The Japan Times - Experts warn bird flu virus changing rapidly in largest ever outbreak

EUR -
AED 3.815784
AFN 80.876176
ALL 99.967285
AMD 415.706354
ANG 1.872811
AOA 949.546047
ARS 1092.14983
AUD 1.668861
AWG 1.872601
AZN 1.772831
BAM 1.95583
BBD 2.098171
BDT 126.731937
BGN 1.955816
BHD 0.391585
BIF 3075.49538
BMD 1.038891
BND 1.404407
BOB 7.18111
BRL 6.104417
BSD 1.039156
BTN 89.991376
BWP 14.403319
BYN 3.400279
BYR 20362.26125
BZD 2.08708
CAD 1.504008
CDF 2963.955958
CHF 0.945599
CLF 0.037058
CLP 1022.54926
CNY 7.464015
CNH 7.584231
COP 4323.656065
CRC 527.27507
CUC 1.038891
CUP 27.530608
CVE 110.266685
CZK 25.133898
DJF 185.044813
DKK 7.461625
DOP 64.196965
DZD 140.359382
EGP 52.18411
ERN 15.583363
ETB 131.110596
FJD 2.409968
FKP 0.855617
GBP 0.836338
GEL 2.971375
GGP 0.855617
GHS 15.900243
GIP 0.855617
GMD 75.314236
GNF 8982.402379
GTQ 8.043123
GYD 217.953332
HKD 8.095542
HNL 26.605739
HRK 7.666545
HTG 135.900958
HUF 408.207755
IDR 16958.646949
ILS 3.721541
IMP 0.855617
INR 90.023526
IQD 1361.314257
IRR 43737.30542
ISK 146.296668
JEP 0.855617
JMD 163.933827
JOD 0.736887
JPY 160.782386
KES 134.225451
KGS 90.850978
KHR 4177.722046
KMF 491.239285
KPW 935.001908
KRW 1510.074661
KWD 0.320446
KYD 0.866009
KZT 539.075646
LAK 22619.236887
LBP 93325.07906
LKR 309.213238
LRD 206.283153
LSL 19.246602
LTL 3.067574
LVL 0.628414
LYD 5.097857
MAD 10.422669
MDL 19.339203
MGA 4872.398251
MKD 61.530383
MMK 3374.277054
MNT 3530.151322
MOP 8.339187
MRU 41.264049
MUR 48.464349
MVR 16.009412
MWK 1801.914803
MXN 21.476108
MYR 4.610912
MZN 66.395399
NAD 19.246602
NGN 1584.308302
NIO 38.184438
NOK 11.756946
NPR 143.977193
NZD 1.840224
OMR 0.399965
PAB 1.039216
PEN 3.866794
PGK 4.158693
PHP 60.702914
PKR 289.766348
PLN 4.205879
PYG 8203.888498
QAR 3.782588
RON 4.975974
RSD 117.127632
RUB 102.302717
RWF 1474.730273
SAR 3.896853
SBD 8.782461
SCR 15.157273
SDG 624.372992
SEK 11.478191
SGD 1.40791
SHP 0.855617
SLE 23.764615
SLL 21785.022227
SOS 593.731159
SRD 36.470273
STD 21502.943706
SVC 9.093095
SYP 13507.659208
SZL 19.24009
THB 34.978378
TJS 11.327273
TMT 3.646507
TND 3.321751
TOP 2.433186
TRY 37.254937
TTD 7.049074
TWD 34.217435
TZS 2654.366026
UAH 43.421047
UGX 3829.05853
USD 1.038891
UYU 45.090689
UZS 13479.609426
VES 60.145615
VND 26055.383273
VUV 123.339211
WST 2.909754
XAF 655.925987
XAG 0.03307
XAU 0.000372
XCD 2.807654
XDR 0.794362
XOF 654.501574
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.553952
ZAR 19.280085
ZMK 9351.261075
ZMW 29.040552
ZWL 334.52244
  • RBGPF

    2.7100

    64.91

    +4.18%

  • GSK

    0.3000

    35.36

    +0.85%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    11.64

    +0.6%

  • RIO

    1.1900

    60.91

    +1.95%

  • AZN

    0.9900

    71.24

    +1.39%

  • BCC

    2.3400

    128.66

    +1.82%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.68

    +0.3%

  • NGG

    0.9700

    61.74

    +1.57%

  • BTI

    0.4200

    39.68

    +1.06%

  • RELX

    1.1100

    50.35

    +2.2%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    24.22

    +0.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    7.45

    +0.94%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.57

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.61

    +0.7%

  • BCE

    0.2000

    23.9

    +0.84%

  • BP

    0.4800

    31.61

    +1.52%

Experts warn bird flu virus changing rapidly in largest ever outbreak
Experts warn bird flu virus changing rapidly in largest ever outbreak / Photo: MARTIN BERNETTI - AFP

Experts warn bird flu virus changing rapidly in largest ever outbreak

The virus causing record cases of avian influenza in birds across the world is changing rapidly, experts have warned, as calls increase for countries to vaccinate their poultry.

Text size:

While emphasising that the risk to humans remains low, the experts who spoke to AFP said that the surging number of bird flu cases in mammals was a cause for concern.

Since first emerging in 1996, the H5N1 avian influenza virus had previously been confined to mostly seasonal outbreaks.

But "something happened" in mid-2021 that made the group of viruses much more infectious, according to Richard Webby, the head of a World Health Organization collaborating centre studying influenza in animals.

Since then, outbreaks have lasted all year round, spreading to new areas and leading to mass deaths among wild birds and tens of millions of poultry being culled.

Webby, who is a researcher at St Jude Children's Research Hospital in the US city of Memphis, told AFP it was "absolutely" the largest outbreak of avian influenza the world had seen.

He led research, published this week in the journal Nature Communications, showing how the virus rapidly evolved as it spread from Europe into North America.

The study said the virus increased in virulence, which means it causes more dangerous disease, when in arrived in North America.

The researchers also infected a ferret with one of the new strains of bird flu.

The found an unexpectedly "huge" amount of the virus in its brain, Webby said, indicating it had caused more serious disease than previous strains.

Emphasising that the risk in humans was still low, he said that "this virus is not being static, it's changing".

"That does increase the potential that even just by chance" the virus could "pick up genetic traits that allow it to be more of a human virus," he said.

In rare cases, humans have contracted the sometimes deadly virus, usually after coming in close contact with infected birds.

- 'Scares us' -

The virus has also been detected in a soaring number of mammals, which Webby described as a "really, really troubling sign".

Last week Chile said that nearly 9,000 sea lions, penguins, otters, porpoises and dolphins have died from bird flu along its north coast since the start of the year.

Most mammals are believed to have contracted the virus by eating an infected bird.

But Webby said that what "scares us the most" are indications from a Spanish mink farm, or among sea lions off South America, that the virus could be transmitting between mammals.

Ian Brown, virology head at the UK's Animal and Plant Health Agency, said there has not yet been "clear evidence that this virus is easily sustaining in mammals."

While the virus is changing to become "more efficient and more effective in birds," it remains "unadapted to humans," Brown told AFP.

Avian viruses bind to different receptors on the host cell than human viruses, Webby said.

It would take "two or three minor changes in one protein of the viruses" to become more adapted to humans, he said.

"That is what we're really looking out for."

- Vaccinating poultry -

One way to bring down the number of total bird flu cases, and therefore reduce the risk to humans, would be for countries to vaccinate their poultry, Webby said.

A few nations including China, Egypt and Vietnam have already held vaccination campaigns for poultry.

But many other countries have been reluctant due to import restrictions in some areas, and fears vaccinated birds that nonetheless get infected could slip through the net.

In April, the United States started testing several vaccine candidates for potential use on birds.

France recently said it hopes to start vaccinating poultry as early as autumn this year.

Christine Middlemiss, the UK's chief veterinary officer, said that vaccinating poultry was not "a silver bullet because the virus changes constantly".

But traditionally reluctant countries should consider vaccinating poultry more often, Middlemiss told AFP at an event at the UK's embassy in Paris last week.

World Organisation for Animal Health director general Monique Eloit said that the issue of vaccinating poultry should be "on the table".

After all, "everyone now knows that a pandemic is not just a fantasy -- it could be a reality," she added.

Y.Kimura--JT