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A Review of Human Influenza A(H7N9) Infections in 2016 - January 2, 2017

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  • A Review of Human Influenza A(H7N9) Infections in 2016 - January 2, 2017

    Note: Between January 1 and January 9 2017, China officially reported to WHO at least another 107 human cases of H7N9 most with onset dates in 2016. The information presented below relates to the first 125 cases reported with onset dates in 2016. updated January 11, 2017

    The first officially reported human case of infection from a reassortant avian influenza A(H7N9) virus was from the People’s Republic of China (China) in March of 2013, although human H7N9 infection may have occurred in or near Hong Kong as early as 2007 (FAO ID event 220957). Since 2013 the World Health Organization (WHO) has officially reported 808 human cases of H7N9 as of December 23, 2016. In the past few days, an additional 13 H7N9 cases have been reported by public health officials in China but have not yet been published by the WHO. Of these 821 cases, 696 have onset or reporting dates prior to December 31, 2015. The total number of reported H7N9 cases in 2016 is 125.

    Geographic Distribution

    All 125 human cases of H7N9 in 2016 were reported from China. These cases have been reported from 18 provinces and special administrative regions. More specific geographic location information was available for 117 of these cases, the remaining 8 cases were only reported from a specific province; Anhui 2, Hebei 2, Fujian 1, Hubei 1, Shandong 1, and Zhejiang 1. The map below depicts the provinces and special administrative regions with reported 2016 cases. Dots indicate the locations of individual or multiple cases reported in 2016. In 2016, these cases all occurred in the Western portion of China.



    Table: Comparison of the frequencies of human H7N9 infections reported in China between 2013-2015 and 2016 by province/special administrative regions.



    Map: Geographic distribution of human H7N9 cases in China in 2016.

    Age Statistics

    From 2013 to 2015, the median age of H7N9 infected males was 57.5 years with ages ranging from 1 to 91 years old. For females during that period the median age was 54.5 with ages ranging from less than year to 85 years old. The age distributions by gender for 2016 is similar. The chart below compares age categories for 2013-2015 and 2016. In 2016, infected individuals were somewhat younger than previous years.





    Graph: Comparison of the frequencies of human H7N9 cases by age categories.

    Gender

    Between 2013 and 2015, 471 of the reported cases were male (68%) and 220 of the reported cases were female (32%). The genders of the remaining cases were not published. Among the 125 cases reported in 2016, 72% (85) were male and 28% (33) were female. Seven cases do not have a reported gender.
    It seems that males are far more likely to contract H7N9 infections than females. Because almost all cases are associated with exposure to infected poultry, it is possible that different gender roles expose males more frequently to affected poultry than females.

    Fatalities

    Between 2013 and 2015, 143 of the 696 reported H7N9 cases were reported as fatal. These data would suggest a minimum case fatality risk (CFR) of .21.

    The CFR, as defined here, is the conditional probability of death from an H7N9 infection, a ratio between H7N9-caused deaths and recoveries/asymptomatic cases. Because follow-up reporting is lacking in many of these cases, the actual number of deaths versus the number of recoveries is uncertain. Very few of the cases in the period from 2013 to 2015 were officially reported as recovered (only 133).

    In 2016, 29 of the 125 cases were reported as fatal. At face value, the CFR for 2016 is .23 but it is likely to be higher since many of the recently reported cases are currently being treated.

    H7N9 Clusters

    Most of the reported human H7N9 infections in 2016 result from zoonotic transmission of the virus from domestic poultry. Public health reports in 2016 rarely indicate the possibility of human-to-human transmission among confirmed H7N9 cases which would signal a cluster of cases. A human cluster of cases is generally defined by WHO as two or more cases of confirmed, probable, or suspected infections with onset of illness occurring within the same two-week period and who are in the same geographical area and/or are epidemiologically link.

    Based on family ties or restricted geographic area, potential human H7N9 clusters in 2016 include the following. In February 2016 infected individuals in several locations may represent multiple clusters, two siblings in Suzhou Jiangsu, several family members in Wuxi Jiangsu, and several unrelated individuals in Fuzhou Fujian. Several family members from Tahie Jiangxi were reported as H7N9 cases in April. Two cases from Hebei in July of 2016 may represent a cluster. Recently, two infected individuals from Kunshan Jiangsu were reported in November and three cases in Hefei Anhui in December, with no other details are available.

    Discussion

    Most of the human H7N9 case reported in 2016 are sporadic infections. As noted above, a few clusters of cases suggest that human-to-human transmission may have occurred but did not result in sustained human-to-human transmission. H7N9 cases seems to occur on an annual cyclical basis that follows the pattern of season human influenza infections. As depicted in the chart below, H7N9 cases were frequent from week numbers 1-23 and started increasing again in week number 46. The seasonal fluctuation in human infections indicates that more H7N9 cases can be expected in the coming months. While the number of H7N9 cases declined in 2016 compared to earlier years, the potential for a deadly epidemic or a possible H7N9 pandemic continues to exist.



    Chart: Epidemic curve of human H7N9 cases in 2016.


    Note: The information presented and discussed here is based on a compilation of publicly available data sources including WHO, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and various public health agencies supplemented by media reports as available.


    Last edited by Laidback Al; January 11, 2017, 05:25 PM.
    http://novel-infectious-diseases.blogspot.com/

  • #2
    Please see updated comments posted on January 11, 2017:

    What is happening with H7N9 in China?
    Last edited by sharon sanders; January 11, 2017, 02:04 PM. Reason: new post information

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