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A girl, who was previously infected with the H7N9 bird flu virus, leaves a Beijing hospital in April. Photo: Reuters

H7N9 bird flu kills about a third hospitalised patients, study finds

H7N9 virus
AFP

The H7N9 bird flu that hit China this year killed over a third of hospitalised patients, putting the severity of the infection between swine flu and the H5N1 avian virus, said researchers on Monday.

In a study published on Monday, University of Hong Kong researchers analysed data from most of the 132 H7N9 avian influenza patients since its emergence three months ago.

With reference to the H1N1 swine influenza outbreak in 2009, they estimated that the overall death rate of H7N9 to be between 0.16 per cent to 2.8 per cent.

The rate of fatality in hospitalised H7N9 patients was 36 per cent, compared to 5 per cent to 20 per cent in swine flu patients and 65 per cent in H5N1 patients in China.

"One-third hospital fatality is not a small figure. Killing of chickens and market closures may still be needed when the epidemic reappears. I believe these measures should not be relaxed," said Professor Gabriel Leung, director of the university's Public Health Research Centre who announced the findings on Monday.

They warned watchdogs not to take comfort from a lull in new infections, as the virus may reappear in the autumn.

A total 131 human infections have been recorded on the Chinese mainland since the outbreak started in February, the National Health and Family Planning Commission said in its last monthly update.

Of these, 123 were admitted to hospital, and 39 died.

One other case was recorded in Taiwan.

The virus is believed to spread to humans from birds. The fear is that it could mutate into a form transmissible from human to human.

“Human infections with avian influenza A H7N9 virus seem to be less serious than has been previously reported,” they said in the study.

But many mild, unreported cases may have occurred – between 1,500 and 27,000 – said the study, urging “continued vigilance and sustained intensive control efforts”.

In a separate paper also published by , the researchers said there was a possibility H7N9 could rebound within months.

“The warm season has now begun in China, and only one new laboratory-confirmed case of H7N9 in human beings has been identified since May 8, this year. If H7N9 follows a similar pattern to H5N1, the epidemic could reappear in the autumn,” they wrote.

“This potential lull should be an opportunity for discussion of definitive preventive public health measures, optimisation of clinical management, and capacity building in the region in view of the possibility that H7N9 could spread beyond China’s borders.”

The team also estimated the virus’ incubation period – the time between infection and the onset of symptoms – at about three days, shorter than previous estimates.

Last month, a study in said laboratory tests had revealed resistance in some H7N9 patients to the only available treatment.

And the results of a lab study published in the US journal showed the H7N9 strain can spread among mammals, specifically ferrets, and could do the same between humans under certain conditions.

H7 influenza viruses comprise a group that normally circulate among birds, of which H7N9 forms a subgroup that had never been found in humans until the Chinese outbreak.

In a comment on the studies, said that while the number of new cases had stalled, probably in response to authorities closing live bird markets, the threat persisted.

“Continued monitoring of infections, together with near-real-time estimation of case fatality risk and serological surveys, remains crucial,” it said.

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