ANALYSIS | Now that bird flu is spreading among cows, scientists worry where H5N1 will jump next | CBC News (2024)

On March 25, American officials published an urgent announcement: Dairy cows in Texas, Kansas, and New Mexico were falling sick.

The cows had low appetites, and produced less milk than normal. Some farms also discovered wild bird carcasses on their grounds. Tests on a cowthroat swab and raw milk samples all confirmed an unusual finding: for the first time, cattle were catching a dangerous form of bird flu.

Within days, highly pathogenic avian flu — a type of influenza A known as H5N1 — was identified in at least a dozen herds across six states, from Texas in the south, up to Michigan and Idaho on the Canadian border.

Louise Moncla, an avian influenza researcher and assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania, was stunned.

"The overwhelming feeling that all of us have is that this is mostly just incredibly strange," she said. "To our knowledge, I've never seen a cow be infected with any influenza A viruses."

But the curveball wasn't entirely unexpected. And it maybe a harbinger of more species-jumps to come, including the rising possibility of H5N1 appearing in pigs — which could offer it a new route to better adapt to infect humans, inching the world closer to a bird flu pandemic.

Various speciesgetting infected

Over the last two decades, this deadly form of bird flu began striking more and more wild and farmed bird species. The threat exploded in 2022 with tens of millions of global bird deaths. And a rising number of mammals are also getting infected, from mink to seals to domestic dogs and cats.

This March, prior to the discovery of cases among cattle, Minnesota reported an H5N1 infection in a young goat, marking the first known U.S. case of bird flu in a ruminant. (Cows are also ruminants, a group ofherbivores known for their four-chambered stomachs.)

  • Do you have a question about food safety and H5N1? Send an email toask@cbc.ca.

Sporadic human cases — and deaths — are also occurring around the world. The second-ever human infection in the U.S. was reported just days ago in Texas, in an individual with mild symptoms who'd had direct exposure to cattle.

  • Person diagnosed with bird flu in Texas after contact with cows

A somewhat reassuring genomic sequencing analysis from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found only "minor changes" between viral sequences from cattle and the virus sequence from the human patient. And in both cases, the sequences largely lacked any changes suggesting the virus had better adapted to infect mammals.

"There is no evidence at this time that this virus is some sort of new, adapted strain that's transmitting really efficiently in cows," Moncla said.

The genome for the human case did feature one genetic tweak that signals adaptation to mammals — but the CDC stressed there wasn't evidence the virus had transmitted onward to other people.

Still, such rapid spread among dairy cattle herds, alongside other recent infections reported in U.S. farm cats, poultry, and the country's latest human case, all has scientists and health officials on high alert.

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"Dairy cows have not been affected before in the United States, or anywhere else in the world to my knowledge, and we've never before seen such clear evidence of mammal-to-mammal transmission," said Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore.

That possibility of spread between cows "does take us, maybe, a half-step closer to a scenario where the virus would be better adapted for humans," she told CBC News.

What's even more concerning, several researchers agreed, is the growing potential for bird flu to spread to another species of livestock: Pigs.

WATCH | Human bird flu case linked to U.S. dairy cattle outbreaks:

ANALYSIS | Now that bird flu is spreading among cows, scientists worry where H5N1 will jump next | CBC News (1)

Human bird flu case linked to U.S. dairy cattle outbreaks

A person in Texas who had close contact with infected dairy cattle has been diagnosed with bird flu. It's the country's second known human case after the virus was discovered circulating among dairy cows across at least four U.S. states for the first time.

Pigs considered viral mixing vessels

While cattle aren't known for being an ideal host for many flu viruses, pigs are potent viral mixing vessels. That's because swine have both human-adapted receptors and avian-adapted receptors in their respiratory tracts, Moncla said, meaning they can be infected with either type of pathogen.

If a pig catches both a human influenza A virus and an avian influenza A virus at the same time, it can spark a process known as viral reassortment — a genetic exchange in which flu viruses swap gene segments.

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Those swaps can introduce dramatic changes, producing a new virus with certain properties of a non-human strain coupled with the capacity to infect and spread between people.

That sort of shift hasn't been documented yet with H5N1. But it did happen with a new form of H1N1 — a virus resulting from a mashup of genes between various pig, bird, and human flu viruses — which began infecting people for the first time in 2009, sparking a pandemic.

Death rates from H1N1 were higher than typical flu seasons, but it eventually began circulating alongside other seasonal flu viruses and is now included in annual flu shots.

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Moncla said her "worst fear" is something similar happening with highly pathogenic avian flu, given its health impacts.

The death rate in humans may be upwards of 50 per cent, World Health Organization data suggests, though it's possible that milder infections are getting missed, skewing the case fatality ratio. Still, in a population that's never been exposed, the global impacts could be dire.

"Absolutely nobody wants to go through another pandemic — and it would be terrible," Moncla said.

ANALYSIS | Now that bird flu is spreading among cows, scientists worry where H5N1 will jump next | CBC News (2)

'It might not ever leave'

There are no signals that H5N1 has spread to pigs, at least for now. It also hasn't appeared yet in Canadian livestock, including dairy cattle, according to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

But scientists on both sides of the border worry it's just a matter of timeif swift action isn't taken to contain outbreaks and heighten surveillance.

  • In Ontario, worries of an even deadlier pandemic start with chickens

"The more that we can be doing to prepare now, just in case, the faster our reaction will be, and the more likely we will be to get ahead of the virus," said Rivers.

That includes dusting off pandemic plans and updating emergency flu vaccine stockpiles, she said, since the time between the first human cluster of cases and widespread transmission could be a "very short window."

Increased surveillance is also essential, along with serology studies to find out if other cattle herds have been unknowingly impacted, said Dr. Joe Armstrong, a veterinarian with the University of Minnesota who regularly travels the state to educate dairy and beef producers.

Armstrong warned the outbreaks may already be bigger — and tougher to track — than they initially appeared.

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Dairy producers,scared for their livelihoods, can be wary of reporting sick cattle, given poultry producers are often forced to cull entire flocks experiencing H5N1 outbreaks, Armstrong said.

More human cases could also be happening under the radar among farm workers who've moved to the U.S. from abroad, don't speak English as their first language, and may be hesitant to seek medical help, he added.

"So I think there's probably underreporting on both sides," Armstrong said.

"If [H5N1] gets into a population where there's constantly animals going in and out … it might not ever leave."

ANALYSIS | Now that bird flu is spreading among cows, scientists worry where H5N1 will jump next | CBC News (2024)

FAQs

Who is H5N1 in milk? ›

The H5N1 bird flu virus strain has been detected in very high concentrations in raw milk from infected animals, the WHO said on Friday, though how long the virus can survive in milk is unknown.

What is the H5N1 influenza strain? ›

H5N1 bird flu is widespread in wild birds worldwide and is causing outbreaks in poultry and U.S. dairy cows with one recent human case in a U.S. dairy worker. While the current public health risk is low, CDC is watching the situation carefully and working with states to monitor people with animal exposures.

Does bird flu affect cows? ›

Officials believe cows likely have been infected by exposure to wild birds, but said cow-to-cow spread “cannot be ruled out.” Farmers are testing cows that show symptoms of infection, including sharply reduced milk supply and lethargy.

Can you get bird flu from drinking milk? ›

Milk is still safe to drink according to the USDA, because it is pasteurized — meaning it is heated to a high temperature for a set amount of time to kill off any potentially harmful microorganisms.

Is H5N1 a pandemic? ›

There is no sign right now that the H5N1 virus has become a pandemic strain. But if it does, It could cause a pandemic like the one that happened in 1918, when millions of people died, or it could cause a less severe pandemic, like like the ones that happened in 1956 or 1968. We simply don't know.

Can H5N1 infect pigs? ›

Information about the latest developments around avian influenza A(H5N1) is available at Bird Flu Current Situation Summary. Influenza A viruses are endemic (can infect and regularly transmit) in 6 animal species or groups (wild waterfowl, domestic poultry, swine, horses, dogs, and bats) in addition to humans.

Has H5N1 infected humans? ›

The Texas Department of State Health Services is reporting a human case of avian influenza A(H5N1) virus in Texas. The case was identified in a person who had direct exposure to dairy cattle presumed to be infected with avian influenza.

What was the deadliest flu strain? ›

The 1918–1920 flu pandemic, also known as the Great Influenza epidemic or by the common misnomer Spanish flu, was an exceptionally deadly global influenza pandemic caused by the H1N1 influenza A virus.

Is there a human vaccine for H5N1? ›

ASPR's industry partners include CSL Seqirus, GSK, and Sanofi, which have H5N1 vaccines licensed for use in the U.S. Sanofi developed egg-based A/H5N1 vaccines as early as 2004 and received the first U.S. license for such a vaccine in 2007, a spokesperson for the company told MedPage Today.

Which states have bird flu in milk? ›

The FDA has been testing samples nationwide, but officials did not say where the positive samples were from. As of Tuesday evening, the virus, known as Type A H5N1, has been found in dairy cows in Idaho, Kansas, Michigan, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and South Dakota.

Can birds give you bird flu? ›

Human infections with bird flu viruses are rare but can occur, usually after close contact with infected birds. Very rarely, human infections with bird flu have happened after exposure to other infected animals.

Do horses get bird flu? ›

Horse flu viruses first spread to horses from birds. Avian influenza A(H3N8) viruses circulating in birds infected horses, and those viruses eventually adapted to horses and started regularly spreading in horses as equine influenza A(H3N8) viruses. These viruses were first isolated from horses in 1963.

Can bird flu get in eggs? ›

U.S. egg producers are watching the situation closely after bird flu was detected in chickens in Texas and Michigan. Millions of birds have been killed, but the FDA said the risk of affected eggs getting into the retail market or causing infections in humans is low because of federal inspections and other safeguards.

Is bird flu in bird poop? ›

The virus is found in an infected bird's feces (poop) and fluids from the bird's eyes, nose, or mouth. Bird flu viruses don't usually infect people. However, this can happen if you: Touch your eyes, nose, or mouth after handling infected live or dead birds.

What happens if you eat a bird that has bird flu? ›

Avian flu is not a foodborne illness, which means you cannot contract it from eating poultry that has been cooked properly.

Where was bird flu found in milk? ›

The US Department of Agriculture confirmed in late March that it had detected highly pathogenic avian influenza in dairy cows in Texas and Kansas, which was the first time a virus that has been decimating bird populations around the globe had shown up in cattle.

Where did the H5N1 virus come from? ›

In 1996, highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 virus is first identified in domestic waterfowl in Southern China. The virus is named A/goose/Guangdong/1/1996. In 1997, H5N1 poultry outbreaks happen in China and Hong Kong with 18 associated human cases (6 deaths) in Hong Kong.

What animals have H5N1? ›

There has been no stopping H5N1. Avian flu viruses tend to be picky about their hosts, typically sticking to one kind of wild bird. But this one has rapidly infiltrated an astonishingly wide array of birds and animals, from squirrels and skunks to bottlenose dolphins, polar bears and, most recently, dairy cows.

Why is it called H5N1? ›

The name H5N1 refers to the subtypes of surface antigens present on the virus: hemagglutinin type 5 and neuraminidase type 1. Genotype Z of H5N1 is now the dominant genotype of H5N1. Genotype Z is endemic in birds in southeast Asia and represents a long term pandemic threat.

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