Antibody response in individuals infected with avian influenza A (H5N1) viruses and detection of anti-H5 antibody among household and social contacts

Academic Article

Abstract

  • The first documented outbreak of human respiratory disease caused by avian influenza A (H5N1) viruses occurred in Hong Kong in 1997. The kinetics of the antibody response to the avian virus in H5N1-infected persons was similar to that of a primary response to human influenza A viruses; serum neutralizing antibody was detected, in general, ≥14 days after symptom onset. Cohort studies were conducted to assess the risk of human-to-human transmission of the virus. By use of a combination of serologic assays, 6 of 51 household contacts, 1 of 26 tour group members, and none of 47 coworkers exposed to H5N1-infected persons were positive for H5 antibody. One H5 antibody-positive household contact, with no history of poultry exposure, provided evidence that human-to-human transmission of the avian virus may have occurred through close physical contact with H5N1-infected patients. In contrast, social exposure to case patients was not associated with H5N1 infection.
  • Authors

    Published In

    Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Author List

  • Katz JM; Lim W; Bridges CB; Rowe T; Hu-Primmer J; Lu X; Abernathy RA; Clarke M; Conn L; Kwong H
  • Start Page

  • 1763
  • End Page

  • 1770
  • Volume

  • 180
  • Issue

  • 6