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A Plague On Our Planet....For Ever (SARS)
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 5-7-2003

Posted on 05/06/2003 5:44:38 PM PDT by blam

A plague on our planet... for ever

(Filed: 07/05/2003)

The Sars epidemic is just the first of many health scares waiting for us in a highly mobile, densely populated 21st century, say scientists. It is vital that we learn all we can about managing such outbreaks as well as fighting them with technology. Roger Highfield reports

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome is only the beginning. We are set to see many more epidemics sweep across the planet in the coming decades, turning the 21st century into the era of the quarantine and face mask.

At risk: one reason deadly pathogens will become more common is that the world is truly a global community, so that air travel can spread a disease in a day or two

A number of factors have conspired to make the world increasingly susceptible to pandemics, according to Prof Roy Anderson, of Imperial College, London, a leading epidemiologist who is currently working on the Sars epidemic with colleagues in London and Hong Kong.

"One reason that these pathogens will become more common in the coming century is that we are better able to detect them and reveal, by detailed genetic analysis, if an agent is truly new – as in this case," he said. Another is that the world is truly a global community, so that air travel can spread a disease in a day or two.

"The world population is also growing and pathogens love dense communities," said Prof Anderson. "Perhaps most important of all, the majority of the world's population is in Asia - India, Indonesia and China particularly - where there has been a phenomenal growth of megacities of more than 10 million.''

Sars is an "important rehearsal to see how the global community can respond," he said. Perhaps the key lesson is that draconian public health measures have to be taken if there is any chance of snuffing out an epidemic before drugs, tests and vaccines are available.

That means: quarantine of patients before they spread disease; quarantine or close monitoring of all the people they have come into contact with; and a clampdown on social gatherings and travel. Sars is likely to become endemic in China, unless further action is taken.

As one example of the insights that science can offer into an emerging disease, Prof Christl Donnelly, Prof Anderson and Dr Azra Ghani, working with Prof Tony Hedley of the Department of Community Medicine, University of Hong Kong, and colleagues in the HK Department of Health, and HK Hospital Authority, publish the first detailed epidemiological analysis of the Hong Kong Sars outbreak in The Lancet today.

They have concluded, somewhat chillingly, that the virus kills about half of those aged over 60 and between seven and 13 per cent of those under 60. This is significantly worse than the original estimates of about five per cent, based on the cumulative number of Sars deaths divided by the cumulative number of admissions.

"These were inevitably going to be underestimates because the eventual outcome for many admitted patients was unknown at the time the estimate was made," said Prof Donnelly, explaining that the virus can hospitalise patients for weeks, not days, making it harder to track its overall impact as well as placing huge strain on a health service.

The time from infection with Sars to symptoms is variable but can be several days, longer than influenza, said Prof Donnelly. The good news is that the disease seems to be harder to transmit than 'flu, though the analysis has revealed how "superspreading" events can accelerate the epidemic.

One insight into superspreading came from the Amoy Gardens apartment complex in Kowloon where, by the end of April, 131 cases had been confirmed among residents of Block E.

A "blow back" in the plumbing had deposited virus from a single infected individual into wash basins throughout the block. The virus is also transmitted in droplets so that a sneeze in a lift could be enough to spread the disease from one person to many others.

If newly infected Sars patients infect, on average, fewer than one person each, fewer and fewer people will be infected with each round of infection. If this basic reproductive number is less than one, an outbreak cannot sustain itself and will burn out. If the number exceeds one, however, the disease involves ever increasing numbers.

The Imperial team will publish its verdict on the risk that the disease will sweep worldwide in a forthcoming paper.

The good news is that the first global pandemic of the 21st century has seen an unprecedented effort that has already set the stage for scientists to develop a range of ways to curb Sars. Crucially, scientists have identified the cause - a new human virus - in record time.

The sequence of letters that spells out the genetic recipe of two strains of the deadly virus has been published by American and Canadian teams in the current issue of Science, revealing it to be a new member of the human coronavirus family, so named because they look like the corona that surrounds the sun.

In common with other "enveloped viruses" the Sars coronavirus consists of a sliver of genetic material wrapped in an overcoat of fat that is spiked with finger-like proteins that are used to invade host cells.

The strains, one from a patient in Toronto and the second the "Urbani strain", do not look much like any other coronavirus seen so far, obscuring the origins of the pneumonia-like illness, said Dr Mark Pallansch of the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta.

Coronaviruses are "written" in a more primitive genetic code – RNA rather than DNA – so they mutate more easily. The reason for this mutability is that, to replicate itself, the genetic information must be copied by a viral enzyme called polymerase, a notoriously poor RNA "speller".

Being the biggest of all the RNA viruses - with about 30,000 letters - coronavirus recipes can vary greatly, even in a single patient, presenting a trickier moving target for drugs and vaccines.

The genetic code, which differs by only 10 letters or so in the two strains in the published analyses, will be crucial for developing tests, drugs and vaccines, also shedding light on why it can be deadly, said Dr Pallansch. "This can be used as a tool for these other important efforts.''

There may be a hard core of relatively unchanging genes in the virus, those that are crucial for its normal functioning and that, if identified, will offer opportunities to develop vaccines and treatments.

To search for them, Affymetrix, a company in Santa Clara, California, is providing tools to scientists that can give them a unique snapshot of the range of mutations that can invade a patient.

Perlegen Sciences used "next generation" Affymetrix technology developed to read the code of entire chromosomes: it consists of glass wafers covered with up to 60 million genetic probes: the probes are laid down using microchip manufacture technologies and consist of sequences of genetic letters. These only bind to complementary genetic sequences, revealing whether a known sequence is present or not.

A gene chip has now been designed to detect the Sars virus, said Dr Stephen Fodor, chairman of Affymetrix and Perlegen and inventor of the technology. "What is really exciting is that the genetic code of the virus, at about 30,000 letters, can be represented on a chip no larger than a dime.''

Other insights could come from human genetic variations. The technology - 220 five-inch gene chips of human DNA akin to a "CD of the human genome" - has been used to produce a full genetic analysis of 25 people in 18 months. The task revealed three million common genetic variations that play a role in disease, side effects and behaviour - and that could influence how badly someone will be affected by Sars.

These genetic insights are gold dust for scientists who already have experience with coronaviruses, such as those that cause Feline Infectious Peritonitis, the leading infectious cause of cat death in which the sac that lines the abdominal cavity - the peritoneum - is infected.

Prof Peter Rottier, of the University of Utrecht, has taken two approaches to fighting cat coronaviruses: in one, he has created an "attenuated" GM feline coronavirus by deleting some of its genes. The GM virus is safer than the wild type, yet still able to function. Tests suggest that this can be used to infect cats without causing illness, yet create immunity to the disease.

There is unease about using "live vaccines" on people, since they can in theory mutate and evolve to become lethal again. There are, however, ways to improve safety. For instance, "judicious rearrangement of the gene order", as demonstrated for a mouse coronavirus, will minimise the risk that such a virus would generate viable offspring when it mixes with a wild type Sars virus, said Prof Rottier.

The second approach to fighting Sars, an anti-coronavirus drug, exploits the spikes used by a coronavirus to stick to and invade cells. Prof Rottier has developed small protein fragments, called peptides, that can attach to these "spike proteins", blocking the entry into cat cells of feline coronavirus. In a forthcoming publication, "we will describe these peptides for coronaviruses for the first time".

From cat and mouse coronaviruses, his group has now started to extend the work to the human Sars variety. However, Prof Rottier said that it would take some time to come up with candidate drugs and vaccines, which will require tests on animals – although that should take him less time than other groups because he can build on his experience with cats and mice.

Another key development is an animal model of Sars. Prof Albert Osterhaus, at Erasmus University, Rotterdam, has introduced the Sars virus to monkeys to create a similar illness to that seen in people. This model could be used to test vaccines and drugs, though Prof Rottier said these experiments could take "years rather than months''.

In the short term, the worldwide scientific effort will focus on developing simple and reliable tests for Sars that can be used by hospitals to check patients with suspicious symptoms. A British coronavirus expert, Prof Stuart Siddell, of Bristol University, has been supplied with Sars genetic material by the Health Protection Agency to help develop a practical test for hospitals that could identify symptom-free carriers - detection of silent infections is critical.

In the wake of the release of the viral genetic code, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention have already developed a gene test for the virus by using a technology called PCR that can amplify known genetic codes to levels at which they can be detected.

But hospitals would prefer a blood test and now Prof Siddell is trying to find what immune response is provoked by the virus in the body, as part of a network of laboratories collaborating worldwide. "We need a robust and sensitive serological test," he said.

He hopes to develop a test for blood antibodies within weeks, one that does not produce false positives, by cross reaction with coronaviruses that cause the common cold, and that does not produce false negatives, missing some infected people.

However, in the longer term he is interested in the response to Sars of white blood cells, called T cells, not only as the basis of a test but also because it provides insights into how to develop an effective vaccine. But even when a vaccine is available, some mutated viruses may survive and thrive to develop into a resistant strain.

"It is likely that you get these so called escape mutants, viruses that mutate and are selected for resistance, which could be a problem," said Prof Siddell. "The same goes for an antiviral drug."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: amoygardens; blowback; ever; fatalityrate; fip; fipv; for; plague; planet; rate; royanderson; sars; superspreader

1 posted on 05/06/2003 5:44:38 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
People have been traveling in airplanes for decades. And from continent to continent. I'm not sure just how much of a factor that truly is. Good article though.

Prairie
2 posted on 05/06/2003 5:50:37 PM PDT by prairiebreeze ("Never have so many been so wrong about so many things"---Sec. Defense Donald Rumsfeld)
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To: per loin; CathyRyan; riri
ping.
3 posted on 05/06/2003 5:59:52 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
Looks good. Bookmarking for tomorrow.
4 posted on 05/06/2003 6:04:50 PM PDT by riri
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To: riri
bump to myself. Thunder coming closer...logging off...
5 posted on 05/06/2003 6:15:35 PM PDT by Judith Anne
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To: blam
Do virus mutations always mean that the symptoms and deadly results continue to occur? Might a natural mutation eventually lead to non-lethal forms of SARS?
6 posted on 05/06/2003 6:41:07 PM PDT by twntaipan (Defend American Liberty: Defeat a demoncRAT!)
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To: blam
Can someone read this to me its two long and doesint have any picturs and two confusing with so many doctor stuff in it and it is giving much series headake so my head hurts. so someone please esplain this SARS sicknes unto me.


thanks.
7 posted on 05/06/2003 6:45:45 PM PDT by Hammerhead
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To: twntaipan
"Do virus mutations always mean that the symptoms and deadly results continue to occur? Might a natural mutation eventually lead to non-lethal forms of SARS?"

Yes.

8 posted on 05/06/2003 6:48:43 PM PDT by blam
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To: Hammerhead
"Can someone read this to me its two long and doesint have any picturs and two confusing with so many doctor stuff in it and it is giving much series headake so my head hurts. so someone please esplain this SARS sicknes unto me. thanks."

Your chances of dying of something other than 'old age' just went up big time.

9 posted on 05/06/2003 6:50:23 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
Your chances of dying of something other than 'old age' just went up big time.

Actually, 100% of deaths can be attributed to "cardiac arrest."

Cardiac=Heart
Arrest=Stop

10 posted on 05/06/2003 6:53:31 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (Peace through Strength)
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To: prairiebreeze; blam
Crowding is a bigger part of the problem. Despite the wailings of "conservatives" who decry any and all efforts to limit human population growth, it WILL be limited -- if not by human design, then by swarms of little microbes. The former would be less painful, and less likely to strike the most capable and productive members of society, but since we seem to lack the political will and common sense to do it ourselves, the little bugs will do it for us, using their criteria rather than ours.
11 posted on 05/06/2003 7:54:30 PM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: GovernmentShrinker
". . . but since we seem to lack the political will and common sense to do it ourselves, the little bugs will do it for us, using their criteria rather than ours."

. . .seems we can thank China; it's poverty and ignorance and the Totalitarian Will that engenders for contributing the 'little bugs' in their super genetic combinations that now threaten the rest of the world.

Made in China. . .Sars is not the first of their imports; hope they clean up their act; their politics threaten all of us.

12 posted on 05/06/2003 8:06:52 PM PDT by cricket
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To: cricket
I think their problems are long standing--rural poverty combined with very high population density is a lethal mix. Throw in agricultural practices and culinary peculiarities (particularly among the Cantonese), and a bad situation gets worse.
13 posted on 05/06/2003 8:36:43 PM PDT by twntaipan (Defend American Liberty: Defeat a demoncRAT!)
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To: blam; Judith Anne; Mother Abigail; CathyRyan; per loin; Dog Gone; Petronski; InShanghai; Ma Li; ...
Good ideas on possible countermeasures to SARS.
14 posted on 05/07/2003 4:30:06 AM PDT by aristeides
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To: twntaipan
"Throw in agricultural practices and culinary peculiarities (particularly among the Cantonese), and a bad situation gets worse"

No question. . .save the one the goes begging; when does China move into the 21st century or even the twentieth century with regard to change.

'Terrorist bugs' and terrorist minds have much in common; both breed in ignorance and unenlightened environments.

15 posted on 05/07/2003 4:49:58 AM PDT by cricket
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To: blam
*BUMP* !

Air travel to Asia ought to be made illegal. Gee, you flew to Hong Kong . . . Stay out of the U.S. because you are not coming until you have been passed through a sixty day quarnatine. And if you are a 'SARS carrier, you may have to remain locked out for a year,'

16 posted on 05/07/2003 7:44:03 AM PDT by ex-Texan (primates capitulards toujours en quete de fromage!)
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To: cricket
They may never enter the 21st century in the way the West would like. Remember, in their estimation, they are the enlightened ones (Zhong Guo = middle kingdom). It is the rest of us who are the barbarians.
17 posted on 05/07/2003 7:56:05 AM PDT by twntaipan (Defend American Liberty: Defeat a demoncRAT!)
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To: twntaipan
"Remember, in their estimation, they are the enlightened ones (Zhong Guo = middle kingdom). It is the rest of us who are the barbarians."

. . .true, but there is the truth in the 'mind of the beholder'. . .and there is the truth of the proof in the pudding. . .so to speak;

. . . and there is an indisputable and ominous message from China and they had better 'enlighten up'!

18 posted on 05/07/2003 10:49:22 AM PDT by cricket
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To: cricket
Agreed. Social instability in China has to be a huge fear for the Communist Party.
19 posted on 05/07/2003 5:22:28 PM PDT by twntaipan (Defend American Liberty: Defeat a demoncRAT!)
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