Showing posts with label Tamiflu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tamiflu. Show all posts

Sunday, March 6, 2016

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Health Ministry Issues Warning As Jamaica Records Fourth Swine Flu-Related Death - The Number Of Confirmed Cases Now Up To 28!


March 6, 2016 - JAMAICA - The Ministry of Health is appealing to persons who fall within the high-risk groups for severe complications to seek treatment early if they experience symptoms of Influenza infection.

This comes as the country recorded its fourth Influenza A(H1N1) associated death. The latest patient is a pregnant woman who had other illnesses, including lung related complications.

Chief Medical Officer Dr. Winston De La Haye advises that persons with other illnesses usually experience more severe symptoms of Influenza A(H1N1) which can lead to a worsening of their pre-existing condition.

To date, four persons have died, all of whom had severe complications including heart and lung related illnesses.

The patient, a 29-year-old woman was pregnant with twins. She died at the University Hospital of the West Indies. In the meantime,
a hospital official says there have now been 28 cases of adults and seven children with the swine flu.



“Patients in the high risk groups usually have other illnesses made worse by the infection or a compromised immune system. We generally see the greatest effects in persons with non-communicable diseases such as heart and lung related illnesses and respiratory diseases such as asthma,” De La Haye said.

He says it is important that treatment for these persons is initiated early so that there is a greater chance of recovery.

“I am appealing to persons in the high risk group including pregnant women, young children, the elderly, those with non-communicable diseases and any illness or undergoing treatment that weakens the immune system to seek medical help as soon as they begin to notice symptoms,” he said.

Influenza presents with symptoms including fever, sore throat, cough, stuffy nose, headache and body aches and fatigue. Nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea may also be experienced.



  Since January, the Ministry of Health has confirmed 28 cases of Influenza A(H1N1). The death of any person who had any of the associated conditions of the flu is recorded as an H1N1 death.

The Centre for Disease Control’s National Centre for Health Statistics estimates that 56,979 persons die each year from influenza and pneumonia associated complications.

Individuals who wish to obtain more information may call the Ministry of Health or the nearest health centre.

Persons may also visit the ministry's website at moh.gov.jm and like and follow us on www.facebook.com/themohgovjm; https://twitter.com/themohgovjm; https://instagram.com/themohgovjm.

- Jamaica Gleaner.




Monday, February 29, 2016

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Jamaica Records Second Swine Flu-Related Death - The Number Of Confirmed Cases Now Up To 10!


February 29, 2016 - JAMAICA - The Health Ministry is reporting a second death linked to the H1N1 virus commonly called (Swine Flu).

At the same time, the number of confirmed cases is now up to 10.

Acting chief medical officer in the Health Ministry, Dr Winston De La Haye, says the second patient to have died was a 49-year-old woman who had "other complicating illnesses".

She died at the University Hospital of the West Indies on February 23.

However, De La Haye says the positive result from a test for H1N1 was received only yesterday.


The second patient to have died was a 49-year-old woman who had "other complicating illnesses".

Fifty-year-old medical doctor, Suzanna Roye, who was also admitted at the UHWI, was the first patient to die from H1N1-related issues.

In the meantime, De La Haye says Jamaica remains on high alert for a possible spread of the virus.




"What we really want to stress is persons to do the appropriate hygiene," he said.

The virus was first reported in Jamaica in early February.

Swine Flu is a category one illness which means that within 24 hours of suspecting a case of severe acute respiratory illness, medical practitioners must report it to the health authority. - Jamaica Gleaner.





Tuesday, February 23, 2016

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Jamaica Activates National Influenza Plan Following Spike In Swine Flu Cases - 10 H1N1 Cases Since The Start Of The Year, Including The Death Of A Female Doctor; Country On High Alert!


February 23, 2016 - JAMAICA - The Ministry of Health is putting measures in place to prepare the health sector for more influenza cases, following an increase in cases of H1N1, commonly referred to as Swine Flu, and one death linked to that illness.

And Minister of Health Horace Dalley says he has instructed the National Emergency Operations Centre team to activate the national influenza plan.

“We have been reviewing our systems to ensure that we are able to manage any increase in cases that may come at our public health facilities. The team has been instructed to ensure that the necessary resources are put in place across all the Regional Health Authorities,” he said.

Chief Medical Officer Dr. Winston De La Haye says the ministry has been monitoring symptoms associated with influenza viruses through its surveillance system and has noted an increase in cases over the past six weeks.


Minister of Health Horace Dalley (Photo: Jamaica Gleaner)

As a result doctors have been advised to report cases of influenza on suspicion within 24 hours.

“We have confirmed 10 cases since the start of the year and so far identified two strains of influenza viruses that are circulating among the population. Nine of the ten cases are H1N1. That nine includes one death. We have been strengthening our systems and increasing our supplies of medication to deal with this increase,” Dr. De La Haye said.

Over the weekend, a female doctor who was infected with H1N1, died in hospital. It was the first H1N1-related death in Jamaica.




The ministry says additional supplies of Tami Flu, used to treat H1N1, have been acquired with more supplies to come. But Dr. De La Haye noted that Tamiflu is only used to treat symptoms in severely affected patients and does not prevent illness.

Other measures put in place include: frontline staff being offered the flu vaccine, isolation areas in hospitals prepared, additional equipment, testing capacity being increased and increased public education.




Dr. De La Haye is urging citizens to also take steps to protect themselves and others from infection by observing proper hygiene practices.

Influenza is a viral respiratory illness that presents with symptoms including fever, sore throat, cough, stuffy nose, headache and body aches and fatigue. Nausea, vomiting and diarrhea may also be experienced.Influenza viruses are mainly spread from person to person through droplets produced while coughing or sneezing, or by persons touching surfaces contaminated with droplets. - Caribbean 360.







Wednesday, June 12, 2013

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: China Confirms 131 H7N9 Bird Flu Cases With 39 Deaths - Federal Officials Weigh Vaccine Options!

June 12, 2013 - CHINA - A total of 131 H7N9 avian flu cases have been reported on the Chinese mainland, including 39 cases resulting in deaths, authorities said. Of the total, 78 H7N9 patients have been discharged from hospitals after receiving treatment. The other 14 patients are being treated in hospitals, reported Xinhua Sunday citing the National Health and Family Planning Commission. It said the China’s confirmed H7N9 virus cases are isolated and there has been no sign of human-to-human transmission.




The H7N9 bird flu is a form of the Influenza virus A. Detecting the presence of this virus is very difficult because it does not cause illness in poultry. It is a virulent form of the H1N1 virus and has a much higher fatality rate.  


What is H7N9?
H7N9 bird flu is a form of avian flu that is spread from infected poultry to humans. In the name given to the disease, the H7 stands for haemaglutinin or HA. Haemaglutinin is a glycoprotein found on the surface of the influenza virus. Its main function is to cause the agglutination (clumping of particles/cells) of blood. HA has 17 different parts and they are labeled as part H1 to H17. H7 is the type of haemaglutinin found in this particular virus. The ‘N7’ stands for Viral neuraminidase, its main function is to help viral DNA enter the patients’ cells and cause infection. Like Haemaglutinin, Viral neuraminidase also has a number of parts and N9 is the type of neuraminidase found in this particular virus.

The H7N9 bird flu is a form of the Influenzavirus A. It has been found to commonly infect people who handle poultry infected with the virus. Detecting this virus is very difficult because it does not cause illness in poultry. It is a virulent form of the H1N1 virus and the CDC and WHO(World Health Organisatiom) are still looking into its origin, the way it is transmitted and a possible vaccine for the condition.

 According to the CDC and WHO the symptoms of mild avian flu are the same as having a viral fever. Symptoms include sore throat, running nose, muscle aches. Symptoms of infection by a more virulent form of the disease include severe respiratory illness, shortness of breath, difficulty breathing, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress, viral pneumonia, respiratory failure, multi-organ disease, sometimes accompanied by nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, confusion, dizziness etc.

Diagnosis of Avian Flu:
The avian flu cannot be diagnosed by clinical signs and symptoms alone, there are a few basic tests that a physician is likely to prescribe in such a case. To perform the test, a lab technician will take a swab of the throat of the person. This will then be used to culture the organism in the lab. Tests usually performed are molecular analysis and culture (growing the organism) analysis. In cases where there is a severe form of the disease, the technician might take a swab from the lower respiratory tract (a region a little lower in the throat). This again will be analyzed like a normal swab. If the Influenzavirus A is still not detected, the lab may perform a test called the viral antigen detection test. This test is used to identify if the patient’s body has produced antigens (fighting cells) against the influenza virus.

In the case of the H7N9 virus, the time of testing is crucial to accurate diagnosis. A person cannot be tested at the onset of the disease nor when he/she has fully recovered. This is because the virus is very rarely detected under such circumstances.
 
Treatment options:

The CDC and WHO has found that the H7N9 virus is sensitive to neuramidase inhibitors such as oseltamivir or zanamivir. These are drugs sold under the commercial name of Tamiflu. As a precaution doctor says that people should avoid the indiscrimate use of this drug as it could lead to  antibiotic resistance in patients.

Methods of prevention:

The influenza virus A or the Avian flu can be prevented by simple measures. Firstly, people working with poultry should take adequate protection before handling them. Protective measures such as wearing a mask and gloves are the best methods. People should also ensure that they wash their hands well before eating or touching their face or nose. Currently the CDC has not been able to pinpoint the exact mode of transmission from human-to-human, but they do suggest that people should avoid contact with patients infected with the virus.  It is also suggested that patients should be effectively quarantined during the time of the infection. All in all the H7N9 hasn’t given the authorities much to worry about till now! - Health India.



Federal Officials Weigh H7N9 Vaccine Options
Intensive federal deliberations are under way on whether to stockpile a vaccine against the H7N9 flu virus that emerged this spring in China, similar to the government's response to the H5N1 avian flu threat, health officials said today.

In the meantime, vaccine companies are getting ready to produce enough vaccine for clinical trials, which are slated to begin in August, according to an update presented before the National Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC), an outside group that assists the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The meeting was broadcast live on the Web.

Robin Robinson, PhD, director of the HHS' Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) told the group that over the past 4 years federal health officials have used an assessment tool to weigh the risks of novel flu viruses and consider any steps to take with vaccine and other preparedness activities.

He said the risk weighting for H7N9 virus and the 2009 H1N1 virus bear some resemblances, with an uncanny similarity in timing. "It's been 4 years and 1 week since I was here to talk about possible pandemic vaccine efforts [for the 2009 pandemic H1N1 virus]," Robinson said.

When the variant H3N2 virus popped up at state and county fairs in the United States last summer, federal officials used the same risk-assessment tool and decided to go only as far as making enough vaccine for clinical trials, he said. However, if the H7N9 virus evolves to support sustained human-to-human transmission, the government would consider a large-scale vaccine campaign.

In stockpiling discussions, federal officials are weighing factors such as whom to vaccinate, what vaccine platforms to include, production capacity, timing, and cost, Robinson said. A decision on stockpiling could come this summer, he added.

Vaccine development details

So far nine different H7N9 seed strains have been developed for vaccine production, and most of them were made with reverse genetics. However, Robinson said some classic reassortants are starting to emerge.

Reminiscent of the 2009 H1N1 vaccine, health officials are seeing disappointing yields of antigen with the vaccine seeds used with traditional egg-based production methods, Robinson said. Lower-than-expected antigen yield was one factor that hampered the H1N1 vaccine in its early stages of production. However, he said one change from 2009 is that scientists can recognize that issue up front. Officials saw antigen yield increase in 2009 as production of the pandemic vaccine hit its stride.

A major difference between 2009 and now is that the H7N9 trials will include two new platforms—cell based and recombinant. "We have more tools in our toolbox," he said.

In October 2012 a 3-year review of existing influenza vaccines called out gaps in protection, especially in older people. Its researchers said the newest vaccine technology targets the same part of the flu virus—the hemagglutinin (HA) head—as traditional vaccines and aren't likely to yield substantial efficacy improvements.
The group, from the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, publisher of CIDRAP News concluded that new approaches are needed, such as vaccines that target the HA stalk, and that major national and global efforts are required to overcome significant challenges in producing a game-changing flu vaccine.

Progress on the recombinant vaccines is running a little ahead of the traditional vaccines, with better antigen yields so far, Robinson said, predicting that the first vaccine lots will be released in July, with the first clinical trials to launch in August. "That may sound familiar, because that's when we started testing the H1N1 vaccine," Robinson said.

BARDA has been supporting an H7N1 vaccine candidate made by GlaxoSmithKline, and trials of that vaccine will launch in early July, he said. Given that the vaccine is a "cousin" of the H7N9 vaccine, those trials are likely to produce interesting findings shortly in advance of the H7N9 results. The H7N1 virus is one of a handful of flu strains considered to have pandemic potential.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has already started work on the potency assay reagents that will be used to assess the candidate H7N9 vaccines, Robinson said. He added that at least two alternate potency assays are being assessed. A federal countermeasure assessment and a White House review of the 2009 H1N1 vaccine campaign both suggested that new vaccine potency assays might be one way to shorten pandemic vaccine production timelines.

H7N9 challenges ahead

Looking ahead to the H7N9 trials, federal officials and researchers will have some daunting challenges. "Historically, H7 vaccines haven't provided a very rosy picture for us," Robinson said. "We have our work cut out for us."

Earlier trials of inactivated subunit H7 vaccines with and without adjuvant haven't shown a strong immune response, he said. "That is alarming."

Robinson said live-attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) trials with H7 strains have shown modest immunity, for what can actually be measured. More recently, studies have hinted that priming with LAIV H7 vaccine followed by vaccination with inactivated vaccine may produce a robust response, he told the group.

Last month, CIDRAP Director Michael T. Osterholm, PhD, MPH, and colleagues said in a Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) commentary that if the H7N9 evolves into a pandemic strain, the world is unlikely to make enough of the vaccine in time to dampen the impact. Besides the limited effectiveness of H7 vaccines tested so far, the global public health community remains unprepared, they wrote, despite added vaccination production capacity.

The group projected that at the 90-microgram (mcg) dose used for the H5N1 vaccine, the global capacity for H7N9 vaccine would be 757 million doses, less than 15% of the global need.

Robinson said researchers don't know what dosage is needed, but given the lack of population immunity to H7 strains, the amount of antigen in a dose of unadjuvanted vaccine might require as much as 90 mcg, as with the H5N1 version. He predicted that two doses of H7N9 vaccine would be needed. With that estimate, it would take 18 months to provide enough vaccine for everyone, with the cost likely to be prohibitive, he said.
As federal officials weigh different H7N9 vaccine scenarios, one decision they have made is that its production should not delay seasonal flu vaccine manufacturing, he said.

The combination of factors involves may increase the possibility that a dose-sparing adjuvanted vaccine would be needed in an H7N9 immunization campaign, Robinson said. Unlike in many other parts of the world, adjuvants haven't been used in US flu vaccines, and their inclusion in a pandemic vaccine would create challenges in pitching it to a public that is unfamiliar with the vaccine boosters.

NVAC members asked federal health officials about H7N9 vaccine efforts under way in China. During the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, China was the first country to bring a vaccine to market. Robinson said several different companies in China are developing H7N9 vaccines. "They are probably at the same point we are," he said. - CIDRAP.






Monday, June 3, 2013

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Shanghai Man Dies From H7N9 Avian Influenza - Becomes 38th Fatality!

June 03, 2013 - CHINA - A man diagnosed with avian influenza H7N9 approximately two months ago, has succumbed to the new viral disease, say the Shanghai Municipal Health and Family Planning Commission, the Indo-Asian News Service reports Saturday.


Under a high magnification, this negatively-stained transmission electron micrograph (TEM) captured some of the ultrastructural details exhibited by the new influenza A (H7N9) virus.
Image/CDC

The 59-year-old man becomes the 38th death reported due to the bird flu virus.

To date, there are a total of 132 laboratory-confirmed cases, including 38 deaths.

Influenza A(H7N9) is one of a subgroup of influenza viruses that normally circulate among birds. Until recently, this virus had not been seen in people. However, human infections have now been detected in China.

Thus far, most patients with this infection have had severe pneumonia. Symptoms include fever, cough and shortness of breath.

At a special presentation on the response to the recent emergence of human infection with avian influenza A(H7N9) virus in China was held during the 66th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Dr Margaret Chan, the WHO Director-General said:

“Chinese officials have promptly traced, monitored, and tested thousands of patient contacts, including hundreds of health care workers. At present, human-to-human transmission of the virus is negligible. However, influenza viruses constantly reinvent themselves. No one can predict the future course of this outbreak.”
- Global Dispatch.



Tuesday, May 28, 2013

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: CONTAGION - Two Die After H7N9 Bird Flu Virus Develops Drug Resistance, Already Showing The Ability To Mutate To Avoid Treatment With Tamiflu!

May 28, 2013 - CHINA - Scientists have found the first cases of the new bird flu virus proving resistant to treatment with Tamiflu or similar drugs. The virus has so far killed 36 people in China and been confirmed in 95 others.




The analysis of the course of the H7N9 bird flu virus and use of antivirals in 14 patients, reported in the Lancet medical journal, found that three severely ill people did not respond to the group of medicines that are the standard weapon against threatened flu pandemics. Two died and the third still needed specialist equipment to oxygenate their blood at the time the research paper was submitted.

The authors, from Shanghai and Hong Kong, said that in these cases genetic testing showed a mutation. In one patient, it seemed to have occurred after the infection took hold, probably as a result of the treatment.

They said: "The apparent ease with which antiviral resistance emerges in (H7N9) viruses is concerning: it needs to be closely monitored and considered in future pandemic response plans."

However, they said that in most cases, treatment with oseltamivir (Tamiflu) "even when started 48 hours or more after disease onset, was associated with falling viral load in most patients … Therefore, early treatment of suspected or confirmed cases is strongly encouraged".




The same message was given by the World Health Organisation, which said scientists at its collaborating centre in Beijing had found "discrepancies" in samples of virus tested in laboratory conditions but not linked to clinical cases. But the study, as yet unpublished, did not differentiate between resistance and possible impurities.

It believed neuraminidase inhibitors – the group of treatments to which Tamiflu belongs – could still be effective. "Based on this, our treatment recommendations have not changed: the potential severity of H7N9-associated illness warrants recommending that all confirmed cases, probable cases, and H7N9 cases under investigation, receive antiviral treatment with a neuraminidase inhibitor drug as early as possible." - Guardian.