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Future flu pandemic toll could be "very scary" -U.S.
08 Jan 2007 12:54:24 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Kamil Zaheer

NEW DELHI, Jan 8 (Reuters) - The number of people that could die in a flu pandemic that matches the 1918-19 outbreak will be "very scary" and far higher than the 62 million deaths forecast by a recent study, an adviser to the White House said on Monday.

"I think that number is a very optimistic number if we are talking about a 1918-wide pandemic today," said Rajeev Venkayya, Special Assistant for Biodefense to U.S. President George W. Bush.

Health experts worry that the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus that re-emerged in Asia in 2003 and spread widely to more than 50 countries could mutate and spread between people, sparking a human flu pandemic.

The H5N1 virus has killed at least 157 people out of 261 known human cases and ravaged poultry stocks.

The 1918-19 "Spanish influenza" pandemic -- the worst in living history -- killed anywhere from 20 million to 100 million people. Half a million died in the United States alone.

Last month, a Harvard University study published in The Lancet medical journal said developing countries would bear the vast majority of the 62 million deaths in a similar pandemic.

Venkayya did not give a forecast of possible deaths in a pandemic -- which the World Health Organisation and other experts say is inevitable and overdue -- but said the number of fatalities could be frightening.

"The bottom line is that they (U.S. government guesses about a toll) are all very high and all very scary," Venkayya told a meeting attended by government health and defence officials organi sed by a business chamber in New Delhi.

Washington estimates that if a 1918-19 type pandemic hits the United States today, nearly two million people would die and 30 percent of the country's 300-million people would be infected.

The Harvard study predicted 350,000 deaths in the United States in such a scenario, Venkayya said.

"If a pandemic virus emerges, it is almost inevitable that the virus will sweep the globe," he said.

The U.S. government says countries need to sharply step up vaccine production capacity -- currently at around 350 million doses per year for a global population of more than 6 billion people.

Venkayya also called for urgent efforts to try to utilise adjuvants -- substances that be delivered along with vaccines and that enhance the immune response to a vaccine dose.

"So for every individual you are immunising, you can use a much smaller dose of vaccine than you would have without the adjuvant which means you can immunise many more people."

He said recent data from global drug firms such as GlaxoSmithKline Plc, which were carrying out tests on adjuvants, suggested that if they proved to be safe, they would allow countries to immunise more than 20 times more people from a single dose of vaccine.

"That is the single most promising thing on the vaccine side of the equation, I believe."
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A Tibetan man wears a Tibetan national flag on his cap as he attends a protest against the visit of Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Dai Bingguo in New Delhi January 17, 2007. India and China began on Wednesday a new round of border talks aimed at resolving a long-running Himalayan frontier dispute at the centre of lingering mistrust between the two Asian giants.