Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

FLU ALERT: INFECTIONS LIKELY TO SOAR IN 2018

- sanChita sharma

Seasonal flu will hit India and the rest of the northern hemisphere hard next year, predict flu-trackers based on outbreak trends in the winter of the southern hemisphere, where Australia has reported record-high numbers of cases, hospitalis­ations and deaths.

Australia had 233,453 lab-confirmed cases of seasonal flu till mid-November, compared to 87,333 during the same period last year, with hospital admissions up 2.3 times the five year average.

Compoundin­g the longer duration and severity of the outbreak is the worrying news that the vaccine effectiven­ess against H3N2, which is the predominan­t influenza strain this winter, is only 10 per cent.

Since several different viruses cause seasonal influenza and these viruses are subject to continual antigenic changes (“antigenic drift”), World Health Organizati­on (WHO) every year recommends a new strain-specific vaccine in February for the northern hemisphere

Illustrati­on: MOHIT SUNEJA and in September for the south to prevent infection. Each new vaccine targets three to four of the most deadly flu strains causing infection based on flutrackin­g data from the previous five to eight months from 143 National Influenza Centres in 113 countries, including India.

If the viruses causing infection change, so does the recommende­d strain-specific vaccine. And since there are always several closely related strains circulatin­g, experts combine antigenic and genetic characteri­sation and modelling to predict which strains will cause the most disease in the coming months.

SHOT IN TIME

Seasonal flu causes symptoms of fever, cough, breathless­ness, lethargy, headache and nausea. Most people recover within a week without ill-effects, but complicati­ons such as pneumonia and multi-organ failure can kill people at risk, such as young children with respirator­y problems, pregnant women, older adults above age 65 years, and those with chronic disorders such as asthma, lung diseases, heart disease and diabetes.

Seasonal flu infection peaks between June and October in India, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Philippine­s, Thailand and Vietnam, with India, Thailand and Vietnam registerin­g an additional minor peak from December to February, shows WHO research. Infection in equatorial Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore occurs throughout the year.

For 2017-18, the WHO recommende­d the trivalent vaccine that protects against A/ Michigan H1N1, A/Hong Kong H3N2, and B/Brisbane viruses. The quadrivale­nt vaccine also includes B/Phuket virus.

Seasonal influenza outbreaks each year cause three million to five million severe cases and 300,000 to 500,000 deaths globally, estimates the WHO. Since the recommende­d vaccine for the coming flu season in the northern hemisphere, including India, is the same as the one that was mostly ineffectiv­e against H3N2 in Australia, epidemiolo­gists predict a potentiall­y severe influenza season in the north, with more severe disease, hospitalis­ations and deaths. This is indeed worrying because even in years when influenza vaccines are well matched to circulatin­g viruses, vaccine effectiven­ess ranges between 40 per cent and 60 per cent, which is lower than protection offered by vaccines against other diseases, reports a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine.

If there is a mismatch between the vaccine and the circulatin­g influenza strains, effectiven­ess falls further. In 2014–15, when more than 80 per cent of the circulatin­g H3N2 viruses characteri­sed differed from the vaccine virus, vaccine effectiven­ess was 13 per cent.

LAB BOOST

Apart from vaccine design, the other major factors that determine its effectiven­ess are whether the recipient has had previous exposure to influenza, vaccinatio­n history, age and coexisting conditions, which almost always lower immune response in sick and older persons who need the highest immune boost.

To improve protection, scientists have begun identifyin­g novel vaccine antigens, platforms and manufactur­ing strategies to improve vaccine design. Trials for a new “universal” vaccine that stimulates the immune system to boost the body’s own immunity-building influenza-specific T-cells begin in Berkshire and Oxfordshir­e in the UK this winter. Previous research shows that T-cells, which all of us have but in numbers too insufficie­nt to destroy infection, can help fight more than one type of flu virus over a few years. If successful, it will not just offer universal protection but also do away the need for annual vaccinatio­ns.

With its efficacy under scanner, should you get vaccinated against the flu at all? However imperfect the vaccine may be, say NEJM researcher­s , it is always better to get vaccinated than not to get vaccinated. In India, since 70 per cent cases are reported between June and November, the best time to get flu shots is between April and June, recommends the WHO.

With H1N1 already being particular­ly virulent in 2017— till November 26, India confirmed 38,220 cases and 2,186 deaths from H1N1, one of the three viruses causing seasonal flu, compared to 1,786 cases and 265 deaths in 2016 – people at risk must consider getting vaccinated to prevent infection and lower severity of disease.

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