Early Life Exposure To Influenza Virus May Not Assure Immunity
“Reported situations in which previous influenza virus exposures have enhanced susceptibility are rare and poorly understood,” said Matthew Miller, senior author of the paper.
“This study’s results have important implications for pandemic risk assessment and should inform laboratory studies aimed at uncovering what’s responsible for this effect.”
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The influenza A virus continues to pose one of the most pressing threats to global public health due to its tendency to cause a pandemic. Over the last 100 years alone, at least five such pandemics have occurred, including the 1918 H1N1 Spanish Flu, the 1957 H2N2 Asian Flu, 1968 H3N2 “Hong Kong Flu”, the 1977 Russian Flu and the 2009 H1N1 Swine Flu.
Miller and the teams from both universities reviewed monthly mortality and influenza circulation data from October 1997 to July 2014 in the United States and Mexico. They identified peaks in excess mortality during the 2009 H1N1 Swine Flu pandemic and during the resurgent 2013-2014 H1N1 outbreak among people born in 1952.
The results align with at least two previous influenza A virus pandemics, in 1918 and 1968, when there were higher death rates among those born during previous pandemic years in 1890 and 1918, respectively.
“We suggest the phenomenon of 1918 is not unique,” Miller said. “We believe that exposure to pandemic influenza early in life is a risk factor for mortality during subsequent cross-strain pandemics.”
Miller suggested further research is needed so appropriate vaccines may be developed.
“We believe there is an important piece missing in this puzzle that has been overlooked in most investigations on pandemic influenza,” he said.
“Our research highlights the urgent need to develop more broadly-protective ‘universal’ influenza virus vaccines – capable of providing protection against both seasonal and pandemic influenza strains.”
Source: Eurekalert
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