[Ip-health] WHO issues bird flu warning, warns on Tamiflu research

Michelle Childs michelle.childs@cptech.org
Wed Nov 8 08:12:05 2006


<snip>.It also cautioned against regarding the anti-viral drug Tamiflu as
a magic bullet, highlighting that some H5N1 viruses seem to already be
naturally resistant to the effects of the drug.

Link to copy of the report:
Influenza research at the human and animal interface
Report of a WHO working group ,Geneva, Switzerland, 21-22 September 2006

http://www.who.int/csr/resources/publications/influenza/WHO_CDS_EPR_GIP_200=
6_3C.pdf


Press report:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/11/03/bird_flu_warning/

WHO issues bird flu warning, warns on Tamiflu research
Virulence and resistance discussed
By Lucy Sherriff &#8594;
Published Friday 3rd November 2006 11:36 GMT .

 The World Health Organisation has warned that there is no guarantee that
a pandemic strain of the H5N1 virus will be less deadly to people. The
report, published this week, contains the findings of a meeting of flu
experts held last month.

The method of change will determine how deadly the virus is, the report
says. If the virus changes by exchanging genes with a human flu virus, a
process called reassortment, a pandemic might not be too deadly. However,
straightforward adaptive mutation would leave the virulence of the disease
unchanged, the scientists warned.

 It also cautioned against regarding the anti-viral drug Tamiflu as a
magic bullet, highlighting that some H5N1 viruses seem to already be
naturally resistant to the effects of the drug.

The report comes less than two weeks after the Centre for Ecology and
Hydrology (CEH) in the UK issued a warning about the possible
environmental effects of large scale use of Tamiflu.

Dr Andrew Singer of the CEH said: "An antiviral drug has never been widely
used before, so we need to determine what might happen. During a flu
pandemic, millions of people will all take Tamiflu at the same time. Over
just eight or nine weeks, massive amounts of the drug will be expelled in
sewage and find its way into the rivers. It could have huge effects on the
fish and other wildlife."

A build up of the drug in rivers could cause the avian version of the
virus to become resistant to it, which could lead to a new, resistant
strain emerging in humans, Singer argues.

He is calling for research into ways to safely break the anti-viral down
once it is in the sewage system but before it reaches the public
waterways. =AE



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