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> Alert! Avian Influenza A(H5N1)
Probable
Person-to-Person Transmission of Avian Influenza A (H5N1)
Abstract
Background
During 2004, a highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) virus
caused poultry disease in eight Asian countries and infected at
least 44 persons, killing 32; most of these persons had had close
contact with poultry. No evidence of efficient person-to-person
transmission has yet been reported. We investigated possible person-to-person
transmission in a family cluster of the disease in Thailand.
Methods
For each of the three involved patients, we reviewed the circumstances
and timing of exposures to poultry and to other ill persons. Field
teams isolated and treated the surviving patient, instituted active
surveillance for disease and prophylaxis among exposed contacts,
and culled the remaining poultry surrounding the affected village.
Specimens from family members were tested by viral culture, microneutralization
serologic analysis, immunohistochemical assay, reverse-transcriptase–polymerase-chain-reaction
(RT-PCR) analysis, and genetic sequencing.
Results
The index patient became ill three to four days after her last exposure
to dying household chickens. Her mother came from a distant city
to care for her in the hospital, had no recognized exposure to poultry,
and died from pneumonia after providing 16 to 18 hours of unprotected
nursing care. The aunt also provided unprotected nursing care; she
had fever five days after the mother first had fever, followed by
pneumonia seven days later. Autopsy tissue from the mother and nasopharyngeal
and throat swabs from the aunt were positive for influenza A (H5N1)
by RT-PCR. No additional chains of transmission were identified,
and sequencing of the viral genes identified no change in the receptor-binding
site of hemagglutinin or other key features of the virus. The sequences
of all eight viral gene segments clustered closely with other H5N1
sequences from recent avian isolates in Thailand.
Conclusions
Disease in the mother and aunt probably resulted from person-to-person
transmission of this lethal avian influenzavirus during unprotected
exposure to the critically ill index patient.
Source
Information
From
the Bureau of Epidemiology (K.U., C.P.), the Departments of Medical
Sciences (R. Kitphati, W.A., P.T., M.C.) and Disease Control (S.C.),
and the Kamphang Phet Hospital (R. Khontong), Thai Ministry of Public
Health, Nonthaburi, Thailand; the Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital,
Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand (P.A., P.P., M.U., K.B.);
the International Emerging Infections Program, Thai Ministry of
Public Health and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Nonthaburi, Thailand (S.F.D., J.M.S.); and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta (N.J.C., S.R.Z.).
Address
reprint requests to Dr. Ungchusak at the Bureau of Epidemiology,
Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health, Tivanon
Rd., Nonthaburi 11000, Thailand, or at kum@health.moph.go.th.
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