Study finds cats are susceptible to avian influenza H5N1
virus
JAVMA October 15, 2004
Domestic cats are susceptible to avian influenza A H5N1, and
they can spread the disease to other cats, according to a study published in
the Sept. 2 online edition of Science magazine.
The study bolstered anecdotal evidence that domestic cats and captive wild felids
can be infected with this deadly strain of avian influenza by eating infected
chickens. The findings raise new questions about the role cats may play in spreading
the disease among poultry farms, and may suggest another route of human exposure
to the virus, according to the study's authors.
In the study, led byThijs Kuiken, a veterinary pathologist in the Department
of Virology at Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands, one group of cats
was intratracheally inoculated with H5N1 virus isolated from a human in Vietnam
who died, another group of cats was exposed to other cats that had been inoculated
with the virus, and a third group was fed chicks that had been inoculated with
the virus. All three groups developed signs of disease, according to the study.
Dr. Carol J. Cardona, a University of California-Davis extension veterinarian,
cautioned that the results of the study are preliminary and more research will
be necessary to determine whether cats indeed serve as a reservoir for the disease.
Because the United States is free of the H5N1 strain, there is no threat that
domestic cats could spread the virus on U.S. poultry farms, Dr. Cardona said.
The study's findings do, however, reinforce long-standing veterinary advice
that cats should not be allowed on commercial poultry farms. Dr. Cardona explained
that cats are a biosecurity threat because they can serve as mechanical vectors
of diseases on poultry farms.
Dr. Cardona said she is not surprised that cats can be infected with the H5N1
strain of the influenza virus.
"The only thing predictable about influenza viruses is that they are unpredictable,"
she said.
This study provides new evidence that mammal-to-mammal transmission of the H5N1
strain of the influenza virus is possible.
The study should serve as a reminder to veterinarians to be vigilant, Dr. Cardona
said.
"I think (veterinarians) need to be aware of the clinical signs of avian
influenza in chickens and other birds, and recognize that not all avian viruses
are going to stay in birds," she said.