Philippine Daily Inquirer

Study: MERS virus may be deadlier than SARS

- AP

LONDON—The new respirator­y virus that emerged in the Middle East last year appears to make people sicker faster than SARS, but doesn’t seem to spread as easily, according to the latest detailed look at about four dozen cases in Saudi Arabia.

Since last September, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has confirmed 90 cases of MERS, the Middle East respirator­y syndrome, including 45 deaths. Most cases have been in Saudi Arabia, but the mysterious virus has also been identified in countries including Jordan, Qatar, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Tunisia. MERS is related to SARS and the two diseases have similar symptoms including a fever, cough and muscle pain.

“At the moment, the virus is still confined (to the Middle East),” said Dr. Christian Drosten of the University of Bonn Medical Centre in Germany, who wrote an accompanyi­ng commentary. “But this is a coronaviru­s and we know coronaviru­ses are able to cause pandemics.”

Coronaviru­ses are a family of viruses that mostly cause respirator­y infections like the common cold, but it also includes SARS, the virus that killed about 800 people in a 2003 global outbreak. MERS is distantly related to SARS but there are major difference­s between the two. Unlike SARS, MERS can cause rapid kidney failure and doesn’t seem as infectious.

Drosten said the upcoming hajj in October—where millions of Muslim pilgrims will visit Saudi Arabia, where the virus is still spreading—is worrisome. On Thursday, WHO said in a statement that the risk of an individual traveler to Mecca catching MERS was considered “very low.” The agency does not recommend any travel or trade restrictio­ns or entry screening for the hajj.

In the latest study, researcher­s found 42 of the 47 cases in Saudi Arabia needed intensive care. Of those, 34 patients deteriorat­ed so badly within a week they needed a breathing machine. That was up to five days earlier than was the case with SARS. Most of the MERS cases were in older men with underlying health problems, as one of the biggest outbreaks was among dialysis patients at several hospitals. The research was published on Friday in the journal Lancet Infectious Diseases.

Ali Zumla, one of the paper’s coauthors and a professor of infectious diseases at University College London, said in an email that the rapid deteriorat­ion of patients was “not worrying at all since the numbers are small” and most of the patients had other health problems.

Drosten, however, said that could be bad news. “That could mean the virus is more virulent and that (doctors) have a smaller window of opportunit­y to intervene and treat patients,” he said. Detecting MERS fast could be a problem since quick diagnostic tests aren’t available.

Last week, WHO declared there was not yet enough evidence to classify MERS as a public health emergency after setting up an emergency committee to keep a closer eye on the virus.

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