| Literature DB >> 28352464 |
Chau Minh Bui1, Abrar Ahmad Chughtai1, Dillon Charles Adam1, C Raina MacIntyre1,2.
Abstract
In recent years multiple novel influenza A strains have emerged in humans. We reviewed publically available data to summarise epidemiological characteristics of distinct avian influenza viruses known to cause human infection and describe changes over time. Most recently identified zoonotic strains have emerged in China (H7N9, H5N6, H10N8) - these strains have occurred mostly in association with visiting a live bird market. Most zoonotic AIVs and swine influenza variants typically cause mild infections in humans however severe illness and fatalities are associated with zoonotic H5N6, H10N8, H7N9 and H5N1 serotypes, and the H1N1 1918 Spanish Influenza. The changing landscape of avian influenza globally indicates a need to reassess the risk of a pandemic influenza outbreak of zoonotic origin.Entities:
Keywords: Avian influenza; Emerging infectious diseases; Influenza A; One health
Year: 2017 PMID: 28352464 PMCID: PMC5366997 DOI: 10.1186/s13690-017-0182-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Public Health ISSN: 0778-7367
Epidemiological features of known avian influenza serotypes which have caused human infections
| Avian influenza serotype | te (month, year) and location of first report in humans | Number of human cases | Number of deaths | istory of animal exposure in human cases | uration of persistence in human population | Extent of Human to human transmission | Classification of pathogenicity | Animal hosts/potential animal hosts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H5N6 | Feb-2014 Changsha city, Hunan, China [1] | 15 | 9 reported deaths | Animal exposure | Sporadic. Last case reported in 2016. [2] | None | HPAI | Avian [3] [4] |
| H10N8 | Dec-2013 | 3 [2] | 2 reported deaths [2] | Animal exposure [2] | Sporadic. Last case reported in 2015. [2] | None | LPAI | Avian [3] [4] |
| H6N1 | May-2013 | 2 [7] | No reported deaths | None [6] | Isolated event | None | LPAI | Avian [8] [4] |
| H7N9 | Mar-2013 | 791 [2] | 314 reported deaths [10] | Animal exposure [11] | Seasonal occurrence. Last reported in 2016 [2] | Limited (41 reported occurrences) [12–14] | LPAI | Avian [4] |
| H1N2v | Jun-2012 | 8 [17] | No reported deaths | Animal exposure [16] | Sporadic. Last reported in 2016 | None | n/a | Swine [16, 18] |
| H1N1v | Dec-2011 | 20 [17] | No reported deaths | Animal exposure | Sporadic. Last case in 2015 | None | n/a | Swine [18] |
| H3N2v | Indiana, United States | 372 [17, 19] | 1 death [19, 20] | Animal exposure [20] | Sporadic. Last case in 2016 [19] | Limited (15 possible occurrences) [20] | n/a | Swine [18, 21] |
| H10N7 | Mar-2010 | 2 [22] | No reported deaths | Animal exposure [22] | Isolated event | No | LPAI | Avian [4] |
| H1N1pdm09 | Mar-2009 | Estimated > 24% population in 19 countries | Estimated 0.02% of cases result in death [25] | Not described [18] | 2009 to current | Widespread | n/a | Swine [18] |
| H7N3 | Mar-2004 | 19 | No reported deaths | Animal exposure | Sporadic cases. Last reported in 2012 [28] | None | LPAI/HPAI | Avian [29] [4] |
| H7N2 | Oct-2003 | 16 | No reported deaths | Animal exposure | Sporadic cases. Last reported in 2007 [31] | None | LPAI | Avian [4, 29] |
| H1N2 | Oct-2000 | No global estimates | No deaths attributable to this subtype (UK) [33] | Not described | 2000-2003 [33] | Widespread | n/a | None |
| H7N7 | Dec-1979 | 94 | 1 reported death. | Animal exposure | Sporadic cases. Last reported in 2013 [36] | Limited (3 reported occurrences) [37] | LPAI/HPAI | Avian [4] |
| H9N2 | Jun-1999 | 28 | No reported deaths | Animal exposure | Sporadic cases. Last reported in 2016 | None reported | LPAI | Avian [40] |
| H5N1 | Feb-1997 | 850 [2] | 449 reported deaths [2] | Animal exposure [42] | Sporadic cases. Last reported in 2016. [2] | Limited (41 reported occurrences) [42] | HPAI | Avian |
| H1N2 | Dec-1988 | No case estimates (19 isolates were recovered from China) [34, 43] | No deaths attributable [43] | Not described [16, 43] | Sporadic cases from Dec-1988 to Mar-1989 [43] | Widespread | n/a | Swine [16] |
| H1N1 (seasonal flu) | May-1977 | Estimated 3–5 million cases (severe illness) per year [45] | Estimated 250 000 – | Not described | Seasonally endemic (1977 to current) [46] | Widespread | n/a | None |
| H3N2 | Jul-1968 | No global estimates | No global estimates | Not described | Pandemic; | Widespread | n/a | Swine [47] |
| H2N2 | Feb-1957 | No global estimates | Estimated 1.1 million deaths [50] | Not described | Pandemic; seasonally endemic and sporadic (1957 to 1968) [51] | Widespread | n/a | None |
| H1N1 (Spanish Flu) | Aug-1918 | Estimated 500 million cases [52] | Estimated 50 million deaths [52] | No described | Pandemic; | Widespread | n/a | None |
Information from this table was obtained from Additional file 1: Table S1 unless indicated otherwise. Numbers of human cases and deaths are total global counts or estimates. Animal exposure refers to animal and animal environmental exposure documented in at least 1 case. Sources refer to the reference list in the Additional file 2: Text 1
Fig. 1Timeline of Influenza A serotype emergence by year and zoonotic host from 1918 to 2015. Each point indicates a distinct avian influenza serotype known to have caused human infection, placement of point corresponds to their year of emergence. The different point shapes correspond to the animal host which was identified when the serotype was first reported in humans: a pentagon corresponds to a seal host, a triangle corresponds to avian host, a cross corresponds to swine host, and a circle corresponds to instances where the animal host has not yet been identified