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Centre Health Shiftingon theGlobal paradigm: from rapid detection and response to prevention a Security the source Draft Research Strategy 29th June 2010 February 2015 1 Breaches in species barrier since 1976 Infection Ebola virus February 2015 Animal linked to transmission Bats Year infection first reported 1976 HIV-1 Primates 1981 E. coli O157:H7 Cattle `1982 Borrelia burgdorferi Rodents 1982 HIV-2 Primate 1986 Hendra virus Bats 1994 BSE/vCJD Cattle 1996 Australian lyssavirus Bats 1996 H5N1 influenza A Chickens 1997 Nipah virus Bats 1999 SARS coronavirus Palm civets 2003 Influenza (H1N1) Swine 2009 MERS coronavirus Camel 2012 2 Potential transmission pathways, emerging infectious diseases Emergence No further transmission Continues transmission Ceases/ sporadic February 2015 Continues transmission Continues/ endemic 3 Emergence from animals in nature: Eco Challenge, Malaysia, 2000 February 2015 4 Leptospirosis (N = 33) among 312 participants, Eco Challenge 2000, Malaysia Canada: 4 US: 10 UK: 9 France: 4 Eco Challenge Brazil: 1 Uruguay: 1 February 2015 Australia: 4 5 The current paradigm: rapid detection, risk assessment, and emergency response February 2015 6 SARS: international spread from Hong Kong, 21 February – 12 March, 2003 Doctor from Guangdong Canada F A H Hong Kong J G Ireland K Hotel M Hong Kong B C I D E USA Viet Nam Germany 1 HCW + 2 Singapore Source: WHO/CDC February 2015 Bangkok New York 7 Probable cases of SARS by date of onset worldwide, 1 March – 27 June 2003 8,273 reported cases 775 deaths February 2015 8 SARS and the economy: impact on global travel, April 2003 February 2015 9 Passenger movement, Hong Kong International Airport, March-July 2003 Number of passenger 120 000 WHO travel advisory 2 April WHO lifted travel advisory 23 May 100 000 102 165 Total 80 000 65 255 60 000 40 000 20 000 3/16 3/20 3/24 3/28 4/1 February 2015 4/5 4/9 4/13 4/17 4/21 4/25 4/29 5/3 5/7 5/11 5/15 5/19 5/23 5/27 5/31 6/4 6/8 6/12 6/16 6/20 6/24 6/28 7/2 14 670 0 10 Economic impact SARS, Hong Kong Health (sector) impact small, but impact on other sectors large – Hong Kong retail losses ~ US$334m Hong K ong Hotels yoy % c hang e + 20.0 + 10.0 0.0 -10.0 -20.0 -30.0 -40.0 -50.0 -60.0 -70.0 2002 Q1 2002 Q2 2002 Q3 2002 Q4 2003 Q1 2003 Q2 2003 Q3 2003 Q4 R etail s ales HK $Mn R es taurant R ec eipts HK $Mn 46,000 45,000 44,000 43,000 42,000 41,000 40,000 39,000 38,000 37,000 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 2002 Q1 2002 Q2 February 2015 2002 Q3 2002 Q4 2003 Q1 2003 Q2 2003 Q3 2003 Q4 2002 Q1 2002 Q2 2002 Q3 2002 Q4 2003 Q1 2003 Q2 2003 Q3 2003 Q4 11 The cost of SARS, Asian Development Bank, 2003 % of GDP Hong Kong China, mainland Taiwan South Korea Indonesia Singapore Thailand Malaysia Philippines 4% 0.5% 1.9% 0.5% 1.4% 2.3% 1.6% 1.5% 0.8% 0 February 2015 1 2 3 As of 30 September, 2003, SARS had decreased Asia’s combined GDP by US$18 billion and cost nearly US$60 billion in lost demand and revenues 4 5 6 7 US$ billion 12 Influenza A(H1N1) Pandemic as of 13 June 2009 February 2015 13 February 2015 14 Recent infectious disease outbreaks and their economic impact February 2015 15 Changing the paradigm: joint risk assessment, prediction and prevention February 2015 16 Changing the paradigm: joint human/animal surveillance and risk assessment ● ● share laboratory specimens between animal and human public health ● conduct joint research ● increase use of animal vaccines ● February 2015 identify animal infections/assess their risk to humans stronger regulation of animal husbandry 17 Joint risk communication February 2015 18 Changing the paradigm: risk maps for emergence of infectious diseases February 2015 19 Changing the paradigm: identification/sequencing of animal infections February 2015 20 Pushing the paradigm even further upstream: prevention of emergence at its source February 2015 21 Nipah virus infection, Malaysia, 1998-1999 Source: Chua KB, Journal of Clinical Virology, April 2003 February 2015 22 Nipah virus outbreaks, humans, 1998 - 2008 Dates Location 1998-1999 Malaysia; 265 105 40 1999 Singapore 11 1 9 2001 W. Bengal, India 66 45 68 2001 Bangladesh 13 9 69 2003 Bangladesh 12 8 67 2004 Bangladesh 29 22 76 Bangladesh 36 27 75 2005 Bangladesh 12 11 92 2007 W. Bengal, India 5 5 100 2007 Bangladesh 15 8 54 2008 Bangladesh 11 6 54 February 2015 No. cases No. deaths CFR(%) 23 Changing Nipah virus epidemiology: Bangladesh and India Human-to-human transmission first suspected 2001, hospitalized patients, India Human to human transmission suspected again in 2003, 2005, and 2007, Bangladesh – cases could not be linked to domestic animal exposure, including pigs – index cases not identified: one potential exposure to bat guano in palm wine February 2015 24 Assessing the risk/testing the hypothesis February 2015 Courtesy: Dr Shovon Shazzad, Dr Salah Uddin Khan, and Dr Steve Luby, ICCDR,B and Stanford University. 25 The risk is plausible through the food chain February 2015 Courtesy: Dr Shovon Shazzad, Dr Salah Uddin Khan, and Dr Steve Luby, ICCDR,B and Stanford University. 26 Precautionary measures: community agreement to cover the collection containers Community agriculture meeting February 2015 27 Shifting the paradigm from emergency response to prevention February 2015 28 Ebola emergence: current hypotheses February 2015 29 Ebola Haemorrhagic Fever by mode of transmission, Yambuku DRC,1976 N u m b e r 60 50 Health workers and their contacts Contact and needle/syringe Needle/syringe 40 30 Hospital closed 20 10 Cases: 318 0 Source: CDC September 1 February 2015 6 12 October 18 24 30 6 12 Deaths: 280 (88%) 18 24 30 Mission Hosptial, Tandala Zaire (DRC), 1977 1 clinical case/died 1 contact (sister) fit possible case definition/survived 1 historical probable clinical case/recovered,1972 February 2015 31 Ebola Haemorrhagic Fever by mode of transmission, Kikwit Zaire, 1995 16 14 Non health care workers 12 315 cases Health care workers 10 250 (80%) deaths 8 6 4 2 0 7Mar 13- 19- 25- 31- 6- 12- 18- 24- 30- 6- 12- 18- 24- 30- Mar Mar Mar Mar Apr Apr Apr Apr Apr May May May May May 5- 11- Jun Jun 17Jun Source: WHO/CDC February 2015 32 Ebola outbreaks, West Africa, 2014 February 2015 33 Ebola, new cases as of mid-February, 2015 Source: WHO February 2015 34 Ebola outbreaks can be stopped • Patient identification, isolation and protection of health workers/infection control • Surveillance/contact tracing and fever surveillance with rapid diagnosis and isolation • Community understanding with safe patient and body transport systems, safe burial and household/environmental decontamination February 2015 35 Vaccines against Ebola: possible uses • Short-duration immunity: – Front line health workers – Front line community workers: transporters of patients and bodies, decontamination workers – Ring vaccination: prevent third generation cases • Long-duration immunity – Primary prevention: health workers in Ebola Belt February 2015 36 Ebola candidate vaccines, early 2015 Vaccine Mechanism Trials Comment Ref Plasmid DNA based. VRC-EBODNA02300-VP DNA immunisation with boosting adenoviral vector Phase I Uganda (completed) Process takes 6 months to provide protection in nonhuman primates Sullivan et al Nature 2000 Accelerated vaccine of above ChAd-EBO Adenoviral vector delivers DNA encoding Ebola GP Phase I (started in UK, U.S) Recruiting in Mali, pending in Gambia Process takes 28 days (NH primates and mice). Potential for outbreaks Sullivan et al Nature 2003 VSV-EBO (Canadian) Vesicular stomatitis virus delivers Ag Phase I Currently recruiting Up to thirty minutes post infection (protection against Ebola -50%, Marburg 100%) 33% protection after 48 hrs Feldmannet al Plos Pathog 2007 February 2015 37 Ebola candidate vaccines, 2015 February 2015 38