
Here are a couple of quick H5N1 flu updates about which I’ve been wanting to write. Neither is very surprising, but they highlight (again) some issues of concern.
(Presumed) fatal H5N1 influenza infection in a cat
An outdoor cat in Washington State tested positive for H5N1 influenza. Spillover of H5N1 infection into cats isn’t new. It occurs sporadically, most often in cats with outdoor access or fed contaminated raw poultry-based diets from potentially infected birds. In this case they specifically mentioned that the exposure was thought to be from contact with wild birds and not contaminated food.
Although the article doesn’t specify, presumably the cat died and was tested thereafter. That outcome seems to be the norm for cats with H5N1 flu. It’s possible that there are milder cases that go undiagnosed because a dead cat is more likely to be tested than a slightly ill cat that recovers on its own after a few days. Regardless, whether it’s almost always, most often or regularly fatal, infection in cats is bad. Trying to limit cats’ outdoor access (especially when flu is active in birds in the area) and not feeding cats raw poultry-based diets are two key preventive measures.
H5N1 influenza in cattle in the Netherlands
Back in December, I wrote about a litter of kittens from a dairy farm in the Netherlands that likely died from H5N1 influenza. At the time, none of the other animals on the farm (including the dairy goats and other cats) tested positive for flu. More recently, it was reported that one cow on the farm tested positive for H5N1 flu antibodies, which is consistent with the cow having been previously infected. The latest update is that five cows on the farm have now tested positive for H5N1 flu antibodies. That’s noteworthy for a few reasons:
- It seems to confirm that we’ve had another spillover of the virus from birds to cattle (it’s possible it went from birds to cats to cattle, but more likely it went directly from birds to cattle, as has been seen in the US).
- The infection went relatively unnoticed in cattle. Whether they were all completely healthy or only mildly ill such that it wasn’t flagged isn’t known. This demonstrates that cattle can have relatively silent infections that may be difficult to detect clinically. It also shows (again) that cats may be great sentinels on farms, i.e. unexplained cat deaths should trigger an investigation to see if flu may be present.
- Five positive cattle also gives us more confidence in the diagnosis. A false-positive test in five cows is much less likely than a false-positive in one. It also fits with some degree of cow-to-cow transmission. It’s unlikely (but not impossible) that there were five separate bird-to-cow transmissions, but much more likely that the virus went bird-to-cow-to-cow, as has been seen on US dairy farms. As I’ve mentioned many times before, any mammal-to-mammal transmission of this virus is a concern in terms of increasing the virus’ potential to jump to and spread among humans.















