Optimism increases in epidemic battle (China Daily) Updated: 2005-12-23 06:29
WHO: Virus resistance not a cause for alarm
Signs that the H5N1 bird flu virus may be developing resistance to frontline
drug Tamiflu in some patients are not necessarily a cause for alarm, a senior
World Health Organization official said in Geneva yesterday.
Keiji Fukuda, a scientist at the WHO's global influenza programme, said some
resistance was inevitable with any kind of drug.
"Whenever you use any kind of drugs, antivirals or antibiotics, you expect to
see resistance develop in organs. Finding some resistance in and of itself is
not surprising and is not necessarily alarming," he said.
But findings published in the New England Journal of Medicine that four of
eight patients treated in Viet Nam for bird flu infections had died despite the
use of Tamiflu indicated that more research was needed into how best to use the
drug, Fukuda said.
"It just points out the need for more information... What really is critical
is understanding whether the way we are using the drugs contributes to that
(resistance)," he added.
Tamiflu, made by Swiss firm Roche, remained an "excellent choice" among a
limited number of antivirals available against the deadly virus, the WHO
official said.
Shanghai Pharmaceutical Group last month became the first in Asia to secure a
licence from Roche to produce a generic variety of Tamiflu.
Two more human deaths from bird flu in Indonesia were confirmed yesterday,
bringing the known global total to 73, while cases including survivors would
rise to 141. All the deaths so far have been in Asia.
The H5N1 strain of bird flu has also killed hundreds of millions of chickens
and ducks since it started ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003.
The WHO confirmed that a 39-year-old man and an 8-year-old boy died earlier
this month of bird flu, raising Indonesia's toll to 11.
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