Context and significance
The avian influenza A virus subtype H10N3 is a possible candidate for causing a fatal flu and may present a serious public health threat. Research increasingly shows that the avian influenza virus H10N3 can be transmitted from birds to humans, causing severe viral pneumonia and potentially leading to acute respiratory distress syndrome and respiratory failure. Researchers at the Fourth People’s Hospital of Nanning (China) provide evidence supporting the cross-species transmission of the avian influenza virus H10N3 to humans, which can give rise to severe pneumonia. The authors report that a female patient with avian influenza virus H10N3 infection, who was suffering from severe pneumonia, respiratory failure, pneumothorax, and numbness and dysesthesia in her feet, recovered after receiving appropriate therapy and was discharged from the hospital.
Highlights
• A young woman contracted the avian influenza virus H10N3
• Secondary infections, pneumothorax, and foot numbness developed consecutively
• Baloxavir marboxil and oseltamivir were administered
Summary
Background
Avian influenza viruses, frequently identified in wild waterfowl and poultry, have occasionally been transmitted to humans, causing severe respiratory diseases. This report covers the fourth case of a human contracting the H10N3 subtype of avian influenza virus.
Methods
A case of novel avian influenza virus subtype H10N3 was detected in a female patient hospitalized in Nanning, China, in December 2024. Blood, feces, urine, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid were collected from the patient for medical analysis during the hospitalization.
Findings
A case of novel avian influenza virus subtype H10N3 was detected in a female patient hospitalized in Nanning, China, in December 2024. She also had a history of exposure to live poultry. This case represents the fourth documented instance of H10N3 infection in humans. She was treated with a combination of baloxavir marboxil and oseltamivir. She exhibited extensive lung lesions. Additionally, she presented complicating factors, including secondary infection, pneumothorax, and numbness in her feet. She recovered and was discharged on March 27, 2025, amid comprehensive supportive care, which included therapy with baloxavir marboxil, oseltamivir, fluconazole, tigecycline, amikacin, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, and rehabilitation therapy.
Conclusions
The virus was effectively cleared by the combination therapies. The internal genes of the H10N3 virus in this patient were highly homologous to the corresponding genes from the A/Yunnan/2024 virus (GenBank accession numbers, hemagglutinin [HA] [GenBank: PP555669] and PB-2 [GenBank: PP555666]).
Funding
This work was funded by the Fourth People’s Hospital of Nanning - Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) Clinical Treatment Center of Guangxi (Nanning).
Source: Med., https://www.cell.com/med/abstract/S2666-6340(25)00272-7
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