Friday, November 2, 2007

Flu strain becoming drug-proof - Cold & Flu




Flu strain developing resistance to drugs

Virus resisted meds in Japanese study; overprescribing may be to blame

CHICAGO - A less common strain of flu has shown hints of resistance to two flu drugs among patients in a small study in Japan, a country known for prescribing the drugs more frequently than anywhere else in the world.

Signs of resistance to the drugs Tamiflu and Relenza turned up among a few patients who had type B influenza, normally a milder flu causing smaller outbreaks than the more common type A.

The findings were troubling to researchers because they suggested doctors will eventually need new medications to treat drug-resistant flu if the viruses become more prevalent.

Previous studies, including work by the same researchers, have found a few cases of resistance to Tamiflu in type A flu, the variety thought most likely to cause a pandemic if bird flu changes into a form that is more easily spread among people, not just poultry.

Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious-disease specialist at Vanderbilt University who was not involved in the study, said Japanese doctors prescribe anti-flu drugs frequently, perhaps too often, giving viruses a chance to evolve.

“We were afraid this might happen and, sure enough, it has,” Schaffner said. The study underlines the importance of vaccination and other preventive measures, he said.

Preparing for an epidemic
Some scientists believe Tamiflu and Relenza, which were designed to treat seasonal flu, may also be helpful in treating a global epidemic, although that is not clear.

INTERACTIVE•Test your IQ
Is it a cold, the flu or something else?The U.S. government’s preparation for a flu pandemic includes stockpiling Tamiflu and Relenza, and funding development of new anti-flu drugs, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Anytime doctors treat widely with an anti-viral drug, “you are going to have, sooner or later, the evolution of resistance,” Fauci said. “It’s critical to have a pipeline of drugs you can have available when that resistance develops.”

In the new study, appearing in Wednesday’s Journal of the American Medical Association, researchers collected virus samples from patients at four community hospitals in Japan.

In one part of the study, they took samples from 74 children before and after they were treated with Tamiflu. They found drug-resistant virus in one of the children after treatment, indicating the resistance had emerged during treatment.

They also collected samples from 422 untreated children and adults with flu and found drug-resistant virus in seven of those patients.

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The rate of resistance to this family of drugs, less than 2 percent, was lower than had been found previously in type A influenza. Rates of drug-resistant type A virus have been reported as high as 18 percent.

“If drug-resistant influenza B viruses become more prevalent, we will need new drugs to treat infected patients,” said study co-author Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a virology professor at the University of Tokyo and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

The new study received financial support from the Japanese and U.S. governments. Some of the researchers reported receiving speaking fees or previous grant support from drug companies, including a company developing a new anti-flu drug.

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