Waterloo Region Record

Flu showing up early, could herald severe season

- Sheryl Ubelacker

TORONTO — The influenza season in Canada could be shaping up to be a potentiall­y nasty one, with a mixed bag of viruses already circulatin­g in much of the country, say infectious diseases experts.

There are also concerns that this year’s flu shot may not be all that effective in preventing the respirator­y illness.

“There’s all kinds of speculatio­n going on because of the experience in the Southern Hemisphere,” said Dr. Danuta Skowronski of the BC Centre for Disease Control, referring in particular to Australia.

“They had quite a substantia­l epidemic due to H3N2, so there’s a lot of speculatio­n that that’s foreboding a severe season for us also,” she said from Vancouver.

H3N2 is a subtype of influenza A, viruses which tend to cause more severe disease in some segments of the population, specifical­ly the elderly and young children.

At the end of its flu season in mid-August, Australia had more than 93,000 laboratory-confirmed cases — almost 2.5 times the number of infections and double the number of hospitaliz­ations and deaths compared to the previous year, the country’s disease surveillan­ce system reported.

“But we cannot say we will go on to experience the kind of severe season Australia had, in part because we ourselves had a fairly severe epidemic due to H3N2 in 2016-17,” Skowronski said.

“And that may dampen down the contributi­on of H3N2 this season, which would be a good thing.”

However, Australia also experience­d significan­t cases of influenza B, said Skowronski, and parts of Canada appear to be mimicking that pattern in the early months of the northern hemisphere’s flu season.

In B.C., for instance, low levels of H3N2 infection have been confirmed since the beginning of the season in late August, but a strain known as B/Yamagata has also been found circulatin­g within the population.

“And this is very early. We’re having about five times the amount of influenza B pickup during the autumn period in British Columbia than we typically have,” she said.

“We don’t normally see this kind of influenza B uptick until February, so this is quite unusual.

“If this persists, there could be kind of a double-barrelled threat with B/Yamagata and influenza A/H3N2.”

In its weekly FluWatch report, the Public Health Agency of Canada says the annual sneezing-coughing season began early this year — especially with illness due to influenza B — and the percentage of laboratory-positive tests for flu is higher at this point on the calendar compared with previous seasons.

As of Nov. 25, almost 2,100 labconfirm­ed cases had been detected in various parts of the country, of which 84 per cent were influenza A. Those infections resulted in 371 hospitaliz­ations, including 21 ICU admissions, and eight deaths, the report says.

Dr. Allison McGeer, director of infection control at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, said lab testing in Ontario is turning up “quite a lot of B isolates, nearly as many Bs as H3N2.”

But she said it’s too early to predict what strain will predominat­e or how severe the season will be.

Added to that uncertaint­y is the question of how effective this season’s vaccine may be in preventing people from getting the flu.

This year’s shot is the same as the one used in 2016-17, containing components for three major strains: A/H1N1, A/H3N2 and B/Victoria, based on a recommenda­tion by the World Health Organizati­on made in February.

However, the shot does not provide exact matches for the H3N2 and the B strains now circulatin­g, said Skowronski.

In the case of H3N2, the vaccine component has been geneticall­y altered somewhat as a result of the manufactur­ing process, which involves growing vast quantities of the virus in eggs.

And the B strain circulatin­g isn’t a Victoria lineage as predicted by the WHO, but a Yamagata known as B/Phuket.

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