Journal article
Influenza A/H4N2 mallard infection experiments further indicate zanamivir as less prone to induce environmental resistance development than oseltamivir
V Tepper, M Nykvist, A Gillman, E Skog, M Wille, HS Lindström, C Tang, RH Lindberg, Å Lundkvist, JD Järhult
Journal of General Virology | MICROBIOLOGY SOC | Published : 2020
DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.001369
Abstract
Neuraminidase inhibitors (NAIs) are the gold standard treatment for influenza A virus (IAV). Oseltamivir is mostly used, followed by zanamivir (ZA). NAIs are not readily degraded in conventional wastewater treatment plants and can be detected in aquatic environments. Waterfowl are natural IAV hosts and replicating IAVs could thus be exposed to NAIs in the environment and develop resistance. Avian IAVs form the genetic basis for new human IAVs, and a resistant IAV with pandemic potential poses a serious public health threat, as NAIs constitute a pandemic preparedness cornerstone. Resistance development in waterfowl IAVs exposed to NAIs in the water environment has previously been investigated..
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Awarded by Vetenskapsrådet
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Swedish Research Council's FORMAS (grants 211-2013-1320 and 2016-00790) and VR (grant 2016-02606).