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Bird flu virus shows signs of evading newest drug (TAMIFLU DOESN'T WORK)
Yahoo! - Reuters ^ | 10/14/05 | Maggie Fox

Posted on 10/14/2005 2:05:41 PM PDT by paulat

Bird flu virus shows signs of evading newest drug
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent
1 hour, 22 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The feared avian influenza virus is showing signs it can evade the drug considered the first line of defense against bird flu, researchers They found so-called resistant strains in a Vietnamese girl who recovered from a bird flu infection after being treated with Tamiflu. They also found evidence she was directly infected by her brother and not by chickens, a rare case of human-to-human transmission of the virus.

When bacteria and viruses develop resistance to a drug, it means higher doses of the drug are needed to eradicate or control an infection. Ultimately it means the drug will stop working.

This has happened with many antibiotics, starting with penicillin, and is common among AIDS drugs.

The finding illustrates the need to find and use other drugs to treat influenza and to work quickly to develop a vaccine, the researchers said.

"I don't think we need to panic based on this finding," Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

But the report, to be published in the journal Nature next week, is bad news for doctors around the world who already have precious little in the arsenal against bird flu should it become a human disease.

"This is the first line of defense," Kawaoka said. "It is the drug many countries are stockpiling, and the plan is to rely heavily on it."

The H5N1 strain of avian influenza is considered by health experts to be the biggest single disease threat to the world. Since surfacing in Hong Kong in 1997, it has spread in flocks of poultry across Asia and is now in Turkey.

It does not yet move easily from birds to humans but it has infected 117 people in four Asian countries and has killed 60 of them, according to the World Health Organization.

WHO believes it will eventually acquire the ability to move easily from human to human and that when it does, it will cause a pandemic that will sweep the world in weeks or months and kill millions if not tens of millions of people.

STOCKPILING SUPPLIES

Countries are stockpiling supplies of Tamiflu, an antiviral drug known generically as oseltamivir invented by Gilead Sciences and made and marketed by Swiss drug giant Roche Holdings.

They are to a lesser degree buying up supplies of Relenza, developed by Australia's Biota Holdings and marketed by GlaxoSmithKline. Known generically as zanamivir, this drug is also effective against avian flu but is given via the nose and considered less desirable than a pill like Tamiflu.

An older flu drug called amantadine is already considered to be of little use against H5N1 avian influenza. Work is proceeding on a vaccine but flu vaccines take months to make and cannot be formulated until after an epidemic has begun because they must use the precise strain of virus circulating.

Kawaoka, who is also at the University of Tokyo, worked with colleagues in Japan and Vietnam to analyze samples of virus taken from a 14-year-old Vietnamese girl, called "patient 1," who recovered from an H5N1 infection last March.

"Patient 1 had not had any known direct contact with poultry, but had cared for her 21-year-old brother (patient 2) while he had a documented H5N1 virus infection," Kawaoka and colleagues wrote in their report,

She had been given Tamiflu three days before she became ill, and then was treated with the drug when it failed to prevent her infection.

Kawaoka's team found several types of H5N1 virus in the girl's sample, some of which had developed genetic mutations to make Tamiflu virtually worthless against it.

"It is a mixture," he said. "Within the mixture we found virus that is highly, highly resistant. When you look at the virus as a whole, it is partially resistant," Kawaoka said.

"I think what is important here is that the vast majority of H5N1 viruses are still very sensitive to oseltamivir," Kawaoka said.

"Although our findings are based on a virus from only a single patient, they raise the possibility that it might be useful to stockpile zanamivir as well as oseltamivir in the event of an H5N1 influenza pandemic," the researchers wrote.

And it will be important to test the virus regularly to see if it is changing and becoming resistant to drugs, they said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: doomed; doomeditellyou; endoftheworld; run4yourlives; theskyisfalling; wearedoomed
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To: paulat

What flu was going around in late 1972 and early 1973?

My sister was born in January 1973, and a day or two after she and Mom came home from the hospital, Mom came down with the most virulent flu I'd seen (until the one she and Dad caught at Christmas 1999). Are you old enough to remember what strain that was?


21 posted on 10/14/2005 3:53:42 PM PDT by Xenalyte (Anything is possible when you don't understand how anything happens.)
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To: Altair333; GaltMeister
Yeah, y'all go ahead and laugh, but when that autopilot deflates, I'm not gonna reinflate him.
22 posted on 10/14/2005 3:54:56 PM PDT by Xenalyte (Anything is possible when you don't understand how anything happens.)
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To: GaltMeister
It will be time to panic when we have the public health equivalent of the stewardess in the movie "Airplane" asking "does anyone here know how to fly a plane?"

Just don't order the fish.

In this case, don't order the chicken... or the duck.

23 posted on 10/14/2005 3:57:16 PM PDT by MediaMole
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To: Xenalyte
Tamiflu doesn't do squat with regard to bird flu.

There are some days when I actually appreciate my mutant abilities.

24 posted on 10/14/2005 3:58:10 PM PDT by humblegunner (If you're gonna die, die with your boots on.)
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To: GaltMeister; Altair333
It will be time to panic when we have the public health equivalent of the stewardess in the movie "Airplane" asking "does anyone here know how to fly a plane?"

Just don't order the fish.

I liked "Leave it to Beaver's" mom in that movie, as a jive-talker.

25 posted on 10/14/2005 3:59:04 PM PDT by churchillbuff
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To: Xenalyte

I think that was the "Asian Flu" bug.


26 posted on 10/14/2005 4:00:30 PM PDT by TheLion
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To: 43north
"n bootlegging Tamiflu and feeding it to their bird stocks"

Great, the perfect way to render a product useless in humans is to widely give it animals.
This will ensure that the virus can adapt and become resistant to a drug.
27 posted on 10/14/2005 4:01:39 PM PDT by HereInTheHeartland (Never bring a knife to a gun fight, or a Democrat to do serious work...)
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To: Xenalyte
The bottom line is that if H5N1 jumps to consistent human to human transmission, we're all in serious jeopardy for the first year while a vaccine is being developed. It's been known for several months that Tamiflu will not be effective against that strain.

I'm not sure there's much we can do about it in modern society. Eliminating contact with other people and living in isolation isn't even remotely an option anymore.

28 posted on 10/14/2005 4:03:20 PM PDT by Dog Gone
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To: churchillbuff; Altair333; GaltMeister
Randy: Can I get you something?

Second Jive Dude: 'S'mofo butter layin' me to da' BONE! Jackin' me up... tight me!

Randy: I'm sorry, I don't understand.

First Jive Dude: Cutty say 'e can't HANG!

Jive Lady: Oh stewardess! I speak jive.

Randy: Oh, good.

Jive Lady: He said that he's in great pain and he wants to know if you can help him.

Randy: All right. Would you tell him to just relax and I'll be back as soon as I can with some medicine?

Jive Lady: Jus' hang loose, blood. She gonna catch ya up on da' rebound on da' med side.

Second Jive Dude: What it is, big mama? My mama no raise no dummies. I dug her rap!

Jive Lady: Cut me some slack, Jack! Chump don' want no help, chump don't GET da help!

First Jive Dude: Say 'e can't hang, say seven up!

Jive Lady: Jive-ass dude don't got no brains anyhow! Hmmph!
29 posted on 10/14/2005 4:03:25 PM PDT by Xenalyte (Dear Baby, welcome to Dumpville . . . population, YOU!)
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To: Xenalyte
What flu was going around in late 1972 and early 1973?

...from Googling...I can just guess it was some kind of "Asian" or "Taiwan" flu.

30 posted on 10/14/2005 4:04:53 PM PDT by paulat
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To: 43north
I have read that the ChiComs and their Asian allies have been bootlegging Tamiflu and feeding it to their bird stocks to prevent and treat cases of H5N1.

Link please. You may be confusing amantadine with Tamiflu.

31 posted on 10/14/2005 4:05:37 PM PDT by steve86 (@)
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To: Plutarch

My never humble opinion, this scare is way overblown. The 1918 pandemic had the good luck to get going just as the appropriate "host soup" was almost perfectly in place. Hundreds of thousands of troops and hospital cases from the war were sharing very close quarters with at best primitive sanitation. Then just as it got a good start, this brreding ground suddenly dispersed, scattering disease vectors to the four corners of the globe, with the results now noted in history. Given this perfect storm launch, a fairly nasty strain of influenza killed more people than the war had.

Interestingly, this avian flu is now in a near perfect soup, with birds and people packed in together like cordwood in sanitary conditions that would send the average American housewife screaming to the store for cleaners of all sorts. That it has infected so few humans is not a resounding arguement for its inherent danger.

The idea this virus will leap in one iteration to an easily human to human transmissible disease is most unlikely. It is great for global drug companies and beauracracies looking for more money.

Two things strike me. If this bug does the unlikely, restrictions on movement and quaranteen of patients will do more to stop it than any drug. That is what killed the 1918 pandemic. As we have discovered with AIDS, we still don't have a lot in the way of effective treatment for viral pathogens. Vaccines, maybe, cures for active cases, not so much. Treatments, palliatives, stimulus for the body's immune system, but cures, NO.

I would go as far as preparing a plan for travel restrictions if necessary, but I would not spend a plugged nickel to get in line to buy overpriced Tamiflu, a drug of dubious value with a shelf life measurable in months.

Get a grip. Worry about your mortgage, your credit card bills, the war in Iraq, but at this point I worry more about panicky idiots squandering public monies on failed cures for a disease we ain't got than I worry about dying of bird flu.


32 posted on 10/14/2005 4:05:37 PM PDT by barkeep
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To: Xenalyte
And I wonder (still I wonder) who'll stop the rain

Nevermind that. I wonder who, who, who wrote the book of love?

33 posted on 10/14/2005 4:06:08 PM PDT by Flyer (My FReeper Friends ROCK!)
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To: Flyer

Oooh, and it makes me wonder . . . if there's a bustle in your hedgerow, don't be alarmed now!


34 posted on 10/14/2005 4:07:15 PM PDT by Xenalyte (I dare you to make less sense.)
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To: Flyer

Hey, speaking of, how's Mason?


35 posted on 10/14/2005 4:07:28 PM PDT by Xenalyte (I dare you to make less sense.)
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To: paulat

36 posted on 10/14/2005 4:07:50 PM PDT by Hoboto (I blame Hippies.)
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To: Xenalyte
Hunky dory!

MasonCam

37 posted on 10/14/2005 4:09:23 PM PDT by Flyer (My FReeper Friends ROCK!)
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To: Certain_Doom
Would someone ping me when it is TIME TO PANIC!?

...only if you remember to hit yer button...

Image hosted by TinyPic.com

38 posted on 10/14/2005 4:09:56 PM PDT by paulat
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To: Xenalyte
Image hosted by TinyPic.com
39 posted on 10/14/2005 4:20:40 PM PDT by paulat
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To: Pete from Shawnee Mission

Yes a hand full may have turned gray, so why does not anyone site the grave yards that is full of people who died from drugs and yes the silver works great for me and others.


40 posted on 10/14/2005 6:22:19 PM PDT by zipp_city
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