Bird
flu 'could mutate to cause deadly human pandemic'
The
H5N1 bird flu virus could change into a form able to spread rapidly
between humans, scientists have warned.
BBC,
21
June, 2012
Researchers
have identified five genetic changes that could allow the virus to
start a deadly pandemic.
Writing
in the journal Science,
they say it would be theoretically possible for these changes to
occur in nature.
A
US agency has tried unsuccessfully to ban publication of parts of the
research fearing it could be used by terrorists to create a
bioweapon.
According
to Prof Ron Fouchier from the Erasmus Medical Centre in the
Netherlands, who led the research, publication of the work in full
will give the wider scientific community the best possible chance to
combat future flu pandemics.
"We
hope to learn which viruses can cause pandemics and by knowing that
we might be able to prevent them by enforcing strict eradication
programmes," he told BBC News.
He
added that his work might also speed the development of vaccines and
anti-viral drugs against a lethal form of bird flu that could spread
rapidly among people.
The
H5N1 virus has been responsible for the deaths of tens of millions of
birds and has led to hundreds of millions more being slaughtered to
stop its spread.
The
virus is also deadly to humans but can only be transmitted by close
contact with infected birds.
Coughs
and sneezes
It
is for this reason that relatively few people have died of bird flu.
Latest World Health Organization (WHO) figures indicate 332 people
have died of the illness since 2003.
Health
officials are concerned though that the H5N1 virus could one day
mutate into a form that could be spread between humans through coughs
and sneezes through the air.
This
could, they fear, result in a lethal pandemic that could spread
rapidly across the world killing tens of millions of people.
It
is only now that a study has confirmed that the emergence of such a
deadly virus is theoretically possible.
A
group led by Prof Fouchier wanted to find out which genetic changes
were required to enable the H5N1 virus to mutate into a form that
could be transmitted from person to person through the air.
Bird
flu can only be spread by close contact but the virus could mutate to
be transmitted through coughs
His
team compared the genetic structure of the bird flu virus with those
responsible for earlier human flu pandemics.
The
researchers found five key differences, which they reasoned could be
the mutations required for airborne transmission of the virus.
They
confirmed their theory was correct by genetically engineering those
changes into the H5N1 virus which they found could then be spread
between ferrets through coughing and sneezing.
A
team from Cambridge University then looked to see whether such a
mutation could emerge naturally and if so its likelihood.
The
researchers studied the genetic structure of 3,000 bird viruses and
400 that occur in humans.
They
found some of these viruses had two of the key changes needed to
become airborne. Mathematical modelling suggested it was indeed
possible for a virus to develop the three further changes required
during the course of an epidemic.
Bioweapon
It
is the first time it has been shown that it is possible for bird flu
to become airborne, but the research team was unable to determine
precisely how likely this was to happen.
Prof
Derek Smith, who led the analysis, said more information was needed.
He
said researchers required a better understanding of how flu viruses
were transmitted between people in order to develop a clearer idea of
the likelihood of the emergence of an airborne strain of bird flu.
"These
are difficult things to find out," Prof Smith told BBC News.
"What
this work enables us to do is to prioritise particular experiments to
obtain this information".
It
is clear though that the emergence of an airborne mutation of H5N1 is
unlikely. Were it not it would have emerged already.
But
researchers want to be able to calculate the risk of such a virus
emerging more precisely in order to help public health officials in
their contingency planning.
News
of Prof Fouchier's work, and another similar study by Yoshihiro
Kawaoka published this May in the journal Nature, prompted the US
National Security Advisory Board for Biotechnology (NSABB) to ask
both journals last November to redact some sensitive parts of the
research.
The
NSABB believed the information could be used by terrorists to create
a bioweapon.
The
scientists who carried out the research, and the journals concerned,
considered suggestions as to how the results could be redacted in the
journals, but distributed to bona fide researchers who urgently
needed the information.
But
they concluded such a system was unworkable.
"You
can't share information with so many people in the field and keep it
confidential," according to Prof Fouchier.
Editor
in chief of the journal Science, Dr Bruce Alberts, said the
publication of the research in both Science and Nature had "shone
a spotlight" on the need to deal more effectively with research
that could be misused by terrorists - so called "dual use
research of concern" (Durc).
"It
has become clear that we will need to work toward the establishment
of a comprehensive, international system for assessing Durc, one that
includes transparent procedures to allow selected access to any
information omitted from a scientific publication to those with a
need to know".
But
Prof Fouchier questioned whether a system of asking scientific
journals to censor Durc work is ever workable or even appropriate.
"The
general mode should be that science should be freely available so
that the wider scientific community can build on the research,"
he said.
"I
have a hard time identifying research papers that you shouldn't
publish. So I'm not sure whether we should ever go down this alley".
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