A rare flu variant that has shown some resistance to the most commonly used antiviral treatment has been detected in at least two people in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Influenza viruses are constantly changing, but this variant has two concerning mutations in places that could lower the effectiveness of treatment with oseltamivir phosphate, known by the brand name Tamiflu.
“There’s active global surveillance going on looking for these mutations,” said Dr. Andy Pekosz, a virologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “We want to know when they come up, because that could really have major implications for how we treat influenza.”
For now, though, experts say the threat is low.
Cases of the “dual mutant” influenza variant were identified in 15 countries across five continents, including two cases in the U.S., according to a report published Wednesday in the CDC’s Emerging Infectious Diseases journal. But they’re very infrequent, representing only about 1% of the samples collected between May 2023 and February 2024.
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“They appear in a lot of places, but they’re never really the dominant virus in any place they appear,” Pekosz said.
“It’s not like the mutation occurred someplace, and suddenly that particular virus began spreading and out-competing everything in one big wave,” he said. Instead, the same mutations seem to be developing in multiple places independently.
The doubly mutated variant has shown a reduction in Tamiflu effectiveness of up to 16-fold, according to the CDC report — but that’s based on laboratory studies.
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