Transcript INFLUENZA
INFLUENZA
Otavio Oliva
Regional Consultant for Viral diseases
Pan American Health Organization
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Human Influenza Virus
• Types of virus “A,” “B,” and “C”
• Type C
– Associated with sporadic cases
– Cases that are not serious
– Stable Antigenitically speaking
• Type B
– Associated with epidemics
• Type A
– text
Associated with epidemics and pandemics
– Unique with subdivisions according to the HA and NA.
• H3N2
• H1N1
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Influenza Virus type A
Subtype depends on surface glyco
HA
proteins:
• Hemagglutinate (HA) -16
• Neuraminidases (NA) - 9
Human circulating Subtypes:
textH1N1, H3N2, H1N2
NA
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Influenza type A: Ecological Aspects
• Infects several animal species
– Birds
– Mammals
• Horses
• Hogs
• Humans
• Wild birds
– Principal reservations
– Infected by all the 16 subtypes of “A” virus
text– They may transmit the virus to domestics birds and other animals
• Humans
– Normally they get infected only with human strains
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Influenza Type A: Antigenic changes
• Changes in “drift” Type may occur with HA and NA
– They are associated with seasonal epidemics
– Frequent appearance of new strains in response to a selection provoked by
collective immunity
– The Influenza A virus change more frequently than the virus B
• Changes in “shift” Type occur both in the HA as well as NA
– They are associated with pandemics
– Originates the appearance of new influenza A virus
text presenting a new HA or HA & NA.
– Population without any immunity
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Antigenic “Shift” Mechanisms
of the Influenza Type A virus
16 HAs
9 NAs
Animal
Strain
Human
Virus
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Source: CDC / OMS
Reassociated
Virus
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Genetic Mechanisms associated with
the occurance (surgimiento) of pandemics: Shift
• Genetic Re-associations
• Adaptive Mutations of an avian virus
– Pandemic of 1918
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Terminology
• Seasonal Influenza
• Avian Influenza
– In migratory jungle birds
– Infection among domestic birds
• Enzootic Status (Asia, Africa???)
• Pandemic Influenza
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Seasonal Influenza (Seasonal)
•
•
•
•
•
Circulating Strain A (H1) and A (H3)
Vaccine against influenza would be first line of defense
Propagation by respiratory secretions (micro drops)
Incubation Period 1-4 days (average 2 days)
Infectious period starts the day before the appearance of symptoms
until approximately 5 days after the start of the disease
• disease generally lasts between 3-7 days
(cough and general malaise during >2 weeks)
• For U.S.A.:
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– Rate of attack is 5-20%
– 200,000 hospitalizations
– 36,000 deaths
http://www.placer.ca.gov/hhs/hhs-sub/com-diseases/flu-fact-sheet.htm
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Prevention and control of Influenza
Vaccination
• Technical consulting Group of PAHO in Prophylactic
immunization of diseases (TAG – 2004) recommended using it
in risk groups
• Annual vaccination with influenza is being
gradually introduced in the Region
• Studies in (disease load)
• Economic impact of annual epidemics
that back the priority policy of vaccination
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with influenza
• Limited quantities of the pandemic vaccination
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Prevention and Control of Influenza
Antivirals
Two types of antivirals in preventing or treating
influenza infections :
• Inhibitors of the ionic M2 channel (cyclic
amines)
– amantadine and rimantadine:
• Inhibitors of Neuraminidase
–textOseltamivir and Zanamivir.
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Requirements for having a variant of
epidemic influenza
• Total lack of immunity among the world
population
• Capable of causing disease among humans
• Effective
Transmission of
the virus from
person to person
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http://www.rivm.nl/infectieziektenbulletin/bul1211/scenario.html
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Historic Data on Influenza Pandemics
3 Epidemicity*
H1
2
H2
H1
1
10
20
30 years
10
10
1953
1963
H3 (ducks)
38 years?
0 text
1883
1893
1903
1913
1923
1933
1943
1: epidemics, 2: probable pandemic, 3: pandemic
Potter, C.W: Textbook of Influenza by Nichols, Webster, Hay, Blackwell Science 1998
1973
1983
1993
2006
2003
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Influenza Pandemics in the XX Century
Credit: US National Museum of Health and
Medicine
1918:
text“Spanish Flu”
A(H1N1)
40-100 millions of
deaths
1957: “Asian Flu”
A(H2N2)
1-4 millions of
deaths
1968: “Hong Kong Flu”
A(H3N2)
1-4 millions
deaths
of
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Economic Impact of certain
infectious disease
SARS,
Ch, HK, SGP, Can
$30-50 billion
$50 mm
Estimated Costs
$40 mm
Mad Cow, U.K.
$25-30 billion
$30 mm
$20 mm
$10 mm
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avian flu, Asia
$8-12 billion
EEB, RU
$10-13 billion
Mad Cow, Taiwan
$5-8 billion
Fowl Pest , Nl, $2-3 mm
1990 91 92 93
EEB, Jap
$1,5 mm
avian influenza,
$500 m
Nipah, mayo
HPAI, Italia
$350-400 million $400 million
94 95 96
97 98
EEB, U.S.A.
$3-5 mm
NLEEB, Can
$1,5 mm
99 00 01 02
03
04 05 2006
Source: Bio Economic Research Associates
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Impact on the hospital capacity per week in LAC
outbreak of 8 weeks; attack rate of 25%; scenario 1968
Week
1
2
3
4
Weekly Hospital
Admissions
88,408
147,346
221,020
279,958
% of Hospital
capacity needed
26%
43%
65%
82%
84%
70%
53%
34%
% of capacity in the
ICU needed
98%
209%
321%
423%
458%
446%
354%
245%
344%
730%
1122%
1482%
1604%
1560% 1240% 856%
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% of Respiratory
Use
5
6
7
8
279,958 221,020 147,346 88,408
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Human Infection
with
Influenza A H5N1
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H5N1 Chronology
•
•
•
•
1996 – Highly pathogenic H5N1 isolated in a farm goose in Guangdong, China
1997 – First infection in humans with H5N1 (18 cases, 6 deaths) in Hong Kong.
Mid 2003 – H5N1 starts causing outbreaks in Asia (not detected and not reported)
End of 2003 – beginning of 2004 – Korea, Vietnam, Japan, Thailand, Cambodia, Lao PDR,
Indonesia and China communicate detection of H5N1 in poultry
Feb-Mar 2004 – First human cases in Vietnam and Thailand
Feb 2005 – Cambodia communicates its first case in humans
Jul 2005 – Indonesia communicates its first case in humans
Jul - Ago 2005 – Russia, Kazakhstan and Mongolia communicate H5N1 in poultry
•
•
•
•
• Oct 2005 – Reconstruction of the lethal pandemic of 1918, concludes that it was exclusively
avian and found some similarities with H5N1.
Oct 2005 – H5N1 confirmed in game birds (poultry) in Turkey, Romania and Croatia
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November 2005 – Flamenco migrant tested positive in Kuwait
•
•
• January 2006 – Confirmed human Cases in Turkey and Iraq
• February 2006 – Outbreaks in poultry in Nigeria and Iraq. Wild poultry tested positive in
Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Slovenia, Iran, Austria and Germany
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Characteristics H5N1
• Avian influenza Virus generally does not infect humans, however
several cases have been reported of H5N1 since 1997
• Domestic ducks may act as reservoirs, excreting large quantities of
the highly pathogenic virus and only show minimum signs of the
disease or non at all.
• H5N1 has become progressively in the most lethal for mammals and
may kill aquatic birds, considered until now as natural reservoir free
from the disease.
• There
text are reports that indicate atypical H5N1 infection in Thailand
(since March 04) and Vietnam (since Feb 04), presenting fever and
diarrhea without any respiratory symptoms .
→ Clinical spectrum of the disease may be greater that previously thought.
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Accumulated Confirmed Human Cases of Influenza
H5N1 Notified to the WHO*
12 April, 2006
Countries
Cases
Deaths
Mortality
Azerbaijan
8
5
63%
Cambodia
6
6
100%
China
16
11
69%
Egypt
4
2
50%
Indonesia
31
23
74%
Iraq
2
2
100%
Thailand
24
14
58%
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Turkey
12
4
33%
Vietnam
93
42
45%
Total
194
109
56%
*Referred to confirmed cases by labs
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Source: FAO
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WHO phases of a pandemia
• Interpandemic Period
– Phase 1. No new subtype of
flu in persons. Low risk of
infection due to the circulating
virus of animal flu
– Phase 2. No new subtype of
flu in persons. New animal flu
virus circulating represents a
risk for people
text
•Alert Period of the pandemia
– Phase 3. Human Infection with
the new subtype but without
transmission among persons
– Phase 4. Small accumulations
with limited transmissions
between persons.
– Phase 5. Major Accumulations
but transmission among
persons are still localized
• Pandemic Period
- Phase 6. Pandemic: transmission increases
and sustained in the general population
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Possible Scenarios
• Humans – traveling
– People exposed to game animals who are ill in affected areas
during the pre-pandemic period
– Pandemic
• Birds
– From abroad
• Migratory birds
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Backyard farm
(cock)
Personas
• Illegal Imports
– Local
• Avian Influenza Strain of high patogenicity circulating in the region
• Avian Influenza Strain of low patogenicity circulating in the region
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What we do
not know about the next
pandemic
• The probability that a pandemic may occur
• When is it going to occur
• Where is it going to start
• Which will be the pandemic strain
– H5N1 is probable
• What will be the patogenecity degree of the new
pandemic strain
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– The same as the Spanish flu
– More severe than the Spanish flu
– The same as the Asian and Hong Kong
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What we know ………
• That in human history we never had so many
opportunities to generate a pandemic strain
• That the virus has already turned enzootic in Asia and that
there is a possibility that the same may occur in Africa
and Europe increasing the opportunity of human infection
and the risk of generating a pandemic strain
• That the probability that a pandemic may occur is not zero
text
• That we have to be prepared as if the pandemic would be
within the next few days
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Risk Evaluation
• The risk of a pandemic is large and it will continue
• The evolution of the the threat can not be predicted
• A pandemic would produce considerable diseases, deaths and it would
impact the health, social and economic system
• Presentation of unprecedented levels of diseases and deaths.
• Air travel may increment the dissemination of the virus and reducing the
time available needed to prepare the interventions.
• The health systems may get over saturated quickly, the economy may
be compromised and the social order altered.
• Window
of opportunity for intervening
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– Strengthening the public health system at the national
and international level in order to assume the
management of epidemiological issues
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Purpose of the Workshop
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Preparing for a Pandemic
• It is urgent to have National Preparation Plans for the Influenza
Pandemic.
– Compulsory dispositions mandated via resolutions of the Managing Council in
the 56 World Health Assembly and the 44th Pan American Health Organization
• Guidelines
– Global Influenza Prep Plan of the WHO (in Spanish)
– Check List for the Prep Plan for the Influenza Pandemic of the WHO (in
Spanish)
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• Considering the worse scenario possible
– No vaccines, nor anti viral medicine
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Components of the National Preparation
Plans for an influenza Pandemic
1. Preparation for an
emergency
2. Vigilance (supervision)
3. Investigating cases and
treatment
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4. Preventing the
dissemination of the
disease in the
community
5. Management of the
essential services
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Task Force on Epidemic
Alert & Response
• Inter-programmatic and multidisciplinary Task Force on
Epidemic Alert and Response
• Advise, Enable, Coordinate, and Monitor:
– PAHO activities for to influenza pandemic preparedness and response
– Implementation of the International Health Regulations in the Region
• Responsible for drafting the PAHO Strategic and
Operational Plan for responding to pandemic influenza
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Strategic & Operational Plan in
Responding to Pandemic Influenza
Objectives:
• To direct PAHO Technical Cooperation activities to prepare
the Region for an influenza pandemic
• To assist countries in their Development of National
influenza pandemic preparedness plans
• To assist countries in the supporting actions that need to be
carried out in parallel to drafting plans to have capacity to
text
detect and respond
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Governance,
policy &
partnerships
Disease
Prevention &
Control
Sustainable
Dev’t
&
Environmental
Health
Family &
Community
Health
Emergency
Preparedness &
Disaster Relief
Tech &
Health Services
Delivery
PAHO
Strategic &
Operational Plan
Procurement
Info.
knowledge &
management
PWRs &
CAREC
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Legal
Affairs
Public
Info
Strategic
Health
Dev’t
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Technical Cooperation
Development of NIPPPs
• Assessments of National plans with WHO checklist (CA)
• PWR-level Task Forces to promote and accelerate the
development of national plans
• Introduction of modeling tools (FluAid, FluSurge, Flu
Workloss) for planning purposes to assessment surge
capacity / health services requirements to respond to a
pandemic (CDC)
• Sub-regional exercise to train multi-disciplinary national
teams (USAID):
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–
Develop self-assessments of their national plans
– Develop action plans to fill identified gaps
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Technical Cooperation
Early Warning Systems
• Shift in influenza surveillance paradigm to comply with the newly adopted
International Health Regulations
• Hands-on training on viral isolation and immune fluorescence
• Assessments of national laboratories by Regional experts
• Expansion Global Influenza Network:
– Designation of additional NICs (PAR, ELS)
– Re-activation of non-reporting centers (ECU, HON)
• Pilot interventions to support PAR and COR for the development &
operationalization of National Plans down to local level
• Development of tool to assess countries’ capacity to detect and
text
respond
to an influenza pandemic or any epidemiologic emergency
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Technical Cooperation
Vaccines and Antivirals
• Estimate of Regional demand in progress
• Meeting with international vaccine producers and potential regional
producers to promote technology transfer in November, 2005
• Contact with Roche over possible mechanisms to supply Tamiflu to
the Region (October-November, 2005)
–
–
Assessment of Regional production capacity
Brazil negotiating with Roche – PAHO’s cooperation
• Immunizations unit promoting seasonal influenza vaccine.
–
Seasonal vaccination is taking place in 15 countries targeting high risk
populations
text
– Low global production capacity is a major stumbling block in the
introduction of vaccine
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Since PAHO’s 46th Directing Council
• “International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza” in US
Department of State, October, 2005
•
•
•
•
“Global Pandemic Influenza Readiness” in Ottawa, Canada
Meeting of Andean Ministers of Health
Videoconference of Central American Ministers of Health, October, 2005
Meeting in Geneva to work towards a global consensus to control the virus in
domestic animals and prepare for a potential human influenza pandemic.
November 2005
• Presidential Summit (Summit of the Americas) yielded a plan of action which
tasks PAHO with supporting countries in finalizing their plans by June 2006
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(November, 2005)
• Launching of Brazil’s NIPPP, Rio de Janeiro, November, 2005
• “Hemispheric Conference on Surveillance and Prevention of Avian Influenza”
Brasilia, November, 2005
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Challenges
• Public Health Infrastructure: Strengthening of core
capabilities within the framework of the recently adopted
International Health Regulations (IHR-2005)
• Financial mechanisms and instruments (incentives,
compensation, contingency plans and emergency response)
• Interagency coordination (Shared Agenda)
• Political commitment in view of competing priorities
• text
Guidelines and emergency plans for UN/IO staff.
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Final Remarks
• Develop a specific scenario for the Americas,
based on:
– Preparedness for pandemic influenza beyond H5N1
– Strengthen response and containment in animal
health sector
– Strengthen public health response in the framework
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of the INH requirements.
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Thank you !
text
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