29 August 2006
Background
Prompt and accurate reporting of H5N1 influenza cases to WHO is the cornerstone for monitoring both the global evolution of this disease and the corresponding risk that a pandemic virus might emerge. In collaboration with several partners, WHO has developed standardized case definitions to facilitate:
1. Reporting and classification of human cases of H5N1 infection by national
and international health authorities.
2. Standardization of language for
communication purposes.
3. Comparability of data across time and
geographical areas.
Application of the H5N1 case definitions
1. The case definitions apply to the current phase of pandemic alert (phase
3) and may change as new information about the disease or its epidemiology
becomes available.
2. National authorities should formally notify only
probable and confirmed H5N1 cases to WHO. The case definitions for persons under
investigation and suspected cases have been developed to help national
authorities in classifying and tracking cases.
3. The case definitions
are not intended to provide complete descriptions of disease in patients but
rather to standardize reporting of cases.
4. In clinical situations
requiring decisions concerning treatment, care or triage of persons who may have
H5N1 infection, those decisions should be based on clinical judgement and
epidemiological reasoning, and not on adherence to the case definitions. While
most patients with H5N1 infection have presented with fever and lower
respiratory complaints, the clinical spectrum is broad.
Case definitions
Person under investigation
A person whom public health
authorities have decided to investigate for possible H5N1 infection.
Suspected H5N1 case
A person presenting with unexplained acute
lower respiratory illness with fever (>38 ºC ) and cough, shortness of breath
or difficulty breathing.
AND
One or more of the following
exposures in the 7 days prior to symptom onset:
a. Close contact (within 1 metre) with a person (e.g. caring for, speaking with, or touching) who is a suspected, probable, or confirmed H5N1 case;
b. Exposure (e.g. handling, slaughtering, defeathering, butchering, preparation for consumption) to poultry or wild birds or their remains or to environments contaminated by their faeces in an area where H5N1 infections in animals or humans have been suspected or confirmed in the last month;
c. Consumption of raw or undercooked poultry products in an area where H5N1 infections in animals or humans have been suspected or confirmed in the last month;
d. Close contact with a confirmed H5N1 infected animal other than poultry or wild birds (e.g. cat or pig);
e. Handling samples (animal or human) suspected of containing H5N1 virus in a laboratory or other setting.
Probable H5N1 case (notify WHO)
Probable definition 1:
A person meeting the criteria for a
suspected case
AND
One of the following additional criteria:
a. infiltrates or evidence of an acute pneumonia on chest radiograph plus evidence of respiratory failure (hypoxemia, severe tachypnea)
OR
b. positive laboratory confirmation of an influenza A infection but insufficient laboratory evidence for H5N1 infection.
Probable definition 2:
A person dying of an unexplained acute
respiratory illness who is considered to be epidemiologically linked by time,
place, and exposure to a probable or confirmed H5N1 case.
Confirmed H5N1 case (notify WHO)
A person meeting the criteria for a suspected or probable case
AND
One of the following positive results conducted in a national, regional
or international influenza laboratory whose H5N1 test results are accepted by
WHO as confirmatory:
a. Isolation of an H5N1 virus;
b. Positive H5 PCR results from tests using two different PCR targets, e.g. primers specific for influenza A and H5 HA;
c. A fourfold or greater rise in neutralization antibody titer for H5N1 based on testing of an acute serum specimen (collected 7 days or less after symptom onset) and a convalescent serum specimen. The convalescent neutralizing antibody titer must also be 1:80 or higher;
d. A microneutralization antibody titer for H5N1 of 1:80 or greater in a single serum specimen collected at day 14 or later after symptom onset and a positive result using a different serological assay, for example, a horse red blood cell haemagglutination inhibition titer of 1:160 or greater or an H5-specific western blot positive result.