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March
16, 2019
Why
the Scientific Debate Over a UW Bird Flu Study Isn't Going Away
by
Will Cushman, WisContext
GlobalBioDefense.com
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A
University of Wisconsin-Madison laboratory is set to resume
experiments that could build the foundation of an early warning
system for flu pandemics. The research is based on altering a deadly
type of the influenza virus in a way that could make it more
dangerous, though, and critics say its approval lacked transparency
and creates unnecessary risks.
Yoshihiro
Kawaoka is a virologist and professor at the UW School of Veterinary
Medicine and the University of Tokyo who has figured prominently in
Wisconsin's long-term central role in flu research. Kawaoka's work
has been the focus of fierce debate among epidemiologists ever since
he announced in 2011 that his lab had successfully altered the H5N1
subtype of the influenza A virus to be transmittable through the air
among ferrets. These small mammals are a common laboratory stand-in
for studying human flu transmission.
The
H5N1 flu primarily affects birds. On occasion, though, the virus can
jump to humans, and can kill more than half of those infected. While
deadly, wild H5N1 is confirmed to have infected fewer than 1,000
people around the world.
Those
who have come down with this virus are thought to have almost always
been infected directly from birds with which they were in direct
contact.
That's
why Kawaoka's 2011 announcement, made around the same time that a
research team in the Netherlands made public similar findings,
caused a contentious debate in the scientific community.
That
debate has lingered since 2011 and intensified in early 2019 after
the federal government approved funding for Kawaoka to continue his
research.
Marc
Lipsitch is a professor of epidemiology and director of the Center
for Communicable Disease Dynamics at Harvard T.H. Chan School of
Public Health. He's a longtime critic of research that modifies flu
viruses to be more dangerous in humans.
"What
worries me and my colleagues is the effort to modify viruses that
are novel to humans and therefore to which there's no immunity in
the population, and where a laboratory accident wouldn't just
threaten the person who got infected ... but potentially could be
the spark that leads to a whole pandemic of infectious
disease," Lipsitch told WisContext.
"The
issue is that when you take a strain of flu where there's no
immunity in the population because it's only been circulating in
birds, and you modify [it] to transmit, that is creating a potential
pandemic pathogen," Lipsitch said. "The question is
whether that's a good idea or not."
Lipsitch
firmly believes it is not a good idea, and he's not the only
infectious disease researcher who holds this opinion.
In
2014, Lipsitch organized the Cambridge Working Group, made up of
hundreds of scientists, to call for a reassessment of biosafety
measures for viruses altered by researchers.
The
group formed in response to a series of lab accidents involving
potentially dangerous pathogens.
"An
accidental infection with any pathogen is concerning. But accident
risks with newly created 'potential pandemic pathogens' raise grave
new concerns," the group declared in a July 2014 statement
calling for a reassessment of experiments like Kawaoka's.
"Laboratory
creation of highly transmissible, novel strains of dangerous
viruses, especially but not limited to influenza, poses
substantially increased risks."
Assessing
Risks During a Research Moratorium
In
October 2014, partly in response to the Cambridge Working Group's
concerns, the National Institutes of Health announced a funding
moratorium on some types of what's called
"gain-of-function" research, including the H5N1
experiments at the UW, to assess the potential risks and benefits of
this work, and review of biosafety standards.
Gain-of-function
research aims to identify mutations that give rise to a new genetic
function in viruses and microbes. Yoshihiro Kawaoka's 2011 findings
- published in the journal Nature in May 2012 - identified four
genetic mutations in the H5N1 virus that made it transmissible among
ferrets.
Rebecca
Moritz chairs UW-Madison's biosecurity task force and leads the
university's handling of "select agents," a class of
potentially dangerous subjects of research that includes the H5N1
viruses Kawaoka studies.
Moritz
has worked closely with Kawaoka to develop safety protocols for his
lab, which is located in University Research Park on the west side
of Madison.
She
spoke on behalf of Kawaoka's lab and its work.
Moritz
told WisContext that Kawaoka's research could lead to more effective
treatment and prevention options and help build an "early
warning detection system" for pandemics by mapping mutations
that might make wild H5N1 contagious among humans.
"We
don't understand the mechanisms involved in [influenza] transmission
very well," Moritz said.
She
explained that understanding those mechanisms could result in new
drugs and approaches to deter the transmission of influenza viruses
by identifying certain genetic characteristics that health officials
can watch for while monitoring wild strains.
"The
goal of this research is ... not to intentionally create influenza
viruses that can transmit," Moritz added.
"Nature
is already doing that for us."
She
pointed out that the 2011 experiments created an H5N1 virus with
less severe symptoms than the wild type, and none of the ferrets
died from the infection.
Yoshihiro
Kawaoka, a professor of pathobiological sciences at the UW School of
Veterinary Medicine, gives a presentation during a tour of the
Influenza Research Institute on Feb. 13, 2013.
While
the goal of Kawaoka and his collaborators is to prevent future flu
deaths, their critics point to the risk - however miniscule - of
this work of setting off the very health crisis it aims to prevent
by way of a lab accident.
That
prospect is at the heart of objections to the research and why the
Cambridge Working Group called for a wholesale reassessment of work
like it.
During
the federal funding moratorium, NIH sponsored multiple public
meetings where the risks and benefits of gain-of-function research
on "enhanced potential pandemic viruses" were debated and
evaluated.
The
deliberations included two symposiums of the National Academies of
Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, held in 2015 and 2016, as well
as a 1,000-page risk-benefit analysis and an ethical analysis.
Following
this process, NIH decided that the benefits outweighed the risks and
lifted the funding moratorium in December 2017.
However,
the end of the moratorium did not mean that Kawaoka's research was
automatically approved to resume. It took more than a year for NIH's
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to reinstate
the funding for the UW-based H5N1 research, as Science reported in
February 2019.
In
fact, funding for any "enhanced potential pandemic virus"
research must be approved on a case-by-case basis going forward.
"We
are glad the United States government weighed the risks and benefits
... and developed new oversight mechanisms," Kawaoka told
Science. "We know that it does carry risks. We also believe it
is important work to protect human health."
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Transparency
is Another Subject of Debate
The
way in which NIH disclosed a new round of research at Yoshihiro
Kawaoka's lab at UW-Madison - by way of an update on its public
reporter database - did not sit well with critics of the research.
Harvard
epidemiologist Marc Lipsitch and Johns Hopkins Center for Health
Security director Tom Inglesby wrote a Feb. 27 op-ed in the
Washington Post with the headline "The U.S. government is
funding dangerous experiments it doesn't want you to know
about."
Lipsitch
went further in an interview with WisContext, saying that the
federal approval of Kawaoka's research was "less transparent
than the average grant review," noting that the identities of
the reviewers were never revealed.
Identifying
grant reviewers is standard procedure, Lispitch asserted, and helps
guard against conflicts of interest.
"We
just don't know anything about even the identities of the people
doing the reviews, although there's U.S. government policy
statements listing the many kinds of expertise that are required to
do that work," Lipsitch said.
"We
don't know whether the U.S. government is following its own policy
or whether it's doing something less than that," he added.
Elleen
Kane, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human
Service's Assistant Secretary of Preparedness Response, which led
the department's review of the research proposals, declined to
identify the reviewers, but shared its framework for guiding funding
decisions related to research like Kawaoka's.
"Reviewers
are all federal employees which enables us to avoid conflicts of
interest," Kane wrote in an email to WisContext.
Lipsitch
said that, in his opinion, the experiments are less like typical
grant-funded research and more akin to a large public works project,
and should therefore require an extraordinarily transparent review
of the risks and benefits.
He
said that a publicized event would be appropriate "where the
government said proudly:
'We
have decided to fund research that is so groundbreaking and so
important to the future of our medical preparedness for pandemics
that we think it's worth risking creating such a pandemic ... but
they've done the opposite."
In
response, spokespeople at NIH pointed to its public deliberative
process leading up to the funding decision.
NIH
spokesperson Emma Wojtowicz told WisContext that it is providing
more materials online.
"Moving
forward, to increase transparency even more, [the Department of
Health and Human Services] is posting projects that fall within the
scope of review and have been awarded funding on their
website."
One
new condition of federal funding means that the Kawaoka lab has to
adhere to new communication standards developed through the NIH's
deliberative process.
These
include immediately informing officials at NIH if Kawaoka identifies
mutations allowing bird influenza strains to be contagious in
mammals.
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Cynthia
Goldsmith/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Rebecca
Moritz at UW-Madison emphasized the long, public deliberative
process leading up to the reapproval of Kawaoka's research.
"It
involved multiple public hearings, opportunities for public input
and input from experts outside the virology field, including Dr.
Lipsitch, over the course of four years,"
Moritz
told WisContext. "What has emerged is what the consensus of
experts has agreed is best practice."
Those
best practices include maintaining environmental safety procedures
used before the moratorium, Moritz said. Kawaoka's lab is rated as
Biosafety Level 3 Agriculture, or BSL-3Ag, which Moritz described as
one half-step below the CDC's highest possible biosafety rating.
"Our
biosafety and biosecurity practices are like an onion - layers and
layers build on each other to mitigate risks," Moritz said.
"The
[lab] is a stand-alone facility expressly built for work with
influenza viruses," she added.
"It
has built-in redundancies; is constantly monitored by lab personnel,
law enforcement and other first-responders; and has more than 500
alarm points."
Additionally,
lab workers are strictly vetted, including undergoing an FBI
background check, and must adhere to stringent security protocols.
If
a fire were to break out in the lab, Moritz said local fire
departments have been instructed to let it burn.
And
if lab workers were to have a medical emergency while inside the
facility, they would have to be decontaminated by qualified lab
staff before receiving treatment.
Lipsitch
pointed out that even some of the most secure labs in the world have
dealt with safety breaches, usually due to human error.
"What
these experiments do is ramp up the consequences of an accident to a
whole new level," Lipsitch said.
"When
you take an error-prone process and ramp up the consequences of an
error to global pandemic levels, that's not me being dramatic,
that's just describing what the consequences are of something we
don't need to be doing."
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"Why
The Scientific Debate Over A UW Bird Flu Study Isn't Going
Away" was originally published on WisContext which produced the
article in a partnership between Wisconsin Public Radio and
Wisconsin Public Television.
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