The Daily Telegraph

Global pandemic alert over new ‘Disease X’

‘Disease X’ virus outbreak in China prompts warning of a global pandemic

- By Anne Gulland

A new strain of bird flu that has killed 38 per cent of people it has infected in China has been identified by the deputy chief medical officer for England as the most likely source of a worldwide flu pandemic. Scientists are on high alert for what the World Health Organisati­on has dubbed “Disease X” – newly emerging pathogens that could prove as destructiv­e as the 1918 Spanish flu which killed 50-100million. So far 623 people in China have died.

A NEW strain of bird flu which has killed 38 per cent of those it has infected has been identified by the deputy chief medical officer for England as the most likely source of a worldwide flu pandemic.

Prof Jonathan Van-tam, deputy chief medical officer for England with special responsibi­lity for emergency preparedne­ss and pandemic planning, told The Daily Telegraph that the virus concerning him and others most was H7N9, a flu virus circulatin­g in poultry in China.

He said the UK government was gathering as much intelligen­ce on the virus as possible – looking at its geographic spread, the number of human cases and any changes in its genetic structure.

“[H7N9] is an example of another virus which has proven its ability to transmit from birds to humans. It’s possible that it could be the cause of the next pandemic,” he said.

Scientists across the world are on high alert for what the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) has dubbed “Disease X” – newly emerging pathogens that could prove as destructiv­e as the 1918 Spanish flu which killed 50-100million people a century ago.

So far 1,625 people in China are known to have been infected with the H7N9 virus, 623 of whom have died. Most of those infected have been in contact with poultry or poultry markets.

It is unknown how long the virus has been circulatin­g among birds but it was first identified in humans in 2013. In birds, the virus generally does not cause any symptoms, but in humans it can cause serious illness and – in almost 40 per cent of cases – death.

H7N9 cannot be passed from one person to another but experiment­s on animals have shown that it is just three mutations away from being able to do so.

People who contract H7N9 develop a high fever, cough and shortness of breath and it can rapidly progress into severe pneumonia, which can lead to acute respirator­y distress syndrome, septic shock and multi-organ failure.

Pregnant women, older people and those with underlying conditions are most likely to become seriously ill or die, according to the WHO.

H7N9 belongs to a family of type A flu viruses and is closely related to avian bird flu H5N1, which crossed into humans in 2003.

John Oxford, professor of virology at Queen Mary University of London, said: “H5N1 was first isolated in 1997 and has had 19 years to float around. It’s had its chance to cause a worldwide pandemic but it looks like it’s not going to do it. But H7N9 is younger and stronger and is now waiting for its opportunit­y,” he said.

More than a third of those who have so far contracted H7N9 die from the disease but that death rate would be unlikely to be replicated in a pandemic, said Prof Vantam.

“Mortality is about 38 per cent of known cases, higher than any of the human pandemic viruses. But it would be wrong to think we could have a pandemic virus in future that could kill 38 per cent of people. It would change,” he said.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also ranks H7N9 number one on its influenza risk assessment tool as having the potential to cause a pandemic. The risk of it mutating into a pandemic virus is judged “moderate to high”.

“It is possible that this virus could gain the ability to spread easily and sustainabl­y among people, triggering

a global outbreak of disease,” says the CDC.

The highest number of cases of H7N9 infection were in the winter of 2016-17 when there were 460 cases. This year there were just three. Prof Oxford said the waxing and waning of the virus was to be expected: “It might be to do with climate, it might be to do with movement of people or movement of geese, ducks or swans.”

Dr Jonathan Quick, author of The End of Epidemics, said that sustained human-to-human transition of H7N9 “would take a significan­t, successful mutation or a very, very unfavourab­le combinatio­n of social, environmen­t factors, healthcare and political factors”.

But he said that just before the 2014 Ebola outbreak, which killed 11,000 people in West Africa, the disease had been classed as highly unlikely to lead to an epidemic.

He said: “The West Africa outbreak was so much more explosive than the previous 22 outbreaks in Africa… because of the social, political and healthcare context in which it broke out. We had never before seen ‘urban Ebola’, which required a different approach.”

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