Flu experts gather with H5N1 risk on the agenda
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[February 24, 2023]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) - The world's leading experts on influenza met this
week to discuss the threat posed to humans by a strain of H5N1 avian flu
that has caused record numbers of bird deaths around the world in recent
months.
The group of scientists, regulators and vaccine manufacturers meets
twice a year to decide which strain of seasonal flu to include in the
vaccine for the upcoming winter season, in this case for the northern
hemisphere.
But it is also a chance to discuss the risk of animal viruses spilling
over to humans and causing a pandemic. At this week's meeting, H5N1
clade 2.3.4.4b was a key topic, the World Health Organization (WHO) and
global flu experts told Reuters. They will brief reporters on both the
seasonal flu vaccine composition and spillover risks later on Friday.
"We are more prepared (than for COVID), but even if we are more
prepared, we are not yet prepared enough," Sylvie Briand, WHO director
of global infectious hazard preparedness, said ahead of the meeting. "We
need to really continue the efforts for a flu pandemic."
Experts have been tracking H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b since it emerged in 2020,
but recent reports of mass deaths in infected mammals from seals to
bears, as well as potential mammal-to-mammal transmission on a Spanish
mink farm last year, have raised concern.
However, there have been very few human cases, and the WHO currently
assesses the threat to humans as low.
"This is a natural experiment playing out in front of us, and I don't
think we are complacent," said Nicola Lewis, director of the WHO
Collaborating Centre on Influenza at the Crick Institute in London.
Speaking before the meeting, she said it would include assessments of
the situation worldwide.
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A person holds a test tube labelled
"Bird Flu", in this picture illustration, January 14, 2023.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Experts also discussed potential
vaccine development.
WHO-affiliated labs already hold two flu virus
strains that are closely related to the circulating H5N1 virus,
which could be used by vaccine manufacturers to create a human
vaccine if needed. One of them was added after the previous WHO flu
meeting in September 2022, and labs around the world are currently
testing how closely both subtypes match the strain spreading among
animals to determine whether any more updates are necessary.
A number of companies that produce seasonal flu vaccines can also
make pandemic flu vaccines. For example, GSK and CSL Seqirus are
already working with the United States Biomedical Advanced Research
and Development Authority (BARDA) to test shots based on one of the
closely-related strains.
Having these strains ready could save around two months in the
development of a vaccine, said the WHO's Briand. But getting enough
vaccine developed quickly would still remain a challenge in a
pandemic situation, the experts said.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Mark Potter)
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