EDITOR'S NOTE:Due to broad interest in the avian flu, this article is free to access, and it has been translated into multiple languages to assist clinicians around the world:
An unprecedented epizootic avian influenza A (H5N1) virus thatis highly pathogenic has crossed the species barrier in Asiato cause many human fatalities and poses an increasing pandemicthreat. This summary describes the features of human infectionwith influenza A (H5N1) and reviews recommendations for preventionand clinical management presented in part at the recent WorldHealth Organization (WHO) Meeting on Case Management and Researchon Human Influenza A/H5, which was held in Hanoi, May 10 through12, 2005.1 Because many critical questions remain, modificationsof these recommendations are likely.
Incidence
The occurrence of human influenza A (H5N1) in Southeast Asia(Table 1) has paralleled large outbreaks of avian influenzaA (H5N1), although the avian epidemics in 2004 and 2005 haveonly rarely led to disease in humans. The largest number ofcases has occurred in Vietnam, particularly during the third,ongoing wave, and the first human death was recently reportedin Indonesia. The frequencies of human infection have not beendetermined, and seroprevalence studies are urgently needed.The expanding geographic distribution of avian influenza A (H5N1)infections, with recent outbreaks in Kazakstan, Mongolia, andRussia, indicates that more human populations are at risk.2,3
Table 1. Cumulative Number of Virologically Confirmed Cases of Avian Influenza A (H5N1) in Humans Reported to the WHO since 2003.
Transmission
Human influenza is transmitted by inhalation of infectious dropletsand droplet nuclei, by direct contact, and perhaps, by indirect(fomite) contact, with self-inoculation onto the upper respiratorytract or conjunctival mucosa.4,5 The relative efficiency ofthe different routes of transmission has not been defined. Forhuman influenza A (H5N1) infections, evidence is consistentwith bird-to-human, possibly environment-to-human, and limited,nonsustained human-to-human transmission to date.
Animal to Human
In 1997, exposure to live poultry within a week before the onsetof illness was associated with disease in humans, whereas therewas no significant risk related to eating or preparing poultryproducts or exposure to persons with influenza A (H5N1) disease.6Exposure to ill poultry and butchering of birds were associatedwith seropositivity for influenza A (H5N1)7 (Table 2). Recently,most patients have had a history of direct contact with poultry(Table 3), although not those who were involved in mass cullingof poultry. Plucking and preparing of diseased birds; handlingfighting cocks; playing with poultry, particularly asymptomaticinfected ducks; and consumption of duck's blood or possiblyundercooked poultry have all been implicated. Transmission tofelids has been observed by feeding raw infected chickens totigers and leopards in zoos in Thailand17,18 and to domesticcats under experimental conditions.19 Transmission between felidshas been found under such conditions. Some infections may beinitiated by pharyngeal or gastrointestinal inoculation of virus.
Table 3. Presentation and Outcomes among Patients with Confirmed Avian Influenza A (H5N1).
Human to Human
Human-to-human transmission of influenza A (H5N1) has been suggestedin several household clusters16 and in one case of apparentchild-to-mother transmission (Table 3).20 Intimate contact withoutthe use of precautions was implicated, and so far no case ofhuman-to-human transmission by small-particle aerosols has beenidentified. In 1997, human-to-human transmission did not apparentlyoccur through social contact,8 and serologic studies of exposedhealth care workers indicated that transmission was inefficient9(Table 2). Serologic surveys in Vietnam and Thailand have notfound evidence of asymptomatic infections among contacts (Table 2).Recently, intensified surveillance of contacts of patientsby reverse-transcriptasepolymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR)assay has led to the detection of mild cases, more infectionsin older adults, and an increased number and duration of clustersin families in northern Vietnam,21 findings suggesting thatthe local virus strains may be adapting to humans. However,epidemiologic and virologic studies are needed to confirm thesefindings. To date, the risk of nosocomial transmission to healthcare workers has been low, even when appropriate isolation measureswere not used10,11 (Table 2). However, one case of severe illnesswas reported in a nurse exposed to an infected patient in Vietnam.
Environment to Human
Given the survival of influenza A (H5N1) in the environment,several other modes of transmission are theoretically possible.Oral ingestion of contaminated water during swimming and directintranasal or conjunctival inoculation during exposure to waterare other potential modes, as is contamination of hands frominfected fomites and subsequent self-inoculation. The widespreaduse of untreated poultry feces as fertilizer is another possiblerisk factor.
Clinical Features
The clinical spectrum of influenza A (H5N1) in humans is basedon descriptions of hospitalized patients. The frequencies ofmilder illnesses, subclinical infections, and atypical presentations(e.g., encephalopathy and gastroenteritis) have not been determined,but case reports12,21,22 indicate that each occurs. Most patientshave been previously healthy young children or adults (Table 3).
Incubation
The incubation period of avian influenza A (H5N1) may be longerthan for other known human influenzas. In 1997, most cases occurredwithin two to four days after exposure13; recent reports15,16indicate similar intervals but with ranges of up to eight days(Table 3). The case-to-case intervals in household clustershave generally been 2 to 5 days, but the upper limit has been8 to 17 days, possibly owing to unrecognized exposure to infectedanimals or environmental sources.
Initial Symptoms
Most patients have initial symptoms of high fever (typicallya temperature of more than 38°C) and an influenza-like illnesswith lower respiratory tract symptoms1 (Table 3). Upper respiratorytract symptoms are present only sometimes. Unlike patients withinfections caused by avian influenza A (H7) viruses,23 patientswith avian influenza A (H5N1) rarely have conjunctivitis. Diarrhea,vomiting, abdominal pain, pleuritic pain, and bleeding fromthe nose and gums have also been reported early in the courseof illness in some patients.14,15,16,24 Watery diarrhea withoutblood or inflammatory changes appears to be more common thanin influenza due to human viruses25 and may precede respiratorymanifestations by up to one week.12 One report described twopatients who presented with an encephalopathic illness and diarrheawithout apparent respiratory symptoms.22
Clinical Course
Lower respiratory tract manifestations develop early in thecourse of illness and are usually found at presentation (Table 3).In one series, dyspnea developed a median of 5 days afterthe onset of illness (range, 1 to 16).15 Respiratory distress,tachypnea, and inspiratory crackles are common. Sputum productionis variable and sometimes bloody. Almost all patients have clinicallyapparent pneumonia; radiographic changes include diffuse, multifocal,or patchy infiltrates; interstitial infiltrates; and segmentalor lobular consolidation with air bronchograms. Radiographicabnormalities were present a median of 7 days after the onsetof fever in one study (range, 3 to 17).15 In Ho Chi Minh City,Vietnam, multifocal consolidation involving at least two zoneswas the most common abnormality among patients at the time ofadmission. Pleural effusions are uncommon. Limited microbiologicdata indicate that this process is a primary viral pneumonia,usually without bacterial suprainfection at the time of hospitalization.
Progression to respiratory failure has been associated withdiffuse, bilateral, ground-glass infiltrates and manifestationsof the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In Thailand,15the median time from the onset of illness to ARDS was 6 days(range, 4 to 13). Multiorgan failure with signs of renal dysfunctionand sometimes cardiac compromise, including cardiac dilatationand supraventricular tachyarrhythmias, has been common.14,15,16,24Other complications have included ventilator-associated pneumonia,pulmonary hemorrhage, pneumothorax, pancytopenia, Reye's syndrome,and sepsis syndrome without documented bacteremia.
Mortality
The fatality rate among hospitalized patients has been high(Table 3), although the overall rate is probably much lower.21In contrast to 1997, when most deaths occurred among patientsolder than 13 years of age, recent avian influenza A (H5N1)infections have caused high rates of death among infants andyoung children. The case fatality rate was 89 percent amongthose younger than 15 years of age in Thailand. Death has occurredan average of 9 or 10 days after the onset of illness (range,6 to 30),15,16 and most patients have died of progressive respiratoryfailure.
Laboratory Findings
Common laboratory findings have been leukopenia, particularlylymphopenia; mild-to-moderate thrombocytopenia; and slightlyor moderately elevated aminotransferase levels (Table 3). Markedhyperglycemia, perhaps related to corticosteroid use, and elevatedcreatinine levels also occur.16 In Thailand,15 an increasedrisk of death was associated with decreased leukocyte, platelet,and particularly, lymphocyte counts at the time of admission.
Virologic Diagnosis
Antemortem diagnosis of influenza A (H5N1) has been confirmedby viral isolation, the detection of H5-specific RNA, or bothmethods. Unlike human influenza A infection,26 avian influenzaA (H5N1) infection may be associated with a higher frequencyof virus detection and higher viral RNA levels in pharyngealthan in nasal samples. In Vietnam, the interval from the onsetof illness to the detection of viral RNA in throat-swab samplesranged from 2 to 15 days (median, 5.5), and the viral loadsin pharyngeal swabs 4 to 8 days after the onset of illness wereat least 10 times as high among patients with influenza A (H5N1)as among those with influenza A (H3N2) or (H1N1). Earlier studiesin Hong Kong also found low viral loads in nasopharyngeal samples.27Commercial rapid antigen tests are less sensitive in detectinginfluenza A (H5N1) infections than are RT-PCR assays.15 In Thailand,the results of rapid antigen testing were positive in only 4of 11 patients with culture-positive influenza A (H5N1) (36percent) 4 to 18 days after the onset of illness.
Management
Most hospitalized patients with avian influenza A (H5N1) haverequired ventilatory support within 48 hours after admission,15,16as well as intensive care for multiorgan failure and sometimeshypotension. In addition to empirical treatment with broad-spectrumantibiotics, antiviral agents, alone or with corticosteroids,have been used in most patients (Table 3), although their effectshave not been rigorously assessed. The institution of theseinterventions late in the course of the disease has not beenassociated with an apparent decrease in the overall mortalityrate, although early initiation of antiviral agents appearsto be beneficial.1,15,16 Cultivable virus generally disappearswithin two or three days after the initiation of oseltamiviramong survivors, but clinical progression despite early therapywith oseltamivir and a lack of reductions in pharyngeal viralload have been described in patients who have died.
Pathogenesis
Characterization of Virus
Studies of isolates of avian influenza A (H5N1) from patientsin 1997 revealed that virulence factors included the highlycleavable hemagglutinin that can be activated by multiple cellularproteases, a specific substitution in the polymerase basic protein2 (Glu627Lys) that enhances replication,28,29 and a substitutionin nonstructural protein 1 (Asp92Glu) that confers increasedresistance to inhibition by interferons and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-) in vitro and prolonged replication in swine,30 as wellas greater elaboration of cytokines, particularly TNF-, in humanmacrophages exposed to the virus.31 Since 1997, studies of influenzaA (H5N1)32,33,34 indicate that these viruses continue to evolve,with changes in antigenicity35,36and internal gene constellations;an expanded host range in avian species37,38and the abilityto infect felids17,18; enhanced pathogenicity in experimentallyinfected mice and ferrets, in which they cause systemic infections39,40;and increased environmental stability.
Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the Z genotype has becomedominant33 and that the virus has evolved into two distinctclades, one encompassing isolates from Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia,Thailand, and Vietnam and the other isolates from China, Indonesia,Japan, and South Korea.21 Recently, a separate cluster of isolateshas appeared in northern Vietnam and Thailand, which includesvariable changes near the receptor-binding site and one fewerarginine residue in the polybasic cleavage site of the hemagglutinin.However, the importance of these genetic and biologic changeswith respect to human epidemiology or virulence is uncertain.
Patterns of Viral Replication
The virologic course of human influenza A (H5N1) is incompletelycharacterized, but studies of hospitalized patients indicatethat viral replication is prolonged. In 1997, virus could bedetected in nasopharyngeal isolates for a median of 6.5 days(range, 1 to 16), and in Thailand, the interval from the onsetof illness to the first positive culture ranged from 3 to 16days. Nasopharyngeal replication is less than in human influenza,27andstudies of lower respiratory tract replication are needed. Themajority of fecal samples tested have been positive for viralRNA (seven of nine), whereas urine samples were negative. Thehigh frequency of diarrhea among affected patients and the detectionof viral RNA in fecal samples, including infectious virus inone case,22 suggest that the virus replicates in the gastrointestinaltract. The findings in one autopsy confirmed this observation.41
Highly pathogenic influenza A (H5N1) viruses possess the polybasicamino acid sequence at the hemagglutinin-cleavage site thatis associated with visceral dissemination in avian species.Invasive infection has been documented in mammals,28,29,39,40and in humans, six of six serum specimens were positive forviral RNA four to nine days after the onset of illness. Infectiousvirus and RNA were detected in blood, cerebrospinal fluid, andfeces in one patient.22 Whether feces or blood serves to transmitinfection under some circumstances is unknown.
Host Immune Responses
The relatively low frequencies of influenza A (H5N1) illnessin humans despite widespread exposure to infected poultry indicatethat the species barrier to acquisition of this avian virusis substantial. Clusters of cases in family members may be causedby common exposures, although the genetic factors that may affecta host's susceptibility to disease warrant study.
The innate immune responses to influenza A (H5N1) may contributeto disease pathogenesis. In the 1997 outbreaks, elevated bloodlevels of interleukin-6, TNF-, interferon-, and soluble interleukin-2receptor were observed in individual patients,42 and in thepatients in 2003, elevated levels of the chemokines interferon-inducibleprotein 10, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1, and monokineinduced by interferon- were found three to eight days afterthe onset of illness.27 Recently, plasma levels of inflammatorymediators (interleukin-6, interleukin-8, interleukin-1, andmonocyte chemoattractant protein 1) were found to be higheramong patients who died than among those who survived (SimmonsC: personal communication), and the average levels of plasmainterferon- were about three times as high among patients withavian influenza A who died as among healthy controls. Such responsesmay be responsible in part for the sepsis syndrome, ARDS, andmultiorgan failure observed in many patients.
Among survivors, specific humoral immune responses to influenzaA (H5N1) are detectable by microneutralization assay 10 to 14days after the onset of illness. Corticosteroid use may delayor blunt these responses.
Pathological Findings
Limited postmortem analyses have documented severe pulmonaryinjury with histopathological changes of diffuse alveolar damage,27,41,42consistent with findings in other reports of pneumonia due tohuman influenza virus.43 Changes include filling of the alveolarspaces with fibrinous exudates and red cells, hyaline-membraneformation, vascular congestion, infiltration of lymphocytesinto the interstitial areas, and the proliferation of reactivefibroblasts. Infection of type II pneumocytes occurs.41,42 Antemortembiopsy of bone marrow specimens has shown reactive histiocytosiswith hemophagocytosis in several patients, and lymphoid depletionand atypical lymphocytes have been noted in spleen and lymphoidtissues at autopsy.13,15,27,42 Centrilobular hepatic necrosisand acute tubular necrosis have been noted in several instances.
Case Detection and Management
The possibility of influenza A (H5N1) should be considered inall patients with severe acute respiratory illness in countriesor territories with animal influenza A (H5N1), particularlyin patients who have been exposed to poultry (Table 4). However,some outbreaks in poultry were recognized only after sentinelcases occurred in humans. Early recognition of cases is confoundedby the nonspecificity of the initial clinical manifestationsand high background rates of acute respiratory illnesses fromother causes. In addition, the possibility of influenza A (H5N1)warrants consideration in patients presenting with serious unexplainedillness (e.g., encephalopathy or diarrhea) in areas with knowninfluenza A (H5N1) activity in humans or animals.
Table 4. Exposures That May Put a Person at Risk for Infection with Influenza A (H5N1).
The diagnostic yield of different types of samples and virologicassays is not well defined. In contrast to infections with humaninfluenza virus, throat samples may have better yields thannasal samples. Rapid antigen assays may help provide supportfor a diagnosis of influenza A infection, but they have poornegative predictive value and lack specificity for influenzaA (H5N1). The detection of viral RNA in respiratory samplesappears to offer the greatest sensitivity for early identification,but the sensitivity depends heavily on the primers and assaymethod used. Laboratory confirmation of influenza A (H5N1) requiresone or more of the following: a positive viral culture, a positivePCR assay for influenza A (H5N1) RNA, a positive immunofluorescencetest for antigen with the use of monoclonal antibody againstH5, and at least a fourfold rise in H5-specific antibody titerin paired serum samples.44
Hospitalization
Whenever feasible while the numbers of affected persons aresmall, patients with suspected or proven influenza A (H5N1)should be hospitalized in isolation for clinical monitoring,appropriate diagnostic testing, and antiviral therapy. If patientsare discharged early, both the patients and their families requireeducation on personal hygiene and infection-control measures(Table 5). Supportive care with provision of supplemental oxygenand ventilatory support is the foundation of management.1 Nebulizersand highair flow oxygen masks have been implicated inthe nosocomial spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)and should be used only with strict airborne precautions.
Table 5. Strategies to Prevent Avian Influenza A (H5N1) in Humans in a Nonpandemic Setting.
Antiviral Agents
Patients with suspected influenza A (H5N1) should promptly receivea neuraminidase inhibitor pending the results of diagnosticlaboratory testing. The optimal dose and duration of treatmentwith neuraminidase inhibitors are uncertain, and currently approvedregimens likely represent the minimum required. These virusesare susceptible in vitro to oseltamivir and zanamivir.46,47Oral osel-tamivir46 and topical zanamivir are active in animalmodels of influenza A (H5N1).48,49 Recent murine studies indicatethat as compared with an influenza A (H5N1) strain from 1997,the strain isolated in 2004 requires higher oseltamivir dosesand more prolonged administration (eight days) to induce similarantiviral effects and survival rates.50 Inhaled zanamivir hasnot been studied in cases of influenza A (H5N1) in humans.
Early treatment will provide the greatest clinical benefit,15although the use of therapy is reasonable when there is a likelihoodof ongoing viral replication. Placebo-controlled clinical studiesof oral oseltamivir51,52 and inhaled zanamivir53 comparingcurrently approved doses with doses that are twice as high foundthat the two doses had similar tolerability but no consistentdifference in clinical or antiviral benefits in adults withuncomplicated human influenza. Although approved doses of oseltamivir(75 mg twice daily for five days in adults and weight-adjustedtwice-daily doses for five days in children older than one yearof age twice-daily doses of 30 mg for those weighing15 kg or less, 45 mg for those weighing more than 15 to 23 kg,60 mg for those weighing more than 23 to 40 kg, and 75 mg forthose weighing more than 40 kg) are reasonable for treatingearly, mild cases of influenza A (H5N1), higher doses (150 mgtwice daily in adults) and treatment for 7 to 10 days are considerationsin treating severe infections, but prospective studies are needed.
High-level antiviral resistance to oseltamivir results fromthe substitution of a single amino acid in N1 neuraminidase(His274Tyr). Such variants have been detected in up to 16 percentof children with human influenza A (H1N1) who have receivedoseltamivir.54 Not surprisingly, this resistant variant hasbeen detected recently in several patients with influenza A(H5N1) who were treated with oseltamivir.21 Although less infectiousin cell culture and in animals than susceptible parental virus,55oseltamivir-resistant H1N1 variants are transmissible in ferrets.56Such variants retain full susceptibility to zanamivir and partialsusceptibility to the investigational neuraminidase inhibitorperamivir in vitro.57,58
In contrast to isolates from the 1997 outbreak, recent humaninfluenza A (H5N1) isolates are highly resistant to the M2 inhibitorsamantadine and rimantadine, and consequently, these drugs donot have a therapeutic role. Agents of clinical investigationalinterest for treatment include zanamivir, peramivir, long-actingtopical neuraminidase inhibitors, ribavirin,59,60 and possibly,interferon alfa.61
Immunomodulators
Corticosteroids have been used frequently in treating patientswith influenza A (H5N1), with uncertain effects. Among fivepatients given corticosteroids in 1997, two treated later intheir course for the fibroproliferative phase of ARDS survived.In a randomized trial in Vietnam, all four patients given dexamethasonedied. Interferon alfa possesses both antiviral and immunomodulatoryactivities, but appropriately controlled trials of immunomodulatoryinterventions are needed before routine use is recommended.
Prevention
Immunization
No influenza A (H5) vaccines are currently commercially availablefor humans. Earlier H5 vaccines were poorly immunogenic andrequired two doses of high hemagglutinin antigen content62 orthe addition of MF59 adjuvant63 to generate neutralizing antibodyresponses. A third injection of adjuvanted 1997 H5 vaccine variablyinduced cross-reacting antibodies to human isolates from 2004.64Reverse genetics has been used for the rapid generation of nonvirulentvaccine viruses from recent influenza A (H5) isolates,65,66and several candidate vaccines are under study. One such inactivatedvaccine with the use of a human H5N1 isolate from 2004 has beenreported to be immunogenic at high hemagglutinin doses.67 Studieswith approved adjuvants like alum are urgently needed. Liveattenuated, cold-adapted intranasal vaccines are also underdevelopment. These are protective against human influenza aftera single dose in young children.68
Hospital-Infection Control
Influenza is a well-recognized nosocomial pathogen.4,5 Currentrecommendations are based on efforts to reduce transmissionto health care workers and other patients in a nonpandemic situationand on the interventions used to contain SARS (Table 5).1 Theefficiency of surgical masks, even multiple ones,69 is muchless than that of N-95 masks, but they could be used if thelatter are not available. Chemoprophylaxis with 75 mg of oseltamivironce daily for 7 to 10 days is warranted for persons who havehad a possible unprotected exposure.70,71 The use of preexposureprophylaxis warrants consideration if evidence indicates thatthe influenza A (H5N1) strain is being transmitted from personto person with increased efficiency or if there is a likelihoodof a high-risk exposure (e.g., an aerosol-generating procedure).
Household and Close Contacts
Household contacts of persons with confirmed cases of influenzaA (H5N1) should receive postexposure prophylaxis as describedabove. Contacts of a patient with proven or suspected virusshould monitor their temperature and symptoms (Table 5). Althoughthe risk of secondary transmission has appeared low to date,self-quarantine for a period of one week after the last exposureto an infected person is appropriate. If evidence indicatesthat person-to-person transmission may be occurring, quarantineof exposed contacts should be enforced. For others who havehad an unprotected exposure to an infected person or to an environmentalsource (e.g., exposure to poultry) implicated in the transmissionof influenza A (H5N1), postexposure chemoprophylaxis as describedabove may be warranted.
Conclusions
Infected birds have been the primary source of influenza A (H5N1)infections in humans in Asia. Transmission between humans isvery limited at present, but continued monitoring is requiredto identify any increase in viral adaptation to human hosts.Avian influenza A (H5N1) in humans differs in multiple waysfrom influenza due to human viruses, including the routes oftransmission, clinical severity, pathogenesis, and perhaps,response to treatment. Case detection is confounded by the nonspecificityof initial manifestations of illness, so that detailed contactand travel histories and knowledge of viral activity in poultryare essential. Commercial rapid antigen tests are insensitive,and confirmatory diagnosis requires sophisticated laboratorysupport. Unlike human influenza, avian influenza A (H5N1) mayhave higher viral titers in the throat than in the nose, andhence, analysis of throat swabs or lower respiratory samplesmay offer more sensitive means of diagnosis. Recent human isolatesare fully resistant to M2 inhibitors, and increased doses oforal oseltamivir may be warranted for the treatment of severeillness. Despite recent progress, knowledge of the epidemiology,natural history, and management of influenza A (H5N1) diseasein humans is incomplete. There is an urgent need for more coordinationin clinical and epidemiologic research among institutions incountries with cases of influenza A (H5N1) and internationally.
The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflectthose of the WHO or other meeting sponsors.
We are indebted to the National Institute of Allergy and InfectiousDiseases and the Wellcome Trust for their collaborative supportof the WHO meeting; to Drs. Klaus Stohr and Alice Croisier ofthe Global Influenza Program at the WHO, Geneva; and to Drs.Peter Horby and Monica Guardo and the staff of the WHO CountryOffices, Vietnam, for organizing the WHO consultation and forsupport in the preparation of the manuscript; and to Diane Rammfor help in the preparation of the manuscript.
Source Information
The writing committee consisted of the following: John H. Beigel, M.D., National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.; Jeremy Farrar, D.Phil., Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Aye Maung Han, M.B., B.S., Department of Child Health, Institute of Medicine, Yangon, Myanmar; Frederick G. Hayden, M.D. (rapporteur), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Randy Hyer, M.D., World Health Organization, Geneva; Menno D. de Jong, M.D., Ph.D., Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Sorasak Lochindarat, M.D., Queen Sirikit National Institute of Child Health, Bangkok, Thailand; Nguyen Thi Kim Tien, M.D., Ph.D., Pasteur Institute, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Nguyen Tran Hien, M.D., Ph.D., National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Hanoi; Tran Tinh Hien, M.D., Ph.D., Hospital for Tropical Diseases, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Angus Nicoll, M.Sc., Health Protection Agency, London; Sok Touch, M.D., Ministry of Health, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; and Kwok-Yung Yuen, M.D., University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Hayden at the Department of Internal Medicine, P.O. Box 800473, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville, VA 22908, or at fgh{at}virginia.edu.
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