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LOS ANGELES, Feb. 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Preventing a
possible flu pandemic of the deadly H5N1 virus may require broader poultry
surveillance, Chinese and U.S. scientists reported Monday in a joint study.
The study, appearing in the Feb. 6 issue of U.S. scientific journal Proceedings of National Academy of
Sciences, noted the importance of monitoring apparently healthy birds. The first
author, Honglin Chen, is a researcher at the Shantou University in China.
From poultry found across Southeast Asia, even in
regions without bird flu outbreaks, the researchers identified several different
sublineages, or genetic "branches" of the H5N1 virus.
Although the H5N1 virus can be transmitted over long
distances in migratory birds, the researchers said, transport of infected
poultry appears to be the main means of the virus spreading in Southeast Asia.
By analyzing the gene segments of H5N1 virus strains
from different regions, the researchers suggested that migratory birds,which
have transferred the virus from Southeast Asia to Mongolia, Russia, and even
Europe, may have been first infected by local poultry while over-wintering.
"The migratory ducks could have survived infection
with the H5N1 virus and transmitted the virus over long distances during
migration," they said.
"Our results demonstrate that long-term endemicity of
H5N1 viruses in different regions of Asia has resulted in the establishment of
regional sublineages," the researchers wrote in the paper.
"The establishment of regional virus sublineages
suggests that H5N1 virus is perpetuated in poultry largely through the movement
of poultry and poultry products rather than by continued reintroduction of
viruses by migrating birds."
Since 2003, the H5N1 virus has infected about 160
people in Asia and Europe, and killed half of them, according to the World
Health Organization(WHO).
For now the virus has only spread from birds to
humans, but scientists have warned it could cause a global flu pandemic once it
acquires the ability to pass from person to person.
Based on experience gained in Hong Kong, Japan, and
South Korea,the researchers said, early detection and large-scale culling of
infected poultry, is the most effective method of controlling the bird flu.
But the antigenic diversity of the H5N1 virus shows a
single human vaccine may be not enough for human pandemic preparedness, they
indicated.
"The choice of candidate viruses for development of
human vaccines must reflect the antigenic diversity observed across thiswider
region," they said.
"Furthermore, antigenic drift observed over time
within those H5N1 sublineages highlights the necessity of continually updating
the candidate virus chosen for future H5N1 vaccines.These concepts are critical
for the control of this pandemic threat." Enditem |