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Addressing Emerging Pandemic Threats: Lessons from theand PastLessons 10 Years Observations from the Past 100 Years Andrew Clements, Ph. D. USAID, Bureau for Global Health 7 March 2014 Emerging Threats Program Background: Existing vs. New Public Health Threats Existing Public Health Threats Examples New Public Health Threats Affected Areas HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria, preventable pH1N1, H5N1, and H7N9 influenza; SARS and MERS coronavirus; childhood diseases, ARIs, DDs, Nipah virus NTDs, under-nutrition, chronic diseases very low (<1000 cases annually), high (millions of cases annually) but case fatality rates 10-70% often geographically contained geographically dispersed (country, sub-region) (global, regional) Diagnostics yes no or limited distribution Interventions yes no Program focus scaling up interventions; building capacity gathering evidence for interventions; building capacity Disease burden Budget, staffing, insufficient in many countries to go to scale; substantial international/ training, donor assistance for scale-up commodities Emerging Threats Program insufficient in many countries to gather evidence; very limited international/donor assistance Challenge: Mobilizing Resources for New Threats • Relatively low incidence • Immediate health threats higher priority than potential future threats • Frequent warnings of new threats met with skepticism Difficult to mobilize resources (country level and international/donor level) to: • gather evidence • develop/distribute diagnostics • respond while problem still manageable The sky is falling ! Emerging Threats Program Challenges: Understanding New Threats • Standard case definitions and reporting procedures usually lacking • Health care staff and communities generally not sensitized to signs and symptoms • Difficult to determine risk factors with only tens or hundreds of cases spread out over several years Emerging Threats Program • Very difficult to design interventions • Interventions will most likely be non-biomedical (e.g. policy, behavioral) - Unless current medicines/ vaccines are effective, generally not enough time to develop new medicines/vaccines - Even if current medicines/ vaccines are effective, generally not sufficient quantities for need, especially for a pandemic Gathering Evidence for Interventions: A Classic Model 2 Map of cholera cases in Soho, London (1858) Intervention = remove pump handle Dr. John Snow Emerging Threats Program Broad St. pump Gathering Evidence on New Public Health Threats Two parallel approaches 1. Study past pandemics (very rare; only 7 since 1900) 2. Study emerging public health threats (rare, but hundreds of events since 1940s) Key questions include: • Where, how did they start? • What impact did they have? • Why were these microbes successful? • What interventions (if any) worked? Emerging Threats Program Observations on Pandemics Relatively low mortality (<10 million) Relatively low economic impact Relatively high economic impact H2N2 flu (1957-1958) H3N2 flu (1968-1969) 7th cholera pandemic* (1961-present) Relatively high mortality (>10 million) pH1N1 flu (2009-2010) SARS-CoV (2002-2003) H1N1 flu (1918-1919) HIV/AIDS (~1920-present) Observations: • Origin: Asia (4), Africa (1), Americas (1), unknown (1) • Source: animals (6), environment (1) • Type of microbe: virus (6), bacteria (1) • Direct human-to-human transmission (6) • Some acute (5), others protracted (2) • Potential for very high mortality • Low mortality does not equal low economic impact • Impact can vary considerably across countries** • Only one (SARS) was contained by (non-biomedical) interventions*** Emerging Threats Program Source: WHO; * since 1800. ** e.g. average mortality rate for 1918 flu ranged from 0.2%-20% in part because of income level; *** infection prevention and control in hospitals Observations on Other Emerging Public Health Threats • Many caused by viruses from animals such as bats, rodents, primates*^; livestock may amplify viruses • Disease spillover associated with all regions, but some areas are “hot spots” due to favorable conditions such as specific human activities* • Diseases emerging from wildlife New diseases can have significant impact** mortality usually low, but economic impact can be significant, e.g. >$200 billion in direct and indirect costs over past decade Diseases emerging from livestock • Most human infections due to animal-to-human transmission; some human-to-human transmission possible, but not efficient • Cross-sectoral approaches can improve detection/response • In some cases, non-biomedical interventions (changes in farming and livestock marketing; infection prevention and control in hospitals) have reduced amplification/spread among animals and among people Emerging Threats Program * Global Trends in Emerging Infectious Diseases, Jones, et al., 2008, Nature, 451:990-994; ** People, Pathogens and Our Planet – Volume 1: Towards a One Health Approach for Controlling Zoonotic Diseases, World Bank. ^ USAID PREDICT project Spillover, Amplification, and Spread further amplification and spread No further transmission spillover from wild animals to people human to human transmission No further transmission No further transmission spillover from livestock to people source No further transmission spillover from wild animals to livestock amplification Emerging Threats Program No further transmission Minimizing Spillover, Amplification, and Spread Limited interventions spillover from wild animals to people Good hospital interventions; some community interventions human to human transmission X Good farm and spillover from market interventions livestock to source people spillover from X Good farm and wild animals market interventions to livestock source Emerging Threats Program Recent Emergence of Select “New” Viruses* Already spreading 400 efficiently from person to person when first detected 350 Cumulative number of reported human cases (confirmed) At least 17,000 cases after 2 months pH1N1 flu (Apr 09) At least 1,037 cases after 4 months Solid lines = efficient human-to-human spread Dotted lines = primarily animal-to-human spread Dashed lines = both animal-to-human and human-to human spread SARS-CoV (Nov 02) H7N9 flu (Feb 13) 300 250 200 Mostly animal-tohuman transmission with limited human-tohuman spread MERS-CoV (Mar 12) 150 100 H5N1 flu (Nov 03) 50 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Months after first human case * Based on symptom onset data from WHO (H5N1, H7N9, MERS-CoV) through 3/5/14, WHO case counts (H1N1), and Molecular Evolution of the SARS Coronavirus During the Course of the SARS Epidemic in China, Science, 12 March 2004, 303, pp. 1666-1669. ^ November 2003 used for H5N1 since this was the beginning of this virus’ continued spillover into human populations in multiple countries. Emerging Threats Program One Example: Reducing Spillover of New Threats 120 Global H5N1 human cases by year 80 40 * 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 0 3600 2400 1200 H5N1 Global H5N1 poultry outbreaks by year Interventions: • Rapid detection • Culling infected birds • Poultry vaccination • Farm/market biosecurity * * 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 0 Emerging Threats Program Lesson learned: for some public health threats, the “pump handle” may be an animal Sources: FAO, OIE, WHO; * = data not complete What is the Future Forecast for New Threats? • Spillover of animal diseases into human populations expected to continue; many diseases benign, some serious • Rates of spillover, amplification, and spread will increase over time since drivers (human and animal population size and density, land use change, etc.) will likely continue to increase • However, with improved interventions and investments in their proper application, rates of spillover, amplification, and spread could be decreased • Existing interventions (farm/market biosecurity; infection prevention and control in hospitals) need wider application • Need other complementary interventions, e.g. limit spillover of diseases from wildlife to people Emerging Threats Program More People = More Opportunities for Disease Spillover All driven by increasing human population Rapidly increasing Increasing Increasing Increasing Increasing domestic + crop +human + natural =animal-human population animal production resource Increasing human population production extraction (e.g. timber, minerals, oil/gas) contact and spillover rate Host animals for influenza viruses World Meat Production by Type, 1961-2005 (FAO) Percent increase +320% +700% +132% +1950% +117% Emerging Threats Program Year Opportunities for Disease Spillover from Animals Which contribute most to disease spillover? Bush-meat hunting Live animal markets Collecting animal waste Which interventions are most effective? Pets Wildlife and livestock farms Emerging Threats Program Extractive industry/ Land use change Human Activities Disrupting Animal Habitats From History the film Contagion, Warner Bros. Pictures shows2011, again and again how nature points out the folly of men From “Godzilla” by Blue Öyster Cult (1977) Emerging Threats Program Human Activities Attracting Wildlife Emerging Threats Program Source: Dr. Steve Luby, Stanford University Opportunities for Disease Amplification Which contribute most to disease amplification? Roving flocks Which interventions are most effective? Mixing species on farm Mixing species in market Emerging Threats Program “Factory” farms Hunan, Yunnan Guangxi Opportunities for&Disease Spread (via Trade, Travel) Informal poultry trade in Asia Which contribute most to disease spread? Source: http://www.thestar.com.my/story.aspx/?file=%2f2009%2f8%2f10%2fstarprobe%2f4369565 Source: FAO commissioned cross-border study reports Pet fish trade out of South America Air travel Which interventions are most effective? Source: http://spatial.ly/2013/05/great-world-flight-paths-map/ Emerging Threats Program Source: http://wwf.panda.org/what_we_do/where_we_work/amazon/vision_amazon/models/natural_resources_manage ment_amazon/aquarium_trade_amazon_rainforest/ First North America H5N1 bird flu death confirmed in Canada 8 January 2014 Last updated at 17:35 ET BBC Canadian health officials have confirmed the first known fatal case of the H5N1 avian influenza strain in North America. Canadian Health Minister Rona Ambrose said the deceased person was an Alberta resident who had recently travelled to Beijing. Calling the death an "isolated case", Ms Ambrose said the risk to the general population was low. Ten people have died in Alberta this season from swine flu, or H1N1. H5N1 infects the lower respiratory tract deep in the lung, where it can cause deadly pneumonia. In the latest incident, the infected person first showed symptoms of the flu on an Air Canada flight from Beijing to Vancouver on 27 December, officials said. The passenger continued on to Edmonton and on 1 January was admitted to hospital where they died two days later. Emerging Threats Program Next Steps for Addressing New Public Health Threats • Strengthen developing country protocols, platforms, and capacities for cross-sectoral, rapid disease detection/response these will be used for responding to new threats • Understand which public health threats are most likely to spillover from animals to people • Investigate (in advance) mechanisms for spillover of animal disease to people • Develop interventions and response plans, monitor, and revise as needed Emerging Threats Program Recent Detection of Avian Influenza Viruses in Asia June 2013-February 2014 Virus sub-type H5N1 HPAI* H5N2 HPAI H5N8 HPAI H6N1 AI^ H7N2 HPAI H7N9 AI H9N2 AI H10N8 AI Sources: OIE, WHO; * Highly-Pathogenic Avian Influenza; ^ Avian Influenza. Hosts for each of the influenza virus sub-types are indicated as follows: humans ( ); poultry ( ); wild birds ( ). Dots shows the approximate location where an influenza virus sub-type was detected in any of the hosts. Emerging Threats Program = not detected in people prior to 2013 Detection of Specific Zoonotic Viruses that have Potential to Spread within Human Populations* Nov 2012-Oct 2013 Nov 2013-Oct 2014 Imported from China = H5N1 highly-pathogenic avian influenza (poultry, wild birds, or humans = H7N9 low-pathogenic avian influenza (poultry, wild birds, or humans) = other novel avian influenzas such as H6N1 and H10N8 (humans) = other highly-pathogenic avian influenza H5, H7, or H9 avian influenza (poultry, wild birds) and/or other low-pathogenic H5, H7, or H9 (humans) = H1N1v, H1N2v, and H3N2v swine influenza (humans) = Ebola (humans) = Marburg (humans) = Nipah (humans) = Middle East Respiratory Syndrome-Coronavirus (humans) Sources = OIE, WHO, CDC, Ministry of Agriculture/FAO (Egypt, Indonesia), and IEDCR (Bangladesh) reports between 11/1/12 and 3/14/14. * = All of these viruses are capable of infecting people and human populations likely do not have wide-spread immunity to them; at present, human-to-human transmission appears to be limited. While these reports reflect known infections with these viruses, there may be additional viral circulation in these and other countries that is not detected due to limitations in surveillance and/or detection. = countries (including northeastern Brazil, southeastern China, and most of Indonesia) using USAID funding between FY2012 and Emerging FY2014 for surveillance and response to avian influenzaThreats and/or otherProgram emerging pandemic threats. Mapping Viral Diversity in “Hot Spot” Regions PREDICT Project: Animal and human samples being tested for 20 viral families known to cause human disease including Coronaviruses, Ebola, Influenza, Marburg, Nipah. Over 250 novel viruses have been detected so far. Emerging Threats Program Building the Foundation for Action Existing public health threats Mostly done Mostly done Problem identification, gathering evidence Developing/ testing interventions In process Scaling up interventions Strengthening capacity You are here New public health threats In process Just beginning Problem identification, gathering evidence Developing/ testing interventions Strengthening capacity You are here Emerging Threats Program Not started Scaling up interventions Time “One Health” Approach Because of the role of animals in the spillover and amplification of Emerging Public Health Threats, prevention, surveillance, detection, response and research efforts along with training need to operate in multiple sectors Public Health The “One Health” concept recognizes that the health of humans is connected to the health of animals and the environment. “One Health” Animal Health Emerging Threats Program Environmental Health Source: CDC http://www.cdc.gov/onehealth/ Existing One Health Capacity Limited • Limited capacity for dealing with old and new disease threats for both animals and people: Limitations in disease detection/response capacity, health care services, data for policy, staff, budgets Insufficient stockpile of biomedical measures (e.g. vaccines, medicines) • Limited capacity to predict disease emergence Some understanding on where, how, and why diseases emerge, but more specificity needed for prevention and containment • Lack of effective coordination across society (e.g. government, military, civil society, private sector) across sectors (e.g. public health, animal health, environment) Emerging Threats Program USAID Pandemic Influenza & Other Emerging Threats Activity areas: Avian Influenza Pandemic Preparedness Current activities Past activities Emerging Threats Program Other Emerging Threats PIOET Accomplishments (2005-2014): New Threats 1. Decreased H5N1 threat – Faster detection and containment – Fewer countries affected 2. Enhanced pandemic preparedness – 30 countries established national coordinating bodies for preparedness – 25 countries developed “first order” pandemic preparedness plans – Military authorities in 32 countries developed “civ:mil” preparedness response plans 3. Improved infectious disease detection – Detection of routine infectious diseases – Surveillance and detection of microbes with pandemic potential – Improved understanding of conditions that favor disease emergence/spread 4. Strengthened capacity – Pre-service training (One Health) – In-service training (public health, animal health): lab, surveillance, epi, etc. * Coordinated with CDC and WHO; ^ coordinated with FAO Emerging Threats Program PIOET Accomplishments (2005-2014) continued 5. Rapidly used PIOET platforms and expertise to address new threats: • H1N1 influenza pandemic (2009-2010)* – – – • MERS-coronavirus (2012-2014)* – – • detailed technical and logistics experts to WHO to assist in planning distribution of vaccine and ancillary equipment deployed >70 million doses of H1N1 pandemic vaccine (including U.S. donation) and injection equipment to >60 countries upgraded H1N1 surveillance and laboratory capacities in 26 countries in Africa and Latin America genetic sequence comparison used to target surveillance surveillance and lab protocols used to identify animal source H7N9 avian influenza (2013-2014)*^ – surveillance and lab protocols used to identify animal source and other potential threats circulating in animals * Coordinated with CDC and WHO; ^ coordinated with FAO Emerging Threats Program H7N9 (2013) MERS-CoV (2012) H1N1 (2009) H5N1 (2005) SARS-CoV (2002) Animal and human infectious disease programs Global Health Security “To stop disease that spreads across borders, we must strengthen our systems of public health…. And we must come together to prevent, detect, and fight every kind of biological danger – whether it is a pandemic like H1N1, a terrorist threat, or a treatable disease. --President Obama, UNGA, September 22, 2011 • White House Global Health Security Vision – “to prevent, detect, and respond to biological threats, regardless of cause” • Provides a new and important strategic framework for “re-visioning” our rationale for action and opportunities for broadening our partnerships Emerging Threats Program USAID Goal Under Global Health Security As the “Development” arm of the USG Global Health Security Framework, USAID will launch its Emerging Pandemic Threats Program (ver. 2) in October 2014 to: mitigate the impact of novel high consequence pathogens arising from animals through a suite of “One Health” investments targeted at the animal-human interface that enable • early detection of new disease threats*; • effective control through enhanced national-level preparedness*; • reduction of risk of disease emergence by minimizing practices and behaviors that trigger spillover and spread of new pathogens* Emerging Threats Program * Building on developing-country programs to address infectious diseases in animals and people. Further reading • Origins of AIDS, Jacques Pepin, 2011 • Global Trends in Emerging Infectious Diseases, Jones et al., 2008, Nature, 451:990-994 • The Great Influenza, John Barry, 2004 • The Coming Plague, Laurie Garrett, 1994 • Guns, Germs, and Steel, Jared Diamond, 1997 Emerging Threats Program