Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

    Originally posted by niman
    Commentary

    N294S Tamiflu Resistance Marker In H5N1 Ducks
    Recombinomics Commentary
    January 18, 2007


    The drug-resistant strains found in Egypt likely developed after the patients were hospitalized and treated with Tamiflu, with the virus responding directly to the drug, Hayden said. It was not proven, however, that that was the case, and a more worrying scenario would be if drug-resistant strains were already circulating among birds.

    Though Tamiflu remains the drug of choice to treat H5N1, experts may have to consider other options if they find more resistant viruses.

    "What the resistance tests look for are markers associated with antiviral resistance," though finding the markers did not necessarily mean Tamiflu would not work, said Dr. Angus Nicoll, flu director at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

    Hayden said the mutations found in Egypt were different from Tamiflu-resistant H5N1 viruses found two years ago in Vietnam. The Vietnamese strains were definitely resistant to Tamiflu, whereas the Egyptian viruses have only proven they are not as susceptible to the drug, he said.

    The above comments provide additional detail on the isolates from the Gharbiya cluster, but fail to note that samples were collected with 48 hours of Tamiflu treatment, suggesting the changes did not develop in the patients. Although recent sequences from Qinghai isolates from birds in Egypt have not been reported, sequences in H5N1 infected ducks in China have been reported.

    Thus, the N294S change has already been found in the wild, indicating the change did not create a finess penalty that prevent the altered H5N1 from competing with wild type H5N1.

    The N294S was found in all four sequences from the two Gharbiya cluster patients, which also suggests the changes were not linked to treatment of these patients. Additional sequences from Qinghai infected birds and patients in Egypt will help resolve these questions, but the available data points toward a circulating H5N1 with N294S.

    The level of resistance can be influenced by the genetic background surrounding the change. The H5N1 in ducks in China provide donor sequences for the Qinghai sequences found in Egypt. Data on Tamiflu resistance levels on the duck isolates have not been reported. However, the H5N1 from the patients in Egypt has been tested and as indicated above, the H5N1 from Egypt were not as susceptible to the drug.

    However, this is a major concern if the N294S is widespread because there have already been problems reported associated resistance of H5N1 to Tamiflu. H274Y has already developed in patients treated sub-optimally with Tamiflu, and many countries have increased the H5N1 treatment dosage. The newly reported change would raise serious questions about the use of Tamiflu for both treatment and prevention of H5N1 containing N294S.

    Tamiflu blankets have been applied in prior outbreaks, including Turkey and Indonesia, and suboptimal treatment may lead to additional isolates with N294S or a combination of resistance markers if N294S is already present.

    More information on N294S frequencies of H5N1, including Qinghai H5N1 in Egypt, would be useful.

    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

      Below are public human H5N1 NA sequneces from Vietnam in 2005. Can anyone find the sequence with N294S?

      <TABLE class=resultstable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=4 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=132478 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ094290 </TD><TD>A/Viet Nam/BL-014/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=132479 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ094291 </TD><TD>A/Viet Nam/DT-036/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=132480 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ094292 </TD><TD>A/Viet Nam/HG-207/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=119679 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>ISDN119679 </TD><TD>A/Viet Nam/HN30408/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=117783 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>ISDN117783 </TD><TD>A/Viet Nam/JP14/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=117782 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>ISDN117782 </TD><TD>A/Viet Nam/JP4207/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=141334 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ493075 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL105/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=141335 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ493076 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL115/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=136822 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ250163 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL115/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=136823 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ250164 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL119/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1327 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=141336 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ493077 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL119/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1326 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=136824 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ250165 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL2009/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1333 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=141337 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ493078 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/CL2009/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1332 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=218104 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ535726 </TD><TD>A/Vietnam/PEV16T/2005 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1350 </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

        Well, no, actually. Clicking on each link, I see the sequence. Each line is 75 long. So four lines is 300. Position 294 is six back from the right end of the fourth line. By my eye, the last 8 positions of the fourth line are the same for all the listed sequences.
        ?????

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

          Originally posted by wetDirt
          Well, no, actually. Clicking on each link, I see the sequence. Each line is 75 long. So four lines is 300. Position 294 is six back from the right end of the fourth line. By my eye, the last 8 positions of the fourth line are the same for all the listed sequences.
          ?????
          The sequence position will vary depending on the presence or absence of the 20 aa deletion. For the human isolates from Vietnam in 2005, all have the deletion so the N -->S change would be around position 275b of the protein sequence. It is the lower case "s" in this seqence surrounding the change (VCRDsWHG). Wild type would be VCRDnWHG. All public sequences at Genbank or Los Alamos have an "n" at position 294.

          It would seem that the sequence from the patient in Vietnam in 2005 is "hidden" in the WHO private database, if the WHO update is accurate.
          Last edited by AlaskaDenise; January 18, 2007, 07:12 PM. Reason: typos

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

            IF you use the GenBank link, the exact positions are noted.

            .
            "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

              http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/con...07tamiflu.html

              Tamiflu-resistant H5N1 strain surfaces in Egypt

              Lisa Schnirring Contributing Writer


              Jan 18, 2007 (CIDRAP News) ? Two patients who recently died of H5N1 avian influenza in Egypt had a strain of the virus that was moderately resistant to oseltamivir (Tamiflu), the World Health Organization (WHO) announced today, but the finding has not prompted new health advisories.

              News of the drug-resistant strain came as Egypt's health ministry announced a new human H5N1 case, involving a 27-year-old woman from the town of Beni Suef, about 62 miles south of Cairo. The report was carried today by IRIN, a United Nations news and information service.

              Oseltamivir is recommended by the WHO as the first-line drug for H5N1 patients. The patients who had resistant infections were a 16-year-old girl and her 26-year-old uncle, who lived in the same house in Egypt's Gharbiyah province, in the Nile delta 50 miles northwest of Cairo. They got sick in December; the man was hospitalized on the 17th, followed by his niece 2 days later, the WHO said. Both received 2 tablets of oseltamivir on Dec 21 and were transferred to a referral hospital on Dec 23, the same day samples were taken.

              The girl died Dec 25 and her uncle died Dec 28. They were part of a possible family cluster; H5N1 avian influenza was also confirmed in a 30-year-old woman in the household, said to be the man's sister, who died, though few details are available about her. The WHO said the patients reportedly had contact with sick ducks. The two cases boosted Egypt's avian flu total to 18 cases and 10 fatalities, all of which occurred in 2006.

              Genetic sequencing was done at US Naval Medical Research Unit 3 in Cairo and at WHO collaborating centers in Atlanta and London, the WHO said.

              Tests suggested that the virus had "moderately reduced susceptibility" to osteltamivir. The same type of mutation was previously identified in a Vietnamese case in 2005, the WHO said.

              But in contrast to the Egyptian cases, the virus in the Vietnamese case appeared to be highly resistant to oseltamivir. The case, reported in December 2005 in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), involved a 13-year-old girl who was started on oseltamivir the day she was hospitalized, receiving the recommended dose of 75 mg twice a day for 5 days.

              The girl was one of 8 patients whose cases were analyzed after they were treated for H5N1 infection in Ho Chi Minh City in 2004 and 2005.

              Researchers sequenced the H5N1 virus's neuraminidase gene to look for resistance, signaled by the substitution of tyrosine for histidine at amino acid position 274. The mutation was found in the 13-year-old girl, who died of severe pneumonia on her seventh day in the hospital.

              The viral load in her throat was higher by the time of her death than it was earlier, which, with other laboratory evidence, suggested that drug resistance contributed to treatment failure and ultimately death, the NEJM report noted.

              The mutation was also found in an 18-year-old girl, but the researchers said the relationship between the viral resistance and her death was less clear.

              Fred Hayden, a WHO avian flu and antiviral expert, told the Associated Press (AP) today the drug-resistant strains in the Egyptian patients likely developed after they were treated with oseltamivir. He said a more worrying scenario would be if oseltamivir-resistant strains were circulating in birds.

              The mutations in Egypt are different from the ones in Vietnam, Hayden told the AP. The Vietnamese strains were definitely resistant to oseltamivir, but the Egyptian ones were only shown to be less susceptible to the drug.

              There is no evidence that oseltamivir-resistant strains are spreading in Egypt or elsewhere, the WHO said. The agency said it is not changing its antiviral treatment recommendations, because the clinical level of resistance of the mutations is not yet well established.

              Public health implications of the findings are limited because the mutation is not associated with any known changes in transmissibility of the virus between humans, the WHO said, adding that it would not be raising the pandemic alert level.

              Because of concerns about drug-resistant strains, avian flu experts have suggested that a higher dosage, longer treatment course, or combination therapy with other antiviral drugs may be needed to ensure the effectiveness of oseltamivir.

              Terence Hurley, a US spokesperson for Roche, the maker of Tamiflu, told CIDRAP News by e-mail that studies are being conducted to gauge the optimal oseltamivir regimens for use in H5N1 flu cases. "These activities are based upon laboratory data and from information from patients infected with H5N1 who have been treated with Tamiflu," he said.

              Roche is collaborating with the US National Institutes of Health on clinical studies to determine the efficacy of oseltamivir in the treatment of severe influenza, including H5N1, Hurley reported. "The NIH study is comparing standard doses of Tamiflu versus double doses for the treatment of people infected with avian influenza and other severe influenza infections in the Far East," he wrote. "Results of the study will be reported as soon as they are available."

              The Egyptian woman reported today as a new H5N1 patient was admitted to a hospital Jan 11 after having given birth on Jan 2, IRIN reported. She initially denied contact with poultry, but WHO spokesman Hassan el-Bushra told IRIN that ducks and pigeons were found in her home and chickens had died nearby.

              If her case is confirmed by the WHO, it will be Egypt's 19th.

              See also:

              Jan 18 WHO report

              Dec 27 WHO report

              Dec 22, 2005 CIDRAP News article "Tamiflu resistance in avian flu victims sparks concern"

              De Jong MD, Thanh TT, Khanh TH, et al. Oseltamivir resistance during treatment of influenza A (H5N1) infection. N Engl J Med 2005 Dec 22;353(25):2667-72 [Full text]
              "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                Originally posted by niman
                It would seem that the sequence from the patient in Vietnam in 2005 is "hidden" in the WHO private database, if the WHO update is accurate.
                Try DQ250165 A/Vietnam/CL2009/2005

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                  Originally posted by Mamabird
                  Try DQ250165 A/Vietnam/CL2009/2005
                  The sequence is wild type at postion 294 (has an N), but does have H274Y.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                    Originally posted by niman
                    The sequence is wild type at postion 294 (has an N), but does have H274Y.
                    Sensitive: LNAPNYHYEE

                    Resistant: LNAPNYYYEE

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                      Originally posted by Mamabird
                      Sensitive: LNAPNYHYEE

                      Resistant: LNAPNYYYEE
                      Correct. That is H274Y. However, that is in Vietnam in patients that developed Tamiflu resistance during treatment.

                      However, the change in Egypt is N294S, which is not in any public human sequence, which were was listed in the earlier post. All public sequences have N (and not S) at position 294.

                      Today's WHO update indocated that the change in Egypt (N294S) was in ONE patient in Vietnam. H274Y has been reported in several patients in Vietnam that developed resistance during Tamiflu treatment.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                        Originally posted by Mamabird
                        Sensitive: LNAPNYHYEE

                        Resistant: LNAPNYYYEE
                        N294S has been seen in H5N1 in ducks (but not public human H5N1)

                        <TABLE class=resultstable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=4 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR bgColor=#a7c4ef><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=212477 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>DQ997411 </TD><TD>A/duck/Zhejiang/bj/2002 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1458 </TD><TD>2002 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD><TD></TD></TR><TR bgColor=white><TD align=left><INPUT onclick=setAll(this.checked) type=checkbox value=14560 name=checkbox> </TD><TD class=displaytablerow align=left></TD><TD>AY075034 </TD><TD>A/Duck/Hong Kong/380.5/2001 </TD><TD>NA (6) </TD><TD>1427 </TD><TD>2001 </TD><TD>H5N1 </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                          Originally posted by niman
                          Correct.Today's WHO update indocated that the change in Egypt (N294S) was in ONE patient in Vietnam. H274Y has been reported in several patients in Vietnam that developed resistance during Tamiflu treatment.
                          I apoligize, but I can find no statement by any WHO official that stated that a Vietnam patient had N294S. All I can locate is a statement by a reporter that the so called "294S" mutation was also in Vietnam. As everyone knows, that has never been the case, nor has WHO ever represented that to be the case as far as anyone knows.

                          The point is, and always has been, that when Tamiflu is given to infected patients, H5N1 quickly attempts to overt the roadblock that binds the new virons to the host cell. It has four different mutations that it uses to accomplish that, only one of which is N294S.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                            <hr style="border: 1px none ; height: 1px; background-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); width: 100%;" align="left">
                            Avian influenza - situation in Egypt - update


                            18 January 2007
                            Viruses with a genetic mutation, linked in laboratory testing to moderately reduced susceptibility to oseltamivir, have been discovered in two persons previously reported with H5N1 infections in Egypt. Both patients had been on treatment with oseltamivir for two days before the clinical samples that yielded the viruses were taken.
                            The two patients from whom samples were taken were a 16 year-old female and a 26 year-old male from Gharbiyah Province, Egypt.<sup>1</sup> They were a niece and uncle, respectively, who lived in the same house. The girl was admitted to a hospital on 19 December 2006, while the man was admitted on 17 December. On 21 December they began receiving 2 tablets per day of oseltamivir. On 23 December they were moved to a referral hospital. The samples which have so far been tested were taken from the two patients on 23 December. The girl died on 25 December and the man died on 28 December 2006.
                            In this and all other H5N1 investigations there is close, ongoing coordination between Egypt's Ministry of Health and Population (MOH&P) and WHO. It was Egypt's monitoring and rapid virological analysis conducted at the Central Public Health Laboratory in Cairo that initially allowed the diagnoses of H5N1 to be made. Confirmatory testing and genetic sequencing was done at NAMRU-3 and at two WHO Collaborating Centres located in Atlanta, USA and London, UK.
                            At this time there is no indication that oseltamivir resistance is widespread in Egypt or elsewhere. WHO is not making any changes in antiviral treatment recommendations for H5N1-infected persons published in June 2006 because the clinical level of resistance of these mutations is not yet well established. Current laboratory testing suggests that the level of reduced susceptibility is moderate. This mutation has previously been identified in Viet Nam in one case in 2005. Moreover, these mutations are not associated with any known change in the transmissibility of the virus between humans. Based on these considerations, the public health implications at this time are limited. Finally, these findings do not indicate a need for a change in phase level. The WHO pandemic preparedness level remains at three.
                            The Egyptian authorities, WHO and its Collaborating Centres will continue to share with the public all relevant information from the on-going investigations and analyses as soon as it becomes available.


                            <sup>1</sup>The ages and dates in this update related to the two patients, may differ slightly from earlier reports, but reflect the most recent information provided to WHO.




                            <!-- include footer--> <!-- include ftr-->
                            "We are in this breathing space before it happens. We do not know how long that breathing space is going to be. But, if we are not all organizing ourselves to get ready and to take action to prepare for a pandemic, then we are squandering an opportunity for our human security"- Dr. David Nabarro

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                              Originally posted by Mamabird
                              I apoligize, but I can find no statement by any WHO official that stated that a Vietnam patient had N294S. All I can locate is a statement by a reporter that the so called "294S" mutation was also in Vietnam. As everyone knows, that has never been the case, nor has WHO ever represented that to be the case as far as anyone knows.

                              The point is, and always has been, that when Tamiflu is given to infected patients, H5N1 quickly attempts to overt the roadblock that binds the new virons to the host cell. It has four different mutations that it uses to accomplish that, only one of which is N294S.
                              Either 2 reporters got it wrong or there is a piece missing from the public domain.

                              http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/con...07tamiflu.html

                              Tamiflu-resistant H5N1 strain surfaces in Egypt

                              Lisa Schnirring Contributing Writer

                              **snipped**
                              Tests suggested that the virus had "moderately reduced susceptibility" to osteltamivir. The same type of mutation was previously identified in a Vietnamese case in 2005, the WHO said.
                              AND this one:
                              Moderately Tamiflu-resistant bird flu in Egypt--WHO
                              18 Jan 2007 14:49:57 GMT

                              By Stephanie Nebehay


                              GENEVA, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Two people who died of bird flu in Egypt last month had a strain of the H5N1 virus which has shown "moderate" resistance to the frontline antiviral Tamiflu, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday.

                              Known as "294S", the mutated strain was first detected in 2005 in a teenage girl in Vietnam who survived, but this is the first evidence of it spreading beyond Asia, it said.
                              "In the beginning of change, the patriot is a scarce man (or woman https://flutrackers.com/forum/core/i...ilies/wink.png), and brave, and hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for it then costs nothing to be a patriot."- Mark TwainReason obeys itself; and ignorance submits to whatever is dictated to it. -Thomas Paine

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Re: New Strain of Bird Flu Found in Egypt Is Resistant to Antiviral Drug

                                Originally posted by Mamabird
                                I apoligize, but I can find no statement by any WHO official that stated that a Vietnam patient had N294S. All I can locate is a statement by a reporter that the so called "294S" mutation was also in Vietnam. As everyone knows, that has never been the case, nor has WHO ever represented that to be the case as far as anyone knows.

                                The point is, and always has been, that when Tamiflu is given to infected patients, H5N1 quickly attempts to overt the roadblock that binds the new virons to the host cell. It has four different mutations that it uses to accomplish that, only one of which is N294S.
                                From the WHO update:

                                This mutation has previously been identified in Viet Nam in one case in 2005
                                Last edited by HenryN; January 18, 2007, 10:50 PM.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X