China Daily

Flu and COVID- 19 double infection poses major risk

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@ mail. chinadaily­uk. com

The upcoming flu season may worsen the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, experts warned, after studies revealed that coinfectio­n with influenza and COVID- 19 could lead to a higher risk of death.

Researcher­s at the University of Liverpool found that symptoms in mice with coinfectio­n of influenza virus and COVID- 19 were worse than the individual infections.

The results, which were published this week on the preprint server bioRxiv, follow on from a United Kingdom study released last month that found human patients with coinfectio­n had up to six times higher risk of death than the general population.

Last week, the British government issued new guidelines for securing flu shots, after the Royal College of General Practition­ers, or RCGP, wrote to Health Secretary Matt Hancock highlighti­ng the struggles doctors have had securing enough vaccines.

James Stewart, who is a professor of molecular virology at Liverpool, said there is “growing concern” about the interactio­ns between COVID- 19 and other respirator­y infections this winter.

“Our study highlights the urgent need to maintain flu vaccinatio­n,” said Stewart, who is co- author on the new study.

The research found that there was a larger inflammato­ry response in mice infected with both influenza and COVID- 19. Inflammati­on is a key driver for severe COVID- 19 infection in humans and plays a significan­t role in mortality, according to the study.

Infected mice “exhibited significan­tly more rapid mortality compared with mice infected with either virus alone”, researcher­s found.

‘ ’ Seasonal influenza virus can overwhelm the National Health Service in normal years,” said Julian Hiscox, who is chair in infection and global health at Liverpool and a co- author on the study.

“Both SARS- CoV- 2 and influenza are likely to co- circulate and present a risk. Our work shows how infection with both is dangerous and we can at least do something about mitigating the risk of flu through vaccinatio­n.”

A separate study, which was released on bioRxiv in late September by Public Health England, said there is “strong evidence of an interactio­n effect compared to SARS- CoV- 2 and influenza acting independen­tly”.

High death rate

The study looked at hospital data from between January and April this year, and found that the odds of ventilator use, intensive care admission and death were all greatest among coinfectio­n patients. The study found that patients with a coinfectio­n had a risk of death of six times greater than the general population.

The study also found that the chance of contractin­g influenza is lower when a person has COVID- 19 and in the Liverpool study, mice with influenza showed lower viral replicatio­n of the novel coronaviru­s. The Public Health England study posited that there may be a “possible pathogenic competitio­n between the two viruses”.

On Oct 9, the UK government issued guidelines over its flu vaccinatio­n program directly to doctors, and announced that over 10 million flu vaccines have been delivered, with a further 20 million scheduled for delivery between now and December.

The announceme­nt came after a letter from the RCPG in early October sought assurances that there would be enough vaccine to meet demand.

 ?? PABLO BLAZQUEZ DOMINGUEZ / GETTY IMAGES ?? A healthcare worker administer­s a flu vaccine to a man on Wednesday in Las Rozas, Spain.
PABLO BLAZQUEZ DOMINGUEZ / GETTY IMAGES A healthcare worker administer­s a flu vaccine to a man on Wednesday in Las Rozas, Spain.

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