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WHO Fears Avian Virus May Mutate

'Unprecedented spread' raises prospect of a variation enabling rapid human transmission.

The World

January 26, 2004|Thomas H. Maugh II, Times Staff Writer

The lethal avian flu that has infected tens of millions of chickens throughout Southeast Asia has been confirmed in Indonesia -- the seventh country ensnared in what the World Health Organization calls a "historically unprecedented spread" of the disease.

In another disturbing report, WHO also said that the virus has mutated sufficiently to become impervious to two of the most commonly used and inexpensive antiviral drugs, amantadine and rimantadine. It is also not affected by a vaccine that the agency hoped to begin using within a month.


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That vaccine was developed against the Hong Kong strain of avian influenza that killed one person there in 2003. The virus responsible for the current episode is substantially different, and WHO spokesmen said that a new vaccine would not be available for at least six months, or until the next flu season.

So far there have been 10 confirmed cases and seven deaths from the disease. The victims had been in direct contact with infected chickens; the virus does not yet appear to be transmitted from human to human.

The greatest fear of researchers at WHO and elsewhere is that, as more humans are infected, the virus will merge with a human influenza virus to produce a more infectious form that will pass readily among humans.

That process is called recombination, and the influenza virus has an unmatched propensity for it, which is why a new flu vaccine must be created each year.

Similar recombinations occurred in 1957 and 1968, producing large-scale flu outbreaks, but those viruses were not as lethal as the current one appears to be.

WHO officials believe the avian flu outbreak has the potential to become a more serious problem than last winter's SARS outbreak, which infected more than 8,000 people and killed 774. The coronavirus that causes SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome, is less transmissible among humans than are influenza viruses.

Health officials hope to control the avian flu outbreak before it reaches that stage. "There is a chance that something can go wrong," Dr. Karl Stohr, head of WHO's flu program, said Friday in Geneva. With decisive and timely action, he said, it seems "there is a window of opportunity here to control the disease before it takes global proportions."

Like Thailand before it, Indonesia had adamantly denied the presence of avian flu within its borders, attributing large-scale deaths of chickens to Exotic Newcastle disease, which is not a danger to humans.

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