
Flu season 2019: How bad will it be?
Experts say it’s too early to predict the severity of the flu season, or how effective the vaccine will be
Mainstream media reports are already rife with dire predictions for the upcoming flu season, but experts say it’s really too early to tell how severe it will be.
The severity of the flu season in the Northern Hemisphere typically mirrors that of the Southern Hemisphere.
Influenza expert Scott E. Hensley, PhD, associate professor of microbiology at the University of Pennsylvania
“There is a good chance that the vaccine will be very effective. There is a lot of H3N2 diversity around the world right and it is unclear which of these viruses-if any-will circulate in the Northern Hemisphere this year,” said Scott E. Hensley, PhD, associate professor of microbiology at the University of Pennsylvania. “It may end up being an H1N1 year, and the H1N1 component of the vaccine is very well matched to most circulating H1N1 strains.”
The World Health Organization (WHO) also updated its recommendations for the Northern Hemisphere in September at the close of the Southern Hemipshere’s flu season, with two of the four components-A/south Australia/34/2019 (H3N2)-like virus and the B/Colorado/06/2017-like virus (Victoria lineage)-being recommended as a change from the vaccine that was used for this year’s vaccine in the Southern Hemisphere.
The quadrivalent flu vaccine for the Northern Hemisphere now includes protection against the A/Kansas/14/2017 (H3N2)-like virus, the A/Brisbane/02/2018 (H1N1)pdm09-like virus, the B/Colorado/06/2017-like virus (Victoria lineage), and the B/Phuket/3073/2013-like virus (Yamagata lineage), according to the CDC.
So far, national flu activity in the United States is low, with 2.8 percent of samples testing positive since September. There are pockets of higher activity, with high levels of flu-like illness being reported in Puerto Rico and Louisiana, according to CDC.
Influenza A viruses seem to be predominant so far, making up about 58 percent of the cumulative positive samples for far this season. A third of those were the (H1N1)pdm09 strain and two-thirds were H3N2. Forty-two percent of the positive samples were Influenza B type, with the Victoria lineage making up about 96 percent of those samples and the Yamagata lineage accounting for the remainder. Influenza B viruses tend to circulate predominantly in the southern United States, while the Influenza A viruses are more prominent in the northern states, CDC notes.
In terms of other surveillance outside of confirmed samples, the CDC reports that nationwide in late October, 1.7 percent of patient visits to outpatient healthcare facilities were related to flu-like illness, noting that this is below the national baseline of 2.4 percent.
Severity of this year’s viruses is difficult to predict so early, but 4.9 percent of adult deaths in late October were attributed to pneumonia and influenza, which CDC reports is below the epidemic threshold of 5.7 percent. Two pediatric deaths were also attributed to the flu already this season, with one of those deaths associated with an Influenza A virus of unknown subtype and the other to the Influenza B/Victoria virus.
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