Hi everyone,
I've been reading up on H5N1 this weekend, and I'm pretty concerned. Right now my estimate hunch is that there is a 5% non-zero chance that it will cost more than 10,000 people their lives.
To be clear, I think it is unlikely that H5N1 will become a pandemic anywhere close to the size of covid.
Nevertheless, I think our community should be actively following the news and start thinking about ways to be helpful if the probability increases. I am creating this thread as a place where people can discuss and share information about H5N1. We have a lot of pandemic experts in this community, do chime in!
Resources
Articles
- https://www.eurosurveillance.org/content/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2023.28.3.2300001 (paper showing H5N1 has spread to minks, which is my primary cause for concern)
- https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/03/opinion/bird-flu-h5n1-pandemic.html (widely shared, but I'm unsure how much to trust the claims)
- https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/avian-influenza-influenza-a-h5n1-risk-to-human-health/technical-risk-assessment-for-avian-influenza-human-health-influenza-a-h5n1-2344b
Markets
Manifold
Group of H5N1 manifold markets: https://manifold.markets/group/h5n1-bird-flu
Metaculus
Plan for action
Fight status quo bias
In January 2020, many in the effective altruism and rationalist communities had correctly gauged the seriousness of the pandemic threat and were warning people publicly about it. Despite being convinced it was likely to become a pandemic I almost entirely failed to act beyond a few symbolic gestures such as stocking up on food/masks and warning relatives.
I consider this to have been the biggest personal failing of my life. I could have started initiatives to organize and prepare, I could have invested in mRNA producers, I could have researched how it would affect third-world hospitals. Yet all I did was sit idly by and doom scroll the internet for news about covid.
My goal with this thread is to avoid making that mistake ever again, even if it means most likely looking really stupid in a few months time.
How can we lower the chance of a serious pandemic?
I encourage everyone to think about actionable steps and be ambitious in their thinking. As far as I understand mink-to-human transmission is currently the primary reason to be concerned. What ways are there to minimize the chance of this occuring?
The following companies currently own vaccines for H5N1:
Sanofi SA | Aflunov |
GSK plc | Q-Pan H5N1 influenza vaccine |
CSL Limited | Audenz (and 1-3 more I think?) |
Roche Holding AG Genussscheine | oseltamivir (aka Tamiflu, not a vaccine), this one seems less useful than the others |
Could we pay them to start scaling up production tomorrow? One thing to note is that all these vaccines are egg-based. Are mRNA vaccines possible to create for this? If so, what can we do to speed up the process of making them?
Any other ideas?
Can you speak on this since Alvea has been wound down?
As a layperson, I'm increasingly convinced that we're on a path to a devastating H5N1 pandemic within the next few years, possibly much sooner (writing this in late June 2024). My concern is based on the amount of "biocomputation" that is going towards / will soon go towards parallel search for mutations that have the side effect of triggering a pandemic in humans, plus the risk of viral reassortment with human-native viruses. I've been reading a lot about this over the past few days, and I'm eager to defend this position or revise my opinion in light of new arguments.
Here's my basic reasoning:
The virus has been adapting for mammals: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/03/health/bird-flu-cows-mutations.html
Grocery store tests suggest it is already very widespread among dairy cattle: https://health.ucdavis.edu/news/headlines/grocery-store-milk-tests-positive-for-bird-flu-why-the-fda-says-its-still-safe-to-drink/2024/04
I believe this represents a shift from past H5N1 behavior, which did not involve transmission amongst domesticated mammals: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/30/3/23-1098_article
Adaptations which increase fitness within a dairy cow are also liable to trigger a human pandemic, e.g. added a2,6 SA receptor binding ability: https://nitter.poast.org/richardhirschs1/status/1804830640418025518
There's a lot of cattle (the US has around 6% of global cattle): https://xkcd.com/1338/
Lots of cattle biomass = lots of tissue infected with H5N1 = tons of virions (viral density in raw milk is "astronomical" per Nature) = lots of opportunities for a virion to find a mutation that increases fitness in cattle and/or in humans.
Furthermore, as an influenza virus, it has a high mutation rate (which would appear to both lower mutation barriers, and decrease the effectiveness of vaccination).
There are multiple vectors for a mutated virus to spread from cattle to humans: raw milk consumption, poor ag worker biosecurity (see milking parlor discussion here), upcoming county fairs. (Pigs might also serve as an intermediary. Part of why I'm so worried is I see various distinct catastrophe stories.)
For all we know, human-to-human spread is already occurring in states which are doing less testing than Michigan: https://www.michigan.gov/mdhhs/inside-mdhhs/newsroom/2024/05/30/h5n1-updates
Don't forget about the risk of viral reassortment with ordinary human influenza this fall, given the multiple human/cattle contact vectors I mentioned previously.
And finally, if an H5N1 pandemic happens, it could be really bad: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/17/health/bird-flu-pandemic-humans.html
On the other hand, perhaps widespread consumption of pasteurized milk could act as "accidental vaccination" (exposure to deactivated virus) and blunt the spread. As a layperson, I am out of my depth here. Could I drink previously-infected pasteurized milk and consume an adjuvant as a method of DIY vaccination?
Metaculus puts us midway between COVID and the Black Death on a log scale for death rate, perhaps something like the Spanish Flu -- one of the worst pandemics in history? https://www.metaculus.com/questions/23762/h5n1-case-fatality-rate-in-us/
Clarifying my position here, I'm not claiming there will be a pandemic next week or next month. My claim is more that "common in cattle but not common in humans" is an "unstable evolutionary equilibrium" for H5N1, which is unlikely to persist for an extended period of time.
Another way of putting it is that the ambient risk level for H5N1, in the sense of the number of possible-pandemic dice which are getting rolled every day, seems to have gone up a lot recently. The risk level is likely to stay high, because I expect H5N1 to become endemic among cattle (if it isn't already). And regulators seem to be dropping the ball, just like they did for COVID. Calling your congressperson and telling them to ask regulators hard questions could be high-impact.