July 8, 2009 Wednesday
Updated

July 8, 2009
H1N1 FLU PANDEMIC
No Tamiflu-resistant spread

GENEVA - TAMIFLU-RESISTANT H1N1 flu does not appear to be spreading in a sustained or worrisome way, a World Health Organisation (WHO) official said on Tuesday.

'At this point we are not recommending any clinical changes to the approach in treating patients,' WHO Acting Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukuda said, responding to the discovery of drug-resistant H1N1 viruses in three people.

'Right now these examples of oseltamivir resistance remain sporadic cases. We do not see any evidence of widespread movement of oseltamivir resistant viruses,' he told a briefing, using the generic name for Tamiflu, an anti-viral tablet made by Roche and Gilead Sciences.

The three people whose H1N1 virus samples did not respond to Tamiflu - in Denmark, Japan and Hong Kong - have recovered completely from their infection, Mr Fukuda said. He described the Tamiflu-resistant viruses as mutations and not a reassortment or combination with other influenza strains.

So far all discovered Tamiflu-resistant viruses have been sensitive to treatment with the other anti-viral recommended by the WHO, the inhaled drug Relenza made by GlaxoSmithKline under license from Biota, according to Mr Fukuda. Relenza is known generically as zanamivir.

The WHO, a Geneva-based United Nations agency, raised its global flu alert to the highest level on June 11, declaring the first influenza pandemic since 1968 was underway.

While the H1N1 virus has caused mild flu symptoms in most people, 440 people have died from it and health experts are keeping a close watch in case it changes into a more serious form and stops being treatable with existing drugs.

In the southern hemisphere, which has entered its winter season when regular flu emerges, there is a 'mixed picture', according to Mr Fukuda.

In Chile, some 99 per cent of influenza viruses being reported are the new H1N1, whereas in Australia, both the pandemic virus and a seasonal H3N2 are being detected, he said.

In South Africa, seasonal flu continues to dominate. -- REUTERS

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