The first scientific analysis of probable human-to-human transmission of a new strain of avian influenza that emerged in China this year gives the strongest evidence yet that the H7N9 virus can pass between people, scientists said yesterday.
Research published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) analyzing a family cluster of cases of H7N9 infection in eastern China found it was very likely the virus was “transmitted directly from the index patient [a 60-year-old man] to his daughter.”
Experts commenting on the research said while it did not necessarily mean H7N9 is any closer to becoming the next flu pandemic, “it does provide a timely reminder of the need to remain extremely vigilant.”
“The threat posed by H7N9 has by no means passed,” James Rudge and Richard Coker of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said in a commentary in the same journal.
However, the scientists who led the study stressed that the virus has not yet developed the ability to transmit from person to person efficiently — meaning the risk is very low that it could cause a human pandemic in its current form.
The new avian flu virus, which was unknown in humans until February, has so far infected at least 132 people in China and one in Taiwan, killing 43 of them, according to the latest WHO data.
Most cases have been in people who had visited live poultry markets or had close contact with live poultry seven to 10 days before falling ill.
The BMJ study, led by Bao Chang-jun at the Jiangsu Province Center for Disease Control and Prevention, analyzed a family cluster of two H7N9 patients — a father and daughter — in eastern China in March.
The first “index” patient — the 60-year-old man — regularly went to a live poultry market and fell ill five to six days after his last exposure to poultry.
He was admitted to hospital on March 11. When his symptoms became worse, he was transferred to an intensive care unit (ICU) on March 15, but died of multiple organ failure on May 4, the study reported.
The second patient, his healthy 32-year-old daughter, had no known exposure to live poultry, but provided direct bedside care for her father in the hospital before he went to the ICU.
She developed symptoms six days after her last contact with her father and went into hospital on March 24. She was moved to the ICU on March 28 and died of multiple organ failure on April 24.
Strains of the virus isolated from samples taken from each patient were “almost genetically identical” — a strong suggestion that the virus was transmitted directly from the father to the daughter, the researchers said.
“To our best knowledge, this is the first report of probable transmissibility of the novel virus person-to-person with detailed epidemiological, clinical and virological data,” they wrote.
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