| Literature DB >> 29047426 |
Kateri Bertran, Charles Balzli, Yong-Kuk Kwon, Terrence M Tumpey, Andrew Clark, David E Swayne.
Abstract
Exposure to infected poultry is a suspected cause of avian influenza (H5N1) virus infections in humans. We detected infectious droplets and aerosols during laboratory-simulated processing of asymptomatic chickens infected with human- (clades 1 and 2.2.1) and avian- (clades 1.1, 2.2, and 2.1) origin H5N1 viruses. We detected fewer airborne infectious particles in simulated processing of infected ducks. Influenza virus-naive chickens and ferrets exposed to the air space in which virus-infected chickens were processed became infected and died, suggesting that the slaughter of infected chickens is an efficient source of airborne virus that can infect birds and mammals. We did not detect consistent infections in ducks and ferrets exposed to the air space in which virus-infected ducks were processed. Our results support the hypothesis that airborne transmission of HPAI viruses can occur among poultry and from poultry to humans during home or live-poultry market slaughter of infected poultry.Entities:
Keywords: H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza; aerosol; airborne transmission; droplet; poultry; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29047426 PMCID: PMC5652435 DOI: 10.3201/eid2311.170672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Information on Eurasian A/goose/Guangdong/1/1996 lineage (H5N1) virus isolates used in this study
| Isolate | Abbreviation | Country | Host/source | Genetic clade | Accession nos.* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A/Vietnam/1203/2004 | VN/04 | Vietnam | Human | 1 | HM006756–63 |
| A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-878/2011 | VN/878/11 | Vietnam | Poultry | 1.1 | Not available |
| A/chicken/West Java-Subang/29/2007 | WJ/07 | West Java | Poultry | 2.1.3 | EPI533441† |
| A/whooper swan/Mongolia/244/2005 | Mong/05 | Mongolia | Water fowl | 2.2 | GU186700–07 |
| A/chicken/Egypt/102d/2010 | Eg/10 | Egypt | Poultry | 2.2.1 | HQ198270.1 |
| HQ908480.1 | |||||
| KR732432.1 | |||||
| KR732440.1 | |||||
| KR732445.1 | |||||
| KR732492.1 | |||||
|
|
|
|
|
| KR732530.1 |
| A/Egypt/N6658/2011 | Eg/11 | Egypt | Human | 2.2.1 | EPI372860–67† |
| A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-675/2011 | VN/675/11 | Vietnam | Poultry | 2.3.2.1 | KR732403 |
| KR732406 | |||||
| KR732415 | |||||
| KR732468 | |||||
| KR732481 | |||||
| KR732506 | |||||
| KR732521 | |||||
|
|
|
|
|
| KR732536 |
| A/chicken/Vietnam/093/2008 | VN/08 | Vietnam | Poultry | 7.2 | FJ538949.1 |
| FJ538950.1 | |||||
| FJ842480.1 |
*Accession numbers from GenBank except as indicated. Accession numbers represent sequences from all available segments of influenza A virus. †Accession number from GISAID (http://platform.gisaid.org).
Figure 1Processing area for study of airborne transmission of highly pathogenic influenza virus during processing of infected poultry. The star represents the location of the air sampler (experiment 1) or the naive hosts (experiment 2). The arrows indicate the airflow within the HEPA enclosure. The enclosure was 1.5 m wide × 6.7 m long × 2.1 m high, with 8.3 air changes/h (340 m3/h) and a velocity of 0.046 m/s.
Experimental design and clinical outcome of animal hosts exposed to airborne H5N1 HPAI viruses through simulated live-poultry market slaughter*
| Virus | Intranasally infected birds processed (no.) | Duration of slaughter process, min | Naive exposed hosts (no.)† | Deaths of exposed hosts (mean time of death) | Virus detection in exposed hosts‡ | Seroconversion in surviving exposed hosts§ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mong/05 | Chickens (10) | 60 | Chickens (5) | 5/5 (4.4 dpe) | 5/5 at time of death¶ | NA |
| VN/04 | Chickens (10) | 60 | Chickens (5) | 5/5 (4.0 dpe) | 5/5 at time of death¶ | NA |
| VN/04 | Chickens (10) | 60 | Ferrets (4) | 3/4 (8.3 dpe) | 1/4 on 3 dpe (3.0)¶ | 0/1 |
| VN/04 | Ducks (5) | 30 | Ducks (5) | 0/5 | 5/5 (1.6) | 1/5 |
| VN/04 | Ducks (5) | 30 | Ferrets (3) | 0/3 | 0/3 | 0/3 |
*dpe, days postexposure; EID, mean egg infectious dose; Mong/05, A/whooper swan/Mongolia/244/2005; NA, not available; VN/04, A/Vietnam/1203/2004. †Exposed hosts placed 75–80 cm from the slaughter area. ‡No. positive/total no. Numbers in parentheses indicate mean virus titers (log10 EID50/mL) determined by virus isolation in embryonating chicken eggs from oral and cloacal swab samples of exposed poultry or by nasal wash samples of exposed ferrets. §Determined by hemagglutinin inhibition and virus neutralization tests when >12 dpe serum samples were available. ¶Virus antigen was detected by immunohistochemistry in tissues of 5/5 Mong/05-exposed chickens, 5/5 VN/04-exposed chickens, and 3/4 VN/04-exposed ferrets.
Figure 2Highly pathogenic avian influenza virus isolation from air samples collected using cyclone air sampler during simulated slaughter of infected chickens (A) and ducks (B) in study of airborne transmission of highly pathogenic influenza virus during processing of infected poultry. Detection of virus was attempted in 3 different airborne particle sizes. Error bars indicate virus recovery from >2 repeats per run. Dashed lines indicate limit of detection by virus isolation of 3.6 log10 EID50/m3 air sampled. Isolate names are as given in Table 1.
Figure 3Histologic lesions and immunohistochemical detection of viral antigen in samples from ferrets exposed to live poultry market processing of highly pathogenic avian influenza A/Vietnam/1203/04 (H5N1) virus–infected chickens in study of airborne transmission of highly pathogenic influenza virus during processing of infected poultry. A) Olfactory bulb, 7 dpe, showing diffuse and severe neuropil malacia with mild cavitation and focal hemorrhages. Scale bar = 50 μm. B) Olfactory bulb, 7 dpe, showing viral antigen detected in neuropil, astrocytes, and neurons. Scale bar = 50 μm. C) Liver, 8 dpe, showing confluent coagulative necrosis of hepatocytes and bile duct necrosis with mononuclear cellular infiltrate in the portal triad. Scale bar = 50 μm. D) Liver, 8 dpe, showing viral antigen detected in hepatocytes, bile duct epithelia, and cellular debris. Scale bar = 50 μm. E) Nasal cavity, 7 dpe, showing moderate necrotic rhinitis with coagulative necrosis of mucous glandular epithelial cells; insert shows no viral antigen detected in mucosal membrane. Scale bars = 25 μm. F) Lung, 7 dpe, showing mild histiocytic interstitial pneumonia; insert shows viral antigen detected in type II pneumocytes. Scale bars = 25 μm. dpe, days postexposure.
Figure 4Virus titers in oral and cloacal samples of ducks exposed to simulated live poultry market slaughter of highly pathogenic avian influenza A/Vietnam/1203/04(H5N1) virus–infected ducks in study of airborne transmission of highly pathogenic influenza virus during processing of infected poultry. Shedding titers are expressed as log10 with error bars included. Numbers on top of the bars indicate the number of positive samples out of the 5 tested samples at each time point. The limit of detection was 0.9 log10 median egg infection dose/mL.