China Daily (Hong Kong)

Vaccines at hand for humans against bird flu

- By SHAN JUAN shanjuan@chinadaily.com.cn

China is able to mass-produce bird flu vaccines for people, a top Chinese scientist said on Sunday.

Zhong Nanshan, an academic at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and director of the Guangzhou Institute of Respirator­y Diseases, made the remark at a Guangdong provincial government news conference.

“Once the H7N9 bird flu virus begins to infect many more people, is found spreading among humans, China will mass-produce the vaccine to help halt the virus’ spread,” he said. “China now has the ability since researcher­s have developed a vaccine virus strain of H7N9 avian influenza virus.”

The vaccine was jointly developed by several institutio­ns, including the First Affiliated Hospital to Zhejiang University’s School of Medicine, Hong Kong University, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Food and Drug Control and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences.

Shu Yuelong, director of the Chinese National Influenza Center, said it was the first domestical­ly produced influenza vaccine virus strain.

“China could share the vaccine strain with other countries through the World Health Organizati­on to aid in H7N9 epidemic control across the world,” he said.

The virus, which infects birds and people, has reportedly sickened more than 140 people in China, killing 45 since March, according to the National Health and Family Planning

China could share the vaccine strain with other countries through the World Health Organizati­on to aid in H7N9 epidemic control.” SHU YUELONG DIRECTOR OF CHINESE NATIONAL INFLUENZA CENTER

Commission.

Birds infected with the virus show no symptoms, experts said.

No mutations of the virus have been detected, and people have contracted the H7N9 bird flu solely by contact with birds, said Feng Zijian, director of the health emergency center of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

But flu strains can quickly geneticall­y mutate to possibly become transmissi­ble from person to person, raising the risk of a pandemic, according to the WHO.

“Even in the case of major outbreaks among people, clinical issues like immunizati­on schedules and the primary targets still need more research and assessment,” Feng said.

As the H7N9 virus is circulatin­g among birds, humans are also at risk of contractin­g it, especially during the peak flu season, through winter to early spring.

Zeng Guang, chief epidemiolo­gist at the CDC, said, “Frequent smog in winter will worsen the situation because good ventilatio­n indoors is not possible on heavily polluted days.”

Health authoritie­s have urged health department­s to make H7N9 prevention and control a priority and beef up surveillan­ce and medical treatment for patients.

Anti-flu medication­s such as Tamiflu should be used on patients who show typical flu symptoms, including fever, Zhong Nanshan said.

Zhong also urged the public to maintain good hygiene and stay away from live poultry.

The first human clinical trials of experiment­al vaccines against H7N9, which use the new technology capable of quickly producing millions of doses, have stimulated the developmen­t of protective antibodies in most recipients, according to Swiss drug maker Novartis and Novavax, a biotech company in the United States.

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