Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

MUTANT FLU SHOCK

Changing virus could render vaccine ineffectiv­e

- SUE DUNLEVY sue.dunlevy@news.com.au

THE flu has mutated and it may no longer be a good match for the vaccine as Australia’s record-breaking flu season gets even worse.

It comes as a breakthrou­gh by Australian researcher­s means the annual flu jab could one day be replaced with a more effective vaccine that lasts for five or 10 years or even a lifetime.

More than 120,000 Australian­s have been struck down by the flu so far this year with more than 220 killed by the virus.

THE flu has mutated and it may no longer be a good match for the vaccine as Australia’s record-breaking flu season gets even worse.

It comes as a breakthrou­gh by Australian researcher­s means the annual flu jab could one day be replaced with a more effective vaccine that lasts for five or 10 years or even a lifetime.

More than 120,000 Australian­s have been struck down by the flu so far this year with more than 220 killed by the virus.

Five times more people had caught the flu by July this year than during our worst ever outbreak in 2017, when 1255 people died from influenza in Australia.

Griffith University influenza expert Professor Paul van Buynder says one reason is that a key strain of the flu virus appears to have mutated.

World Health Organisati­on Influenza Centre spokeswoma­n Professor Kanta Subbarao, whose laboratory tests samples of flu circulatin­g in the community, has confirmed testing shows the H3N2 strain of flu has mutated.

“We don’t know how much those molecular changes will affect how the vaccine protects,” she said.

It was a mutation in the H3N2 strain of flu that was behind the worst flu season on record in 2017 and the WHO lab says this appears to be the dominant strain of the flu circulatin­g in the community at the moment.

Australian­s should continue to get the flu vaccinatio­n because it protects against three other strains of the virus and could reduce the severity of any H3N2 infection, Professor Subbarao said.

But she warns Australian­s to take additional measures to reduce the spread of the flu by staying home if sick, washing hands and using anti-viral drugs if vulnerable people are infected.

The flu virus continuall­y mutates as a result of errors that occur in the RNA when it reproduces itself.

This can mean the vaccine no longer works to prime our bodies to fight the changed version of the virus and we can catch the flu even if we had the flu shot.

The strains of flu included in the annual flu vaccine are determined in September each year and this often means that by April and May the following year when the shot is provided it is no longer a good match, Professor Subbarao said.

“The vaccine effectiven­ess has been poor for the last five years,” she said. “The H3N2 virus is the one we worry about because it affects the very young and the elderly.

“As soon as we see H3N2 we know there will be more problems in the elderly.” The elderly are not as vulnerable to the H1N1 virus in circulatio­n because it appears they may have caught a similar virus in the past and have some protection against it, she said.

Professor Subbarao said in September and October when the flu season ends experts will tally data on how many people who had the flu shot contracted the virus to determine how effective the vaccine was.

A summer flu outbreak has seen an unusually high number of cases already this year and there were over 45,000 confirmed cases in June, the highest number on record.

This is even before the flu season’s traditiona­l peak period of September and October.

THE H3N2 VIRUS IS THE ONE WE WORRY ABOUT BECAUSE IT AFFECTS THE VERY YOUNG AND THE ELDERLY

PROFESSOR KANTA SUBBARAO

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