statcounter

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

CDC Update, Case Definitions, and Guidance Update


Update, Case Definitions, and Guidance

Update

CDC continues to work closely with the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners to better understand the public health risk presented by recently reported cases of infection with a novel coronavirus. As of May 8, 2013, 31 laboratory-confirmed cases have been reported to WHO - 22 from Saudi Arabia, two from Qatar, two from Jordan, three from the United Kingdom, one from the United Arab Emirates, and one from France. The onset of illness was between April 2012 and May 2013 (1). Among the 31 cases, 18 were fatal. Two of the 31 cases experienced a mild respiratory illness and fully recovered.
Clusters of cases in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Kingdom are being investigated. 
The first cluster of two cases, both fatal, occurred near Amman, Jordan, in April 2012. Stored samples from these two cases tested positive retrospectively for the novel coronavirus. This cluster was temporally associated with cases of illness among workers in a hospital (2).
 A second cluster occurred in October 2012, in Saudi Arabia. Of the four individuals in the household, three were laboratory-confirmed cases, two of them died. 
In February 2013, a third cluster of three family members was identified in the United Kingdom. All three people tested positive for novel coronavirus. Among them, two died, and one recovered after experiencing a mild respiratory illness. This cluster provides evidence of person-to-person transmission of novel coronavirus. It also provides the first example of mild illness being associated with novel coronavirus infection.
 A fourth cluster among two family contacts occurred in Saudi Arabia in February 2013. One of the individuals died, and one recovered after experiencing a mild respiratory illness. 
In May 2013, a fifth cluster was reported in Saudi Arabia and is linked to one healthcare facility. A total of 13 cases have been reported in the cluster, of which seven have died. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Ministry of Health is investigating the situation.
There is clear evidence of limited, not sustained, human-to-human transmission, possibly involving different modes of transmission such as droplet and contact transmission. But further studies are required to better understand the risks. The efficiency of person-to-person transmission of novel coronavirus is not well characterized but appears to be low, given the small number of confirmed cases since the discovery of the virus.
The reservoir and route of transmission of the novel coronavirus are still being investigated. Genetic sequencing to date has determined the virus is most closely related to coronaviruses detected in bats. CDC is continuing to collaborate with WHO and affected countries to better characterize the epidemiology of novel coronavirus infection in humans.

Case Definitions(2)

Patient Under Investigation (PUI)

CDC requests that state and local health departments report PUIs for novel coronavirus to CDC.
  • A person with an acute respiratory infection, which may include fever (≥ 38°C , 100.4°F) and cough; AND
  • suspicion of pulmonary parenchymal disease (e.g., pneumonia or acute respiratory distress syndrome based on clinical or radiological evidence of consolidation); AND
  • history of travel from the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries* within 10 days; AND
  • not already explained by any other infection or etiology, including all clinically indicated tests forcommunity-acquired pneumonia** according to local management guidelines.
In addition, the following persons may be considered for evaluation for novel coronavirus infection:
  • Persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness of known etiology within 10 days after travel from the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries*but do not respond to appropriate therapy; OR
  • Persons who develop severe acute lower respiratory illness who are close contacts of a symptomatic traveler who developed fever and acute respiratory illness within 10 days after travel from the Arabian Peninsula or neighboring countries*. Close contact is defined as providing care for the ill traveler (e.g., a healthcare worker or family member), or having similar close physical contact; or stayed at the same place (e.g. lived with, visited) as the traveler while the traveler was ill.

SARS Coronavirus: the 65 year old man hospitalized in Douai, transferred to Lille



The University Hospital of Lille has more appropriate than Douai way to treat a patient whose lungs work more practically.  
  • By Emmanuel Pall
  • Published 08/05/2013 | 4:17 p.m. , updated on 08/05/2013 | 7:05 p.m.
© PHILIPPE HUGUEN / AFP
© PHILIPPE HUGUEN / AFP

His blood is being oxygenated by a machine. Unconscious, he is being transferred to the University Hospital of Lille in resuscitation in the emergency department. His departure from Douai delayed his arrival in Lille should be done in the evening. His prognosis is engaged.  It was during an accreditation from 9 to 17 April in the United Arab that this 65 year old man contracted Coronavirus Emirates travel.




It is presented for digestive disorders Valenciennes Hospital on April 23. Respiratory disorders arrived around April 28 with significant impairment of respiratory functions April 30. He, between these two dates was transferred to Douai.

"The passengers of the plane are all safe"


Early May analyzes allowed to know that the patient had Coronavirus.  His family and those who flew with him were contacted by the Regional Health Agency. They are healthy and will remain, according to the ARS, as virus symptoms appear after 10 days.  http://nord-pas-de-calais.france3.fr/2013/05/08/sras-coronavirus-l-homme-de-65-ans-hospitalise-douai-va-etre-transfere-lille-248101.html  

Coronavirus: a Northern 65 remains hospitalized in Douai due to surgery (VIDEO)


Coronavirus: a Northern 65 remains hospitalized in Douai due to surgery (VIDEO)

PUBLISHED ON 08/05/2013
By La Voix du Nord
One case of acute respiratory coronavirus infection, the virus again near SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) was confirmed in France, announced the Ministry of Health. The patient, a native of the south of department Nord (59), was hospitalized in Douai. It should be conducted this afternoon at Lille but the transfer was canceled due to surgery. His prognosis is engaged.
The ambulance left the hospital without Lille Douai for the patient.  JOHAN PHOTO BEN AZZOUZ
What has happened?
"This is the first and only confirmed case in France to date" of this new virus coronavirus family, the ministry said, noting it involved "a person back from a trip to the United Arab Emirates . "  The case was confirmed Tuesday. On Wednesday evening, he is still in hospital in Douai. His health prevented his transfer to Lille during the afternoon. The ambulance had the express trip, turned back empty because it was undergoing at the same time surgery.
What is the profile of the patient?
According to information from the Regional Health Agency, the man is 65 years old. It lies in the northern department, rather in the southern part. was hospitalized on April 23 in Valenciennes, Douai and then transferred to 29 April, where he was placed in solitary confinement and in intensive care and benefits of "respite care "or respiratory assistance and" blood trade, "said Jean-Yves Grall, Director General of Health, at a press conference.The man had stayed in Dubai from April 9 to 17 for a family vacation, he said. He was hospitalized with acute respiratory disease.
In what state he is?
The symptoms are similar to those of pneumonia. To treat it, doctors have installed an artificial membrane that allows it to breathe. The patient is intubated and ventilated asleep. "It worries us," concedes Dr. Patrick Goldstein, head of the center's Emergency University Hospital of Lille. The individual was particularly fragile as it was regularly monitored in the hospital for a gastrointestinal disease Valenciennes before being contaminated. Tonight, a source familiar with the matter told us that his condition requiressurgery. His prognosis is engaged.
Should we worry about the rest of the population?
No, the virus is very contagious. It affected only 30 people, of which 17 died within a year and a half. According to doctors, "the virus is less infectious than SARS but more deadly. "
After testing, we got the certainty that the patient's family is not affected by the virus. The staff of the hospital who are approached closely monitored without having found anything.So there is no reason to panic. In case of contamination, the symptoms appear after 10 days. There is currently no treatment.  
A freephone number 0800 13 00 00, "was open this afternoon for the French find answers to their questions," said for his part the Minister of Health Marisol Touraine.
What is this virus?
The new coronavirus - nCoV in medical jargon - was detected for the first time in mid-2012.Cases of infection with the new coronavirus had so far been detected in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the United Kingdom and Germany. It affects mostly men (78%) with a mean age of 54 years and who already have a compromised immune system due to disease.
It owes its name, coronavirus, its particular shape of a crown. 
Already in 2003 ...
An outbreak of SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) has killed more than 800 people in China in 2003, triggering a health alert worldwide.  The new virus is different, however, SARS, especially because it causes rapid kidney failure. At the time, the first French patient was also a northerner. 

Human spillover dangers grow as flu in pigs rises



Thursday, May 09, 2013
Scientists say flu infections are rising among pigs raised for slaughter on farms in south and southeastern China, which is also plagued by bird flu.And the risk of spillover to humans is "constant or growing," according to an author of a study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Pigs are an important source of new human strains of influenza A, such as the 2009-10 H1N1 pandemic that emerged in Mexico and infected an estimated fifth of the world's population.
Pigs can act as a "mixing vessel" in a process known as reassortment, brewing new flu strains from swine, poultry and human viruses in areas where they live in close proximity.
Such new hybrids can be deadly - tens of millions of people died in flu pandemics in 1918, 1957 and 1968.
The 2009 strain, though highly infectious, was about as lethal as the ordinary seasonal flu.
China is in the grip of an H7N9 bird flu virus that has killed 27 people, mainly in the east, overlapping with the study area.
An international team of experts analyzed data collected at an abattoir in Hong Kong over a 12-year period from 1998 to 2010, to learn more about the spread of flu among pigshttp://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?we_cat=3&art_id=133556&sid=39632513&con_type=1&d_str=20130509&fc=4

Probe: Coronavirus spread from tainted dialysis machine


Last updated: Wednesday, May 08, 2013 11:44 PM

  
HOFUF — The primary cause for the corona virus that spread in a private hospital in this Eastern Province city killing seven people and infecting six others in the past two weeks was a contaminated dialysis equipment, the local media reported on Wednesday.

Quoting informed medical and health sources, Al-Watan newspaper said an investigation committee formed to determine the causes of the coronavirus noted that a number of workers in the hospital did not observe the international rules necessary for combating epidemics.

The Ministry of Health on Sunday said it was in close contact with the World Health Organization (WHO) to find out more about the new type of the coronavirus.

The spread of the virus caused panic among the residents and led to a state of alert in the region’s health affairs departments.

A relative of one victim who died of the virus said the patient was not suffering from any serious illness when he was admitted to the private hospital for dialysis three times a week.

“A few days after he was admitted to the hospital for dialysis, the doctors told us that his health condition was deteriorating. Two days later our relative died,” he said.

The sources said another patient who got the virus was improving and was admitted to another hospital from which he would not be discharged before two weeks.

They said the other five patients who contracted the virus were currently receiving intensive treatment but their condition was not stable.

Deputy Health Minister Dr. Mansour Al-Hawasi visited a number of hospitals in Al-Ahsa on Tuesday to follow up the procedures being taken to curb the spread of the virus.

He later briefed the region’s Governor Prince Badr Bin Mohammed Bin Jalawi on the health situation in the region.

The head of the applied medical sciences at the community college in Najran Dr. Abdul Rahman Al-Qurashi said the coronavirus was one of the fast spreading viruses and described it as very serious according to international standards.

He said it was very difficult to analyze the virus because it soon turns into crystal balls that look like pieces of salt or sugar. 

He blamed the existence of the virus in the Kingdom on a variety of reasons including travel abroad. http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20130509164933

General / Ministry of Health: Survey measures have so far limited the emergence of new cases of Corona virus in the province of Hasa

The ministry said in a press statement today that through reviewing cases of previous infection that have been announced and contacts them, who took them samples precedent on 19 Jumada II 1434 AH announced record two cases of this disease for the citizens of one old (58 years) has been cured and discharged from hospital two days ago and the other age (42) years old and still in the hospital under treatment and in stable condition. http://www.spa.gov.sa/details.php?id=1108312

Additional cases of novel coronavirus observed in Saudi Arabia

LISTEN / DOWNLOAD
The World Health Organization
The Ministry of Health of Saudi Arabia has informed the World Health Organization (WHO) that there are three more laboratory-confirmed cases of infection with the novel coronavirus (nCoV).
NCoV is a respiratory ailment that appeared in September 2012 in a previously health 49 year old Qatari male who had travelled to Saudi Arabia before becoming sick.
The Qatari case was a near clinical match to the case of a Saudi man who had died of novel coronavirus earlier in 2012.
Glenn Thomas is with the World Health Organization.
“The Ministry of Health in Saudi Arabia has informed WHO two of the patients died on Friday the 3rd of May and one is currently in critical condition. The Saudi Arabian Government is conducting on-going investigations into this outbreak, which is linked to one health care facility in Al-hazah. Since the beginning of May, a total of 13 patients have been reported from this outbreak, of which seven have died.”
To date, Glenn Thomas says WHO has been informed of a global total of 30 laboratory-confirmed cases of human infection with novel coronavirus, including 18 deaths.
Gerry Adams, United Nations.
Duration: 1’18″

France reports first SARS-like virus case | Video | Reuters.com

http://www.reuters.com/video/2013/05/08/france-reports-first-sars-like-virus-cas?videoId=242681602&videoChannel=117760

WHO experts to visit Saudi hospital where coronavirus spread


GENEVA/DUBAI | Wed May 8, 2013 4:01pm BST
(Reuters) - World Health Organization (WHO) experts and local officials will visit a Saudi hospital where the SARS-like coronavirus has spread, killing seven people, the U.N. agency said on Wednesday.
France reported its first case on Wednesday in a 65-year-old Frenchman who had recently returned from Dubai with the virus that has emerged from the Gulf and has also spread to Britain and Germany as well as Jordan, Qatar and United Arab Emirates.
The French case brings total known infections worldwide to 31, of which 18 have died.The Saudi patients appeared to have been infected in hospital with some family members also falling ill, WHO officials said.
Coronavirus is from the same viral family as triggered the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) that swept the world from Asia in late 2003, killing 775 people.
Health experts' concerns are growing over clusters of cases, despite no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission - the type of infection pathway that can lead to pandemics.
The WHO-Saudi team of experts will focus on the Al-Moosa hospital in the town of Hofuf in Ahsa governate in Eastern Province, where the patients are being treated. Official statements released via the Saudi Press Agency have sought to reassure Saudis the outbreak is limited.
"One focal point of the investigation at the moment is the haemodialysis unit in the hospital," said WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl in Geneva, referring to equipment used on kidney and diabetes patients.
"The association of this outbreak with a single health care facility suggests nosocomial (hospital-acquired) transmission," it said, noting that some patients under treatment for ailments may have had increased susceptibility to infection.
"However, the presence of infection in two family members not associated with the facility itself raises a concern about potential broader transmission in the community," it said.
Saudi Arabia's Health Ministry spokesman did not respond to repeated phone calls seeking comment, while the director at Al-Moussa declined to comment. International media were not invited to a news conference with Health Ministry officials on Monday.
Statements on official media outlets were aimed at dispelling online speculation in Saudi Arabiathat the virus had spread to other hospitals in Eastern Province.
A total of 23 cases have been reported since September in Saudi Arabia, including 13 since mid-April in al-Ahsa, where seven patients have died and four remain critically ill in intensive care, with two improving in hospital, the WHO said.
SPREADING TO EUROPE
Along with the French case, the WHO has registered 23 cases in Saudi Arabia, two in Jordan, two in Qatar, one in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and two in Britain.
France's Health Minister Marisol Touraine said the man, now on a respirator in an intensive care ward, was admitted to hospital with breathing problems and a fever on April 23, a few days after his return from a week-long trip to Dubai.
"This is an imported case and it's a unique case," Touraine told a news conference, promising a thorough investigation into how the man had become infected.
Tests were now being carried out as a precaution on all friends and relatives who had been in contact with him, but all have come up negative so far, officials said.
"He is in a critical condition. His situation is worrying," the government's health director Jean-Yves Grall told the news conference. The man, who is from the northern Nord Pas de Calais region, has needed blood transfusions, he said.
The most recent German case was in March. The man fell ill in UAE and went to Germany for treatment where he died. The previous case, in November, was a man who was infected in Qatar, treated in Germany and then discharged from hospital.
(Additional reporting by Angus McDowall in Riyadh and James Regan in Paris; Editing by LouiseIreland and Catherine Bremer) http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/05/08/uk-coronavirus-idUKBRE9470O420130508?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews

England travel update-Novel coronavirus 2012: update on cases in Saudi Arabia


8 May 2013

Novel coronavirus 2012: update on cases in Saudi Arabia

This updates the previous Clinical Update of 27 March 2013
Since the beginning of May 2013, the Ministry of Health in Saudi Arabia has informed the World Health Organization (WHO) of 13 new laboratory confirmed cases of novel coronavirus (nCoV) infection, including seven deaths [1-2].
As of 6 May 2013, 30 cases of human infection with novel coronavirus (nCoV) have been reported to WHO (two from Jordan, two from Qatar, 23 from Saudi Arabia, one from the United Arab Emirates and two, associated with transmission from imported cases, in the United Kingdom (UK);18 of these 30 cases have died [1-3].
Sustained community transmission of the virus has not been observed; human-to-human transmission has occurred in at least one of four clusters of cases [3].  Although some cases have had animal exposures, information on zoonotic transmission remains limited, and a specific animal reservoir has not been identified. Investigations are on-going [4].
WHO is currently working with international experts and countries where cases have been reported, to assess the situation and review recommendations for surveillance and monitoring.

Advice for travellers

There continue to be no travel restrictions to the Middle East and the risk to travellers remains very low. Travellers returning from the Middle East and surrounding countries, with mild respiratory symptoms are most likely to have a common respiratory illness such as a cold.  However, if severe respiratory symptoms develop, such as shortness of breath, within ten days of returning from these countries, medical advice should be sought from their GP or NHS 111. Returning travellers should mention which countries they have visited.
The risk of UK residents contracting infection in the UK is very low.

Advice for health professionals

Health professionals should, as always, take a detailed travel history when evaluating an ill returned traveller. The level of risk in those who come to the UK from, or return from, the Middle East and meet the case definition for a “case under investigation” is very low but warrants testing for novel coronavirus infection. The probability that a cluster of cases of severe acute respiratory infection of unexplained aetiology requiring intensive care admission is due to novel coronavirus remains very low, but warrants testing.
Public Health England (PHE) has developed advice for health professionals in relation to novel coronavirus 2012, including a case definition for investigation and management of patients, and infection control advice. Where patients meet the possible case definition, clinicians should inform their local PHE Centres which will be able to assist in the risk assessment and advise on what samples should be taken. These risk assessments will continue to be reviewed frequently in response to any further cases of novel coronavirus.
Standard transmission based precautions for respiratory tract infections should be instituted if a possible case is suspected.
Clinical queries about the management of potential cases of severe respiratory infections in people who have recently visited Saudi Arabia, Qatar or Jordan, or the neighbouring countries of Bahrain, Iraq, Israel, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Syria, UAE and Yemen, should be directed in the first instance to the local infectious disease physician or microbiologists.  The nationalImported Fever Service is available to local infectious disease physicians or microbiologists should specialist advice be needed (0844 7788990)..

A first case of SARS virus nearest reported in France


PARIS (Reuters) - The first case of acute respiratory infection linked to again close to the head of the SARS coronavirus was reported Wednesday in France .
The patient, a 65-year-old from Nord-Pas-de-Calais who stayed in Dubai from 9 to 17 April this year, was hospitalized in isolation Douai (Nord) in an "alarming" state, said the health authorities.
The patient, who suffered from severe breathing problems, was hospitalized on April 23 in Valenciennes and then transferred on April 29 at Douai, where he was placed on a ventilator and has a "blood exchange".
"The situation is worrying," said the Director General of Health, Dr. Jean-Yves Grall, at a press conference alongside the Minister of Health, Marisol Touraine .
The ministry said in a statement that it was to this day the "first and only confirmed case in France."
An epidemiological investigation was launched. All persons in contact with the patient have been or will be contacted. The research is for negative time.
"From the first elements, as in the vast majority of cases reported by the World Health Organization , the patient contracted the virus during a trip in the Arabian Peninsula, but the source has been specifically identified " the ministry said...

NOVEL CORONAVIRUS - EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN (19): FRANCE ex UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, REQUEST FOR INFORMATION


A ProMED-mail post
http://www.promedmail.org
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
http://www.isid.org

Date: 8 May 2013
Source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2013/05/08/us-coronavirus-france-idINBRE94709Q20130508 [Edited]

France reports first case of new SARS-like virus
-----------------------------------
France has identified its 1st case of a new strain of coronavirus emerging from the Middle East in a person recently returned from the United Arab Emirates, the health ministry said on Wednesday [8 May 2013].

The ministry said it had opened an investigation into what it said was the 1st and only confirmed case of the virus in France and would hold a news conference later in the day.

"The person has been placed in isolation in an intensive care ward," the ministry said in a statement.

The Geneva-based World Health Organization (WHO) said it had been informed of the French case but had no further details.

Worldwide, there have been 30 laboratory-confirmed cases of the virus, including 18 deaths, since it came to scientists' attention in September [2012], according to WHO data.

The coronavirus is from the same viral family as the common cold and triggered the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) that swept the world from Asia in late 2003, killing 775 people.

There is no evidence yet of sustained human-to-human spread of the new virus, but there are concerns about clusters of cases reported by the WHO in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Britain.

[Reporting by Catherine Bremer; editing by Louise Ireland]

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail


[This is the 1st reported case of illness attributable to infection with the nCoV in France, and the 4th reported case in Europe with history of contact in the UAE prior to arriving in Europe; 2 cases were transferred from Qatar to Europe -- one to the UK and one to Germany- - and another was transferred from Abu Dhabi to Germany.

More information on this current case would be greatly appreciated -- age, sex, location of presumed transmission, animal exposures, possible contacts. - Mod.MPP

A HealthMap/ProMED-mail map can be accessed at: http://healthmap.org/r/1HAK.]
:tiphat:http://www.promedmail.org/direct.php?id=20130508.1699168

Novel coronavirus summary and literature update – as of 8 May 2013



As of 8 May 2013, 30 laboratory-confirmed cases of human infection with novel coronavirus (nCoV) have been reported to WHO: two from Jordan, two from Qatar, 23 cases from Saudi Arabia, two from the United Kingdom (UK), and one from the United Arab Emirates. Most patients are male (79.3%; 23 of 29 cases with sex reported) and range in age from 24 to 94 years (median 56 years). The first cases had onset of illness in late March or early April 2012; the most recent cases reported had onset on 1 May 2013 (13 cases with onset 14 April - 1 May 2013). Most patients presented with severe acute respiratory disease requiring hospitalization and eventually required mechanical ventilation or other advanced respiratory support. Eighteen patients have died.
Several cases have occurred in clusters, including in a health care setting in Jordan in April 2012 (of 2 confirmed and 11 probable cases, 10 were health care workers) and in the UK among family members of an infected patient who had recently arrived from Saudi Arabia. The Jordanian outbreak illustrated the potential of this virus to spread through health care facilities and the UK outbreak confirmed the potential of the virus to transmit between humans with close contact. In neither instance did transmission appear to go beyond the immediate outbreak into the community.
Since 14 April 2013, 13 new cases of infection have been confirmed and reported in Saudi Arabia (10 males and 3 females, median age 58 years). Seven of these have died, four remain critically ill in intensive care and two are hospitalized but clinically improved. All patients were reported to have at least one comorbid medical condition and most had more than one. Most of the cases were patients at a single health care facility. Two were family members of two patients from that facility; no health care workers have been affected. Although investigations are still ongoing into the source of this outbreak, early information indicated that only a small minority of these cases had contact with animals in the time leading up to their illness.
Five viruses from the United Kingdom (n=2), Saudi Arabia (n=1), Jordan (n=1), and Germany (n=1) have been cultured and genome sequences have been made publicly available. No sequence data are yet available from the latest cluster. All five of the sequenced viruses have a high degree of genetic similarity. Preliminary analyses show that the viruses are genetically somewhat similar to bat viruses. It should be noted, however, that the similarity does not necessarily imply that bats are the reservoir for the human virus or that direct exposure to bats or bat excreta were responsible for infection. The nCoV itself has not yet been found in an animal.
An international network of clinical experts has been convened to discuss therapeutic options. It concluded that in the absence of clinical evidence for disease-specific interventions, convalescent plasma is the most promising therapy. A memo containing advice for setting up international or regional serum centers, to obtain and share convalescent plasma, has been circulated by WHO to ministries of health in affected countries. WHO and the International Severe Acute Respiratory and Emerging Infection Consortium have developed and shared a set of research protocols and case report forms to help clinical investigators establish studies of pathogenesis and pharmacology. These are available athttp://www.prognosis.org/isaric/.
WHO has developed interim guidance document Infection prevention and control during health care for probable or confirmed cases of nCoV infection. The recommendations have been reviewed by members of the WHO Global Infection Prevention and Control Network (GIPCN) and other international experts. The interim guidance document is available at:http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/IPCnCoVguidance_06May13.pdf.

Recent peer-reviewed papers published since the last update

The United States of America’s National Institutes of Health has found that a combination of two licensed antiviral drugs, ribavirin and interferon-alpha 2b, can inhibit replication of the virus in cell cultures. Reference: Falzarano et al. Inhibition of novel human coronavirus-EMC replication by a combination of interferon-alpha2b and ribavirin. Scientific Reports 2013, doi: 10.1038/srep01686.

Areas of ongoing research and epidemiological investigation

There a number of areas of ongoing research related to nCoV, including:
  • Further development of nCoV serologic assays using known and novel approaches. Defining the serological response to different viral proteins and the kinetics of antibody response.
  • Further development of PCR-based diagnostic tests to verify acutely nCoV-infected persons .
  • Work related to the binding sites of the virus and the pathogenic potential of nCoV in human respiratory tissues.
  • Pathogenesis and testing of intervention strategies in animal models, including antiviral medications and candidate vaccines.
  • Studies of the response of human lung cells in culture to nCoV.
  • Further work evaluating genetic sequences as viral isolates become available to better understand the evolution of the virus, its relationship to other coronaviruses, and to identify any adaptive mutations in the viral genome.
  • Contact testing of individuals, including health care workers, exposed to known cases to determine transmissibility.
  • Testing samples from patients with severe acute respiratory infections from the affected region.
  • Field work to determine the presumed animal reservoir of the virus.

Summary

The reappearance of this virus and the pattern of transmission currently being observed in Saudi Arabia increase the level of concern regarding this novel pathogen. The questions of the exposures that result in human infection, the mode of transmission, the source of the virus, and the extent of infection in the community urgently need to be answered and are being actively pursued by the Ministry of Health of Saudi Arabia. The association of this outbreak with a single health care facility suggests nosocomial transmission. The patients may have had increased susceptibility to infection or severe disease because of their multiple comorbidities. 
However, the presence of infection in two family members not associated with the facility itself raises a concern about potential broader transmission in the community. Some features of the cases, such as the predominance of males and the age distribution among confirmed cases, may provide important clues to exposures. In addition to the key epidemiological questions, more work is needed to determine the optimal management strategy for patients infected with nCoV and to evaluate potential pharmaceutical interventions.
Evidence suggests that the virus may have its origin in bat species, though the evidence is largely circumstantial and will remain so until the virus is demonstrated in an animal species. However, experience with Nipah virus in Malaysia and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in China both illustrate that intermediate hosts may sometimes play an important role in transmission to humans and that direct exposure to reservoir specie(s) is not needed for infection. Therefore, the work to identify the source, the exposure and the mode of transmission should be multisectoral and involve veterinary services, food safety authorities, environmental health agencies in addition to public health authorities.
Vigilance and enhanced surveillance are needed within the affected area and for unusual clusters of respiratory disease in the rest of the world, particularly clusters associated with health care environments. WHO requests that confirmed and probable cases be reported within 24 hours of being classified as such, through the regional Contact Point for International Health Regulations at the appropriate WHO Regional Office.

nCoV: 66-year-old Emirati man dies in Germany



Hattip Dutchy and Makato
Man was hospitalised for cancer treatment and was infected by coronavirus (ncoV)

published: 17:52 May 8, 2013


Abu Dhabi: A 66-year-old Emirati man died in Germany while being hospitalised for cancer treatment (level 4). The man was infected by novel coronavirus (nCoV) confirmed the German Health Authorities on Tuesday.
The Health Authority in Abu Dhabi confirmed that it’s coordinating with the Ministry of Health and other authorities in the country and has taken the necessary measures as per international standards and recommendations by the World Health Organisation (WHO). The Authority confirmed that there are no suspected cases of coronavirus in the emirate up to date.

The Ministry of Health also confirmed that there are no suspected cases in the UAE up to date.

The Ministry and the Authority stated that the WHO first issued an international alert in September 2012. To date the WHO had confirmed 16 coronavirus cases globally.

Gulf News

thanks to Makoto

Isolation Saudi 6 cases of suspected bird "Corona"



    Isolation Saudi 6 cases of suspected bird "Corona"
    Virus "Corona"
    Revealed an official source in the health Ahsa (eastern Saudi Arabia) that King Fahd Hospital Ahsa put five people (four men and a woman) in the isolation rooms were locking 
    the gate and prevented any visit or access to them, bringing the number of suspected virus "Corona" killer in this region to 25 people announced the death of 7 so far.
    The newspaper "East Online" Saudi Arabia today that the King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh detection of the first infected Coruna in the province of Abqaiq (eastern Saudi Arabia) when the child reached the age of 11 months, and that when he came to the hospital to make a hole in the heart. 
    was the child's family moved from Abqaiq to Riyadh to perform the correct hole in the heart hospital and during the making of the necessary tests for the procedure, turned out to be infected with "Corona" and asked the child's family out of the hospital, and isolated from family members, and their review for treatment...



    http://www.alwafd.org/%D8%B9%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D9%80%D9%8A/465139-%D8%B9%D8%B2%D9%84-6-%D8%AD%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%B3%D8%B9%D9%88%D8%AF%D9%8A%D8%A9-%D9%84%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%B4%D8%AA%D8%A8%D8%A7%D9%87-%D8%A8%D8%A5%D8%B5%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%AA%D9%87%D8%A7-%D8%A8%D9%80-%D9%83%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%88%D9%86%D8%A7
    اقرأ المقال الأصلي علي بوابة الوفد الاليكترونية الوفد - عزل 6 حالات سعودية للاشتباه بإصابتها بـ"كورونا"