiratory illness
- AND
- History within 10 days of onset
- Travel to a country with documented H5N1 in
poultry or humans, and/or - Contact with poultry or domestic birds, or known
or suspected patient with influenza H5N1
29How to reduce risk of infection?
- Thorough cooking of all foods from poultry,
including eggs - Avoiding contact with poultry and any surfaces
that may have been contaminated by poultry or
their feces/secretions
30How to reduce risk of infection?
- Frequent hand washing with soap water
- after touching birds
- after cooking food involving poultry or eggs
- Simple etiquette like covering nose mouth when
sneezing coughing
31Conclusion
- The next pandemic is just a matter of time
- For the first time in human history we have a
chance to prepare ourselves for a pandemic before
it arrives - Pray, plan and practice
32References
- http//www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en/
index.html - http//www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/outbreaks/asia.htm
33Contact
- MOH/ Disease Control
- Tel 5607144
- Fax 5686965
- epijor_at_wanadoo.jo
- neylagd_at_yahoo.com
- MOH
- Tel 5200230
- MOA/ Hotline
- Tel 5657756