ADULTS ONLY REALLY CATCH FLU ABOUT TWICE A DECADE
Adults over the age of
30 only catch flu about twice a decade, a new study suggests.
Flu-like illness can
be caused by many pathogens, making it difficult to assess how often people are
infected by influenza.
Researchers analysed
blood samples from volunteers in Southern China, looking at antibody levels
against nine different influenza strains that circulated from 1968 to 2009.
They found that while
children get flu on average every other year, flu infections become less
frequent as people progress through childhood and early adulthood. From the age
of 30 onwards, flu infections tend to occur at a steady rate of about two per
decade.
Dr Adam Kucharski, who
worked on the study at Imperial College London before moving to the London
School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: "There's a lot of debate
in the field as to how often people get flu, as opposed to flu-like illness
caused by something else. These symptoms could sometimes be caused by common cold
viruses, such as rhinovirus or coronavirus. Also, some people might not realise
they had flu, but the infection will show up when a blood sample is
subsequently tested. This is the first time anyone has reconstructed a group's
history of infection from modern-day blood samples."
Dr Steven Riley,
senior author of the study, from the Medical Research Council Centre for
Outbreak Analysis and Modelling at Imperial, said: "For adults, we found
that influenza infection is actually much less common than some people think.
In childhood and adolescence, it's much more common, possibly because we mix
more with other people. The exact frequency of infection will vary depending on
background levels of flu and vaccination."
In addition to
estimating the frequency of flu infection, the researchers, from the UK, the US
and China, developed a mathematical model of how our immunity to flu changes
over a lifetime as we encounter different strains of the virus.
The immune system
responds to flu viruses by producing antibodies that specifically target
proteins on the virus surface. These proteins can change as the virus evolves,
but we keep antibodies in the blood that have a memory for strains we've
encountered before.
The model supported
evidence from other studies that the strains of influenza virus we encounter
earlier in life evoke stronger immune responses than those we meet later.
The findings will help
take into account the effect of immunity in the population on the evolution of
flu viruses, and potentially make predictions about how the virus will change
in the future. They could also help scientists consider how immunity to
historical strains will influence the way vaccines work and how effective they
will be.
Dr Kucharski said:
"What we've done in this study is to analyse how a person's immunity
builds up over a lifetime of flu infections. This information helps us
understand the susceptibility of the population as a whole and how easy it is
for new seasonal strains to spread through the population."
The findings are
published in PLOS Biology.
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