Literature detail

Transmission potential of influenza A/H7N9, February to May 2013, China.

Gerardo Chowell1 Lone Simonsen Sherry Towers Mark A Miller Cécile Viboud
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Division of International Epidemiology and Population Studies, Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, 31 Center Dr, MSC 2220, Bethesda 20892-2220, Maryland, USA. [email protected].
PMID 24083506 2013 BMC Med eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

On 31 March 2013, the first human infections with the novel influenza A/H7N9 virus were reported in Eastern China. The outbreak expanded rapidly in geographic scope and size, with a total of 132 laboratory-confirmed cases reported by 3 June 2013, in 10 Chinese provinces and Taiwan. The incidence of A/H7N9 cases has stalled in recent weeks, presumably as a consequence of live bird market closures in the most heavily affected areas. Here we compare the transmission potential of influenza A/H7N9 with that of other emerging pathogens and evaluate the impact of intervention measures in an effort to guide pandemic preparedness. We used a Bayesian approach combined with a SEIR (Susceptible-Exposed-Infectious-Removed) transmission model fitted to daily case data to assess the reproduction number (R) of A/H7N9 by province and to evaluate the impact of live bird market closures in April and May 2013. Simulation studies helped quantify the performance of our approach in the context of an emerging pathogen, where human-to-human transmission is limited and most cases arise from spillover events. We also used alternative approaches to estimate R based on individual-level information on prior exposure and compared the transmission potential of influenza A/H7N9 with that of other recent zoonoses. Estimates of R for the A/H7N9 outbreak were below the epidemic threshold required for sustained human-to-human transmission and remained near 0.1 throughout the study period, with broad 95% credible intervals by the Bayesian method (0.01 to 0.49). The Bayesian estimation approach was dominated by the prior distribution, however, due to relatively little information contained in the case data. We observe a statistically significant deceleration in growth rate after 6 April 2013, which is consistent with a reduction in A/H7N9 transmission associated with the preemptive closure of live bird markets. Although confidence intervals are broad, the estimated transmission potential of A/H7N9 appears lower than that of recent zoonotic threats, including avian influenza A/H5N1, swine influenza H3N2sw and Nipah virus. Although uncertainty remains high in R estimates for H7N9 due to limited epidemiological information, all available evidence points to a low transmission potential. Continued monitoring of the transmission potential of A/H7N9 is critical in the coming months as intervention measures may be relaxed and seasonal factors could promote disease transmission in colder months.

Disease Outbreaks Models, Biological Animals Bayes Theorem China Humans Influenza A Virus, H7N9 Subtype Influenza in Birds Influenza, Human Poultry Taiwan Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

The first human outbreak of influenza A/H7N9 in Eastern China involved 132 confirmed cases across multiple provinces, with evidence suggesting spillover from poultry.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

On 31 March 2013, the first human infections with the novel influenza A/H7N9 virus were reported in Eastern China. The outbreak expanded rapidly in geographic scope and size, with a total of 132 laboratory-confirmed cases reported by 3 June 2013, in 10 Chinese provinces and Taiwan.

Method
Bayesian SEIR transmission model; simulation studies; individual-level exposure analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Eastern China, 10 Chinese provinces and Taiwan
Country inferred
China
Outbreak setting
live bird markets
Outbreak time
February to May 2013
Outbreak scale
132 laboratory-confirmed cases
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Most human cases of influenza A/H7N9 in early 2013 China resulted from animal-to-human spillover rather than sustained human-to-human transmission.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Simulation studies helped quantify the performance of our approach in the context of an emerging pathogen, where human-to-human transmission is limited and most cases arise from spillover events.

Method
Bayesian approach; SEIR transmission model; simulation
Study design
epidemiological modeling study
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
China
Country inferred
China
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.75
Key finding

Influenza A/H7N9 transmission was assessed during an outbreak in China, with surveillance suggesting reduced spillover following closure of live bird markets.

Virus
Host
Location
Supporting text

The incidence of A/H7N9 cases has stalled in recent weeks, presumably as a consequence of live bird market closures in the most heavily affected areas. We used a Bayesian approach combined with a SEIR transmission model fitted to daily case data to assess the reproduction number (R) of A/H7N9 by province and evaluate the impact of live bird market closures in April and May 2013.

Method
Bayesian modeling; SEIR transmission model
Geographic raw
China
Country inferred
China