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Tamiflu-resistant swine flu cluster reported in NC

By MIKE STOBBE
,
AP
posted: 7 DAYS 18 HOURS AGO
comments: 12
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ATLANTA -Four North Carolina patients at a single hospital tested positive for a type of swine flu that is resistant to Tamiflu, health officials said Friday.
The cases reported at Duke University Medical Center over six weeks make up the biggest cluster seen so far in the U.S.
Tamiflu — made by Switzerland's Roche Group — is one of two flu medicines that help against swine flu, and health officials have been closely watching for signs that the virus is mutating, making the drugs ineffective.
More than 50 resistant cases have been reported in the world since April, including 21 in the U.S. Almost all in the U.S. were isolated, said officials with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The BBC reported another cluster of five Tamiflu-resistant cases this week in Wales, in the United Kingdom.
The CDC has sent three disease investigators to North Carolina to help in the investigation there, said Dave Daigle, a CDC spokesman. CDC testing confirmed the Tamiflu-resistant cases.
All four cases at the hospital were very ill patients in an isolated cancer unit on the hospital's ninth floor, and it is believed they all caught the flu while at the hospital, said Dr. Daniel Sexton, professor of medicine and director of the Duke Infection Control Outreach Network.
Three of the four patients died and one is recovering, he said. Flu seems to have been a factor in each death, but they were very sick so it was hard to say that it was the primary cause, he added.
North Carolina health officials did not disclose details about the four patients, other than that three of them — including the survivor — were women and their flu illnesses occurred last month and this month.
The first patient had been given Tamiflu before becoming ill with the virus, as a preventive measure. The three others were given Tamiflu after developing flu symptoms, Sexton said.
The case is under investigation, but hospital officials said they have no evidence the cases represent a hospital-wide concern.
The North Carolina cluster is unusual, but "at this time we don't have any information that should raise concerns for the general population," said Dr. Alicia Frye, epidemiologist in the CDC's flu division, in a prepared statement.
The only other reported U.S. instance of Tamiflu-resistant swine flu spreading from one person to another occurred about four months ago at a summer camp in western North Carolina, where two teenage girls — cabin mates — were diagnosed with the same drug-resistant strain. Health officials said at the time that the virus may have spread from one girl to the other, or it's possible that the girls got it from another camper.
Why did both Tamiflu-resistant clusters occur in North Carolina? It could be coincidence, or perhaps North Carolina's disease surveillance is unusually good, said Megan Davies, the state's epidemiologist.
Overall, CDC officials said Friday that swine flu cases appear to be declining throughout most of the U.S., with reports of swine flu illnesses widespread in 43 states last week, down from 46 the week before.
CDC officials also said reports have been increasing in a few states, including Maine and Hawaii. They said it's hard to know whether the epidemic has peaked or not.
Thanksgiving and the holidays may not help matters, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, who heads the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.
"All the kids get together with their grandparents and there's a lot of exchange of warmth and love, but a little exchange of viruses, too," she said.
Swine flu has sickened an estimated 22 million Americans, hospitalized about 98,000 and killed 4,000 since it was first identified last April. It has proved to be similar to seasonal flu but a much bigger threat to children and young adults.
Also on Friday, CDC officials said they are aware of a new report from Norway of a distinct form of swine flu seen in three patients that seems to have an unusual ability to settle deep into the lungs and therefore could potentially be more dangerous.
The Norway report isn't the first time that particular mutation has been seen: About 15 others have been reported around the world, including four in the United States. Some cases proved fatal, but others caused only mild illnesses, CDC officials said.
The swine flu vaccine and antiviral drugs like Tamiflu and Relenza all seem to work well against it, CDC officials also said.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-11-22 09:43:18

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COMMENTS ( 12 )
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Domenique44
3:00PM Nov 25 2009 
The thing is, most of the media, in order to get as much attention from the public, will conveniently omit pertinent information and only expose the public to the worse scenario. Many of the swine flu victims that have died have had other preexisting diseases which have led to complications resulting in their demise.
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clearhoads7
8:48AM Nov 22 2009 
this is not a case for bio this a case as all case .the medical profession have this idea that they can play god,the spend billions in research and that ideas is if a theory is presented in the right format it could obtain funding from the government as a grant, the sad thing is these grants they our funding research on if pigs really like mud . aids is a result of one being two adult males have sex that included ******** in which the fluids from individuals could lie dormaint for many years and not picked up in screening last year but shows up a year later in the carrier of the domaintant strain and thus your would have to do a complete dosay on the indivdual contact for the last 20 years and in some case the actual carrier is never found and the increase in ******** as to normal sex thinking they would prevent fluid strain and never revealing the actual carrier for fear of reprisal, this has not slowed down aid strain which is dominate and if you thrown in a case of strep/yeast/staff infection which is a disease of which your body carries with you and staff /streph throat that actually attacks your body in the form of kidney failure, heart failure, the fact remains that strep and staff can kill by itself and it can lie dormaint for years or active all the time meaning then the strep/staff will eventually stop your kidneys,heart, or any major organ the is a must have for the body to survie and yes you our put on s regiment of antibiotics starting with the mild and then the next antibotic strength and the thoery is by controlling it with least affective antibiotic and saving the big boy antibiotic for emergency, but in doing so staff/streph developes a stronger resititance to the antibiotic stage untill you have no more options left after saving the very best antibiotic for last but the problem is the constant varaintion produces a strain that has no effect on and then you have a new strain of staff/strep that is resitant proof to all antibiotics and then that becomes an epidimic with no know cure or strain that dosent respond to any of the lastest antibiotics then your at the mecery of your own body which is the most affective to treat the bodie with the human muttantion of its own defense and this is what makes the human body so amazing and so delicate and full of endless fascination of mini miracles it produce everyday to survie what ever inviorment that we have only touch on the smallest mirales and resilance it provides each day.
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Emma Jean JC
4:04PM Nov 21 2009 
I saw on tv yesterday that supposedly this flu has already started to mutate, there were cases of it in Norway of a mutated strain. I wonder if that is what this could be.
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KLKBK
3:44PM Nov 21 2009 
My son was diagnosed this morning. Swine flu is NOT decreasing. The doctors are opting NOT to test for it and just prescribe the Tamiflu anyway. There is no time to wait to see if the culture comes back positive or negative for H1N1 because the anti-viral medications need to be started within the first day or two of symptoms. Why bother testing? It is a waste of lab work and money.
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Four North Carolina patients at a single hospital tested positive for a type of swine flu that is resistant to Tamiflu, health officials said Friday.