Showing posts with label abstract. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abstract. Show all posts

Saturday, June 20, 2026

#Coronavirus Disease Research #References (AMEDEO, June 20 '26)

 



    Br J Anaesth

  1. SAFAVYNIA SA, Shanker A, Wang J, Choi JM, et al
    Neurophysiological correlates of delayed recovery of consciousness in a critically ill patient with COVID-19 with repeated cardiac arrest.
    Br J Anaesth. 2026 Jun 17:S0007-0912(26)00360-0. doi: 10.1016/j.bja.2026.
    PubMed        


    Int J Infect Dis

  2. KARANFIL O, Gullu D, Birinci S, Bayram S, et al
    Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever in Turkiye, 2017-2024: Evolving Epidemiology and Implications for Surveillance.
    Int J Infect Dis. 2026 Jun 18:108898. doi: 10.1016/j.ijid.2026.108898.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  3. CHENG A, Meng L, Wang J, Liu L, et al
    Post-Pandemic Forecasting of Pediatric Acute Respiratory Infections with Deep Learning: A Multi-Pathogen, Multi-Time-Horizon Study.
    Int J Infect Dis. 2026 Jun 17:108889. doi: 10.1016/j.ijid.2026.108889.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  4. LAUNAY O, Ansellem O, Dashraath P, Loubet P, et al
    PREGNANT WOMEN COVID-19 IMMUNISATION IN 2026: EVIDENCE, UNCERTAINTY AND PRIORITIES.
    Int J Infect Dis. 2026 Jun 13:108886. doi: 10.1016/j.ijid.2026.108886.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Infect

  5. KONG M, Gao HX, Song XD, Yang GJ, et al
    Convergent neutralizing antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 variants over 2.5 years after BA.5/BF.7 breakthrough infection.
    J Infect. 2026 Jun 18:106799. doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2026.106799.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  6. DONG S, Li M, Huo D, Zhao H, et al
    Impact of EV-A71 vaccination and non-pharmaceutical interventions on hand, foot, and mouth disease: A 14-year interrupted time series analysis.
    J Infect. 2026;93:106795.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Med Virol

  7. DINC HO, Uysal HK, Can G, Budak B, et al
    Booster mRNA Vaccination Prevents Breakthrough Severe COVID-19 Infections.
    J Med Virol. 2026;98:e71026.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  8. GUPTA S, Chaudhary A, Bhatnagar S
    SARS-CoV-2 Evolution and Its Implications for RT-PCR Diagnostic Performance.
    J Med Virol. 2026;98:e71023.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  9. MENG L, Cheng A, Tang D, Huang X, et al
    Molecular Epidemiology, Viral Load and Clinical Severity of Human Adenovirus-Associated Respiratory Infections in Hospitalized Children in Shanghai, 2021-2023.
    J Med Virol. 2026;98:e71011.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  10. CHANG S, Shin J, Park S, Park H, et al
    Limited Cross-Neutralization of Emerging SARS-CoV-2 BA.3.2.2 After LP.8.1-Updated Vaccination.
    J Med Virol. 2026;98:e71025.
    PubMed         Abstract available


  11. Correction to "Preconception COVID-19 Vaccination Reprograms Fetal Metabolism to Accelerate Intrauterine Recovery and Suppress Persistent Metabolic Memory".
    J Med Virol. 2026;98:e71017.
    PubMed        

  12. MARWAHA A, Alam B, Akbari AR
    Reviewing the Use of Oral Melatonin in Critically Ill Covid 19 Patients.
    J Med Virol. 2026;98:e71021.
    PubMed        


    J Virol

  13. ZENG H, Shi Y, Zhong Q, Tang R, et al
    RIG-I-dependent sensing of PEDV shapes epithelial antiviral immunity in the intestinal mucosa.
    J Virol. 2026 Jun 16:e0048326. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00483.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Lancet

  14. ABUBAKAR I, Tellez D, Aldridge RW, Altare C, et al
    The UCL-Lancet Commission on Migration and Health: review of the state of progress.
    Lancet. 2026;407:2554-2576.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  15. SASIENI P, Falcaro M
    Cervical cancer mortality trends following HPV vaccination in England, 2001-24: an analysis of population-based mortality data.
    Lancet. 2026 Jun 17:S0140-6736(26)00918-9. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(26)00918.
    PubMed         Abstract available


  16. Benzylpenicillin versus flucloxacillin or cloxacillin for the treatment of penicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia (SNAP): an international, multicentre, open-label, non-inferiority randomised controlled trial.
    Lancet. 2026 Jun 17:S0140-6736(26)00761-0. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(26)00761.
    PubMed         Abstract available

#Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses Research #References (AMEDEO, Jun. 20 '26)

 


    Ann Intern Med

  1. KOUTOURATSAS T, Dammad T, Mylonakis E
    In outpatients with COVID-19 during Omicron variant circulation, some antivirals reduce time to recovery.
    Ann Intern Med. 2026 Jun 2. doi: 10.7326/ANNALS-26-01878.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  2. COTTON D
    "Never More Than 15 Feet From the Respirator": Housestaff Research During the 1955 Boston Polio Epidemic.
    Ann Intern Med. 2026 Apr 28. doi: 10.7326/ANNALS-25-05440.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Arch Virol

  3. AHMADY A, Mickleburgh I, Bryant N, Carnell GW, et al
    Enhanced virucidal activity of quaternary ammonium compound-thymol combinations: influence of mucin and mucoadhesive polymers.
    Arch Virol. 2026;171:215.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  4. SANYAL D, Chaubey B
    SARS-CoV-2 3CL protease interaction with host factors - identifying novel drug targets.
    Arch Virol. 2026;171:202.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    BMC Pediatr

  5. GRUENDL M, Campos LN, Dey T, Nkurunziza T, et al
    Epidemiology of children and adolescents undergoing surgery at Mexican public hospitals: a retrospective registry-based analysis from 2010 to 2022.
    BMC Pediatr. 2026;26:553.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  6. KARADENIZ HB, Zilan S, Yazici MB, Derelioglu SS, et al
    COVID-19 and first permanent molar extractions in children: a comparative retrospective study.
    BMC Pediatr. 2026;26:567.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Cell

  7. UEKI H, Tomita Y, Duong C, Mitake H, et al
    A CRISPR knockout mouse library for functional genomics in influenza research.
    Cell. 2026 Jun 16:S0092-8674(26)00591-X. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2026.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Epidemiol Infect

  8. NEMCOVA B, Goldstein IH, Sebastian J, Minin VM, et al
    Unjustified Poisson assumptions lead to overconfident estimates of the effective reproductive number.
    Epidemiol Infect. 2026;154:e79.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Epidemiol Community Health

  9. MOSCROP A, Dorling D, Cole T
    'British children are not shrinking', but child height is increasing for the wrong reasons: trends and inequalities in child measurement programme data for England, Scotland and Wales.
    J Epidemiol Community Health. 2026;80:534-540.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Gen Virol

  10. NABIL NM, Tawakol MM, Hagag N, Eid S, et al
    Molecular surveillance and predictive risk modelling of avian influenza virus in wild birds in Egypt.
    J Gen Virol. 2026;107:002278.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Infect

  11. LU L, Long Z, Chen F, Li Z, et al
    Global Disability-Adjusted Life Years Burden of Lower Respiratory Infections Caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, 1990-2021: A Systematic Analysis of the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021.
    J Infect. 2026 May 25:106768. doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2026.106768.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Infect Dis

  12. NURMI V, Hedman L, Vapalahti K, Hepojoki J, et al
    Anti-spike IgG Avidity Enhances Neutralization of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2: A Prospective Study of Primary Infections and Immunizations.
    J Infect Dis. 2026;233:e1374-e1385.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  13. CASERTA MT, Mariani TJ, Walsh EE, Gill SR, et al
    Nasal Biomarkers of Acute Illness Severity and Predictors of Recurrent Wheeze in Infants Infected With Respiratory Syncytial Virus.
    J Infect Dis. 2026;233:1027-1035.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  14. LIN DY, Mischell MA, Zhang X, Mollan KR, et al
    Incidence and Severity of Postacute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 Infection in the Omicron Era: A Prospective Cohort Study.
    J Infect Dis. 2026;233:1063-1068.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    J Virol

  15. LV C, Wang S, Song M, Wu J, et al
    The nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase inhibitor FK866 restricts influenza A virus replication by perturbing viral polymerase activity.
    J Virol. 2026 Jun 15:e0059126. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00591.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  16. NGUYEN X-D, Le BT, Bleich J, Espada C, et al
    Environmental temperature and relative humidity shape post-emission aerosol fate and airborne influenza transmission.
    J Virol. 2026 Jun 15:e0063426. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00634.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  17. HUI X, Tian X, Xue C, Ding S, et al
    KCMF1-mediated influenza A virus PB1 ubiquitination at K653 regulates viral replication.
    J Virol. 2026 Jun 15:e0048126. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00481.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Lancet

  18. ABUBAKAR I, Tellez D, Aldridge RW, Altare C, et al
    The UCL-Lancet Commission on Migration and Health: review of the state of progress.
    Lancet. 2026;407:2554-2576.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    PLoS Comput Biol

  19. MCKINLEY TJ, Williamson DB, Xiong X, Salter JM, et al
    On real-time calibrated prediction for complex model-based decision support in pandemics: Part 2.
    PLoS Comput Biol. 2026;22:e1014299.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  20. SHEFFIELD T, Bruneau RC, Won S, Sale KL, et al
    Combining machine learning and iterative experiments to keep pace with emerging viral variants of concern.
    PLoS Comput Biol. 2026;22:e1014394.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    PLoS One

  21. HIRABAYASHI K, Lorman V, Wuller S, Aragon LV, et al
    Evaluation of steroids for acute COVID in the prevention of long COVID in children: An EHR and pediatric cohort study from the RECOVER Initiative.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0350888.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  22. ALENAZI S, Mohanty J, Srinivasan M, Samontaray DP, et al
    "The impact of COVID-19 on employee productivity and the future of remote work".
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351968.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  23. HEUDORF U, Kowall B
    All?cause excess mortality in Germany peaked during the late?2022 influenza period, exceeding peaks during SARS?CoV?2 waves (2020-2023).
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0335982.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  24. KIM SJ, Kim J
    Symptom profiles and health-related quality of life in Korean adults with post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC): A latent profile analysis.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351506.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  25. HOLDSWORTH L, Jackson M, Piggin L, Kambulandu M, et al
    The experiences of doctors in Lesotho during the COVID-19 pandemic: A qualitative study.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0350935.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  26. HELMSDAL G, Kristiansen MF, Gaard EK, Eysturoy BJ, et al
    Persistent symptoms, cognitive impairment, and clinical predictors of long COVID one year after Omicron infection: A clinical case-control study from the Faroe Islands.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351564.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  27. KEHL-FLOBERG K, Freisberg E, Pop-Vicas A, Gangnon R, et al
    Long COVID risk by pre-infection symptoms and functional status: A retrospective cohort study of data from the All of Us Research Program.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0330793.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  28. BHAN PC, Schroeder M, Turchet D, Wen J, et al
    The time sensitivity of aspirational interventions: Evidence from a role-modeling RCT.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0350832.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  29. WHITE DL, NonoDjotsa ABS, Ahmed ST, Boyle SH, et al
    Association between deployment and Gulf War Illness and adverse COVID outcomes in a nationwide cohort of 1990-1991 Gulf Era war veterans in the VA's Million Veteran Program.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0348594.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  30. REID-WESTOBY C, Duku E, Gaskin A, Janus M, et al
    Chronic absenteeism in Canadian kindergarten classes, pre- and post-COVID-19, and its association with concurrent developmental vulnerability.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0345192.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  31. YANG SD, Qi F, Colwill K, Gingras AC, et al
    SARS-CoV-2 infection in female sex workers from Nairobi, Kenya early in the COVID-19 pandemic: Seroincidence and behavioural associations.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0327692.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  32. GEBRETEKLE GB, Lan M, Xi M, Ximenes R, et al
    Evaluating respiratory syncytial virus immunization strategies for infants in Canada: A cost-utility analysis.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351183.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  33. NISSLEY-TSIOPINIS J, Fleming PF, Chan W, Langberg JM, et al
    Cluster-randomized trial of Homework, Organization, and Planning Skills program compared to treatment as usual/waitlist for youth ages 11-14: Study protocol for conceptual replication.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0343894.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  34. EL-ATFY ES, Gadallah AM, Alsahangiti AM, Balogun OS, et al
    Laplace Transform-Based Nonparametric Test of Exponentiality against DMRL class with preservation under the Homogeneous Poisson Shock Model and applications in survival analysis and reliability.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0349216.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  35. FATIMA Z, Surette MD, Marttala S, Leto D, et al
    Microbiome analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) specimens from immunocompromised patients with pneumonia compared to those from healthy volunteers.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351562.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  36. TRAIN A, Vemuri KK, Coderre-Ball A, Silva-Valencia J, et al
    Prescription patterns of inhaler medications from 2017 to 2023: A retrospective study using Ontario administrative healthcare data.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0348119.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  37. VASUDEV C, Mishra S, Rathi A, Fledderjohann J, et al
    Diverse coping strategies for food insecurity: A qualitative study of economically precarious households in India in the context of COVID-19.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0350020.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  38. KHAM-KJING N, Kawila R, Tariyo P, Puapun K, et al
    Etiology of severe acute respiratory infections among adults in northern Thailand using multiplex PCR: A post-COVID-19 surveillance study (2023-2024).
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0350198.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  39. GODBOLE N, Choi S, Shim K, Liu Y, et al
    A study protocol for mixed-methods evaluation of the structure, design, and availability of medical student wellbeing programs.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351759.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  40. ROHAN H, Bochner AF, Brown L, Ortiz EM, et al
    COVID-19 alert level systems-Lessons learnt for future public health emergencies: A qualitative study.
    PLoS One. 2026;21:e0351209.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

  41. LEVITT M, Marten B, Oren G, Ioannidis JPA, et al
    Reclassification and weighting of multiple causes of death: US death certificates 2003-2023.
    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2026;123:e2604493123.
    PubMed         Abstract available


    Vaccine

  42. MALHOTRA G, Bilguche A, Eades O, Loftus MJ, et al
    Coverage and missed opportunities for routine vaccination in adult travellers: a single-centre observational study.
    Vaccine. 2026;86:128735.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  43. KATANA EB, Kiiza D, Odongpiny EAL, Simbwa BN, et al
    Willingness to receive Ebola vaccines among pregnant and lactating women in Kampala, Uganda: insights from a post-outbreak cross-sectional study.
    Vaccine. 2026;86:128737.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  44. GIANNINI F, Hogan AB, Blyth CC, Glass K, et al
    Modelling the impact of long-acting monoclonal antibody, maternal vaccine and hybrid programs of RSV immunisation in temperate Western Australia.
    Vaccine. 2026;86:128731.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  45. DVORKIN J, Pico M, Guinazu G, Crespi MS, et al
    Residual burden of severe RSV disease in infants during the first season of maternal RSVpreF immunization in Argentina: A hospital-based, multicentre, retrospective cohort study.
    Vaccine. 2026;87:128773.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  46. QI X, Smolders C
    From COVAX deliveries to vaccination uptake in LMICs: a monthly panel analysis.
    Vaccine. 2026;86:128763.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  47. EIDEN AL, Zheng Y, Wang D, Frew PM, et al
    Changes in attitudes and beliefs about childhood vaccination among parents in the United States: A repeat cross-sectional survey before and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Vaccine. 2026;87:128760.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  48. DELLA CIOPPA G, Sahai N, Dodeur V, Dutton JL, et al
    Safety, immunogenicity, and dose ranging of a bivalent respiratory syncytial virus and human metapneumovirus glycoprotein F-molecular clamp vaccine candidate in older adults: 1-month interim analysis of an ongoing randomised, observer-blind, placebo-
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    PubMed         Abstract available

  49. MOROS A, Deulofeu M, Ribo M, Bosch-Rue E, et al
    Multiple monovalent COVID-19 PHH-1V vaccine adaptations elicit homologous and cross-neutralizing antibody responses in mice.
    Vaccine. 2026;87:128781.
    PubMed         Abstract available

  50. SPILA-ALEGIANI S, Massari M, Cutillo M, Menniti-Ippolito F, et al
    Safety of influenza vaccine during the vaccination campaign 2021/2022 in Italy: a self-controlled case series study.
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  51. BUSH C, Desai S, Wang H, Hsu WC, et al
    Incidence of outcomes relevant to vaccine safety monitoring in the general population, after influenza vaccination, and after respiratory infections: a descriptive analysis of four US claims databases, 2022-2023.
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    Australian adults' views on influenza vaccination: Implications for communication and service quality from a qualitative study.
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    Willingness to pay for influenza vaccination among the elderly in Vietnam: A triple-bounded dichotomous choice analysis of economic and behavioral determinants.
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    PubMed         Abstract available


    Virus Res

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    Occurrence of Myocarditis in Patients Immunized with Different Types of COVID-19 Vaccines: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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    Mental health strain due to COVID-19: Psychological distress and somatic symptoms among health care workers and the general population in Kashmir, India.
    Virus Res. 2026;369:199753.
    PubMed         Abstract available

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    Antiviral activity of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug indomethacin against respiratory syncytial virus.
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    PubMed         Abstract available

Friday, June 19, 2026

#Genomic #epidemiology of two #travel-associated #pediatric #measles viruses within the B3 Lineage

 


Highlights

    • The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) detected a B3 MeV case in 2023 and in 2025.

    • Whole-genome amplification of the two CHOP B3 MeV isolates was performed.

    • The CHOP genomes were assessed with a global dataset of all 168 National Center for Biotechnology Information B3 MeV near-full length genomes from 2005-2025.

    • The CHOP isolates form a clade with 39 other isolates from four countries, 36 of which cluster with a 15 single nucleotide polymorphism cutoff.

    • The CHOP clade diverged in 2019, contains the most recently emerged B3 nodes, and shares a private mutation in the phosphoprotein at a codon undergoing positive selection.


Abstract

Background

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) identified a MeV case in late 2023 and also early 2025, both of which were associated with international travel. Of the 24 MeV genotypes, the B3 and D8 lineages have been the most prevalent globally since 2021. Initial genotyping indicated that the two CHOP isolates belong to the B3 lineage.

Objectives

To inform MeV molecular surveillance, we conducted a genomic epidemiology analysis to situate the CHOP strains within the global genetic landscape of past and present MeV B3 cases.

Study design

We performed whole-genome amplification, genome assembly, and phylogenomics of our two MeV cases. These strains were then analyzed alongside all 168 National Center for Biotechnology Information near-full length MeV B3 genomes using population and evolutionary genetic approaches. This dataset includes strains isolated from 13 countries between 2005 and 2025.

Results

The two CHOP strains form a monophyletic group with 39 other isolates from four countries; 36 clade members form a discrete network connected by a 15 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) cutoff. The CHOP clade shares a Q45H phosphoprotein mutation at a codon undergoing diversifying selection, as with a H593R hemagglutinin mutation carried by the 2025 CHOP strain. The CHOP clade likely diverged in 2019 and has a median root-to-tip distance of 0.020 compared to 0.017 for the other B3 strains, consistent with this clade encompassing the most recently divergent nodes.

Conclusions

Our work places the CHOP MeV cases within a diversifying and emergent global clade of the dominating B3 lineage that is a future risk due to ongoing B3 MeV transmission.

Source: 



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Beyond the cruise #ship: #Andes #hantavirus and the neglected #onehealth dimensions of global #outbreak #preparedness

 


{Summary}

The ongoing multi-country outbreak of Andes hantavirus linked to an expedition cruise travel has drawn global public health attention. The outbreak was reported to the World Health Organization on 02 May 2026 after a cluster of severe respiratory illness occurred among passengers and crew aboard the MV Hondius, which travelled across remote regions of the South Atlantic following departure from Ushuaia, Argentina. As of 18 May 2026, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) reported 12 cases, including nine confirmed, two probable, and one inconclusive case, as well as three deaths linked to the outbreak. While response efforts have appropriately focused on case detection, isolation, contact monitoring, and clinical management, the event highlights broader gaps in how emerging zoonotic threats are managed globally. Rather than viewing this solely as a cruise-associated outbreak, it should also be understood as a One Health warning signal emerging at the intersection of rodent ecology, environmental and climatic change, expedition tourism, and global human mobility.

(...)

Potent In Vitro #Antiviral Activity of 4'-Fluorouridine Against Diverse #Orthohantaviruses including #Andes Virus

 


Highlights:

    • 4′-fluorouridine exhibits broad-spectrum activity against 16 orthohantaviruses.

    • The compound inhibits hantavirus replication by targeting the viral polymerase.

    • Efficacy is maintained in human endothelial and airway epithelial cells.


Abstract

Hantaviruses are emerging pathogens responsible for severe and often fatal diseases, including hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS), for which no FDA-approved antivirals currently exist. Using a Seoul virus minigenome system, we first confirmed that the ribonucleoside analog 4’-fluorouridine (EIDD-2749) effectively targets the hantavirus polymerase complex, inhibiting viral RNA transcription and replication. We subsequently evaluated its antiviral activity against a comprehensive panel of 16 hantaviruses representing both Old and New World lineages including both the Chilean and Argentinian strains of Andes virus. 4’-fluorouridine demonstrated potent, dose-dependent inhibition across all viruses tested, with EC50 values uniformly in the low- to sub-micromolar range. Collectively, these findings establish 4’-fluorouridine as a highly potent, pan-hantavirus inhibitor and a promising candidate for further preclinical development.

Source: 


Link: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0166354226001269?via%3Dihub

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#Ebola #outbreak caused by #Bundibugyo virus: challenges and priorities for #epidemic preparedness and response

 


{Summary}

Since WHO declared the ongoing outbreak of Ebola virus disease caused by Bundibugyo virus (species Orthoebolavirus bundibugyoense; BDBV) in DR Congo and Uganda a public health emergency of international concern and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) declared a public health emergency of continental security, the outbreak has continued to evolve rapidly. As of June 3, 2026, 344 laboratory-confirmed cases and 60 deaths had been reported in DR Congo, while Uganda had reported 15 confirmed cases and one death; cross-border transmission has prompted heightened preparedness and response measures across the region.1–3 The outbreak poses a substantial public health threat because diagnosis is often delayed by limited access to suitable point-of-care assays, and no licensed vaccine or approved virus-specific therapeutic currently exists for BDBV. Barriers to controlling the BDBV outbreak and priority response actions are summarised in the table.

(...)

Source: 


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Single-dose #mRNA #vaccines against #Andes #hantavirus

 


{Summary}

The May, 2026, Andes virus outbreak on the Dutch cruise ship (MV Hondius) that departed from Argentina, where the lethal virus was first described, represents a transmission context unprecedented in the known epidemiology of the virus. The Andes virus is the only member of the Hantaviridae family capable of efficient person-to-person spread through close contact with respiratory secretions. The epidemic potential of the virus was demonstrated during the 2018–19 EpuyĂ©n outbreak in Argentina, where four waves of infection from a social gathering resulted in 34 confirmed cases and 11 deaths. Despite passengers on board MV Hondius having now returned to their home countries, there are currently 13 reported cases with three deaths. The dispersal of nearly 150 passengers and high-risk contacts across 23 countries, monitored under varying quarantine protocols, and a 42-day virus incubation window, presents a complicated and critical vulnerability for public health agencies. Contact tracing is ongoing as ambiguity surrounds secondary transmission cases before containment measures were established. There are no vaccines or preventive treatments currently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration or the European Medicines Agency. The travel-related outbreak and potential for sequential transmission events underscore the urgency for vaccine development.

(...)

Source: 


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Mechanistic and #antigenic boundaries of #Henipavirus and Parahenipavirus #glycoproteins

 


Abstract

Henipaviruses, in the Paramyxoviridae family, includes the highly virulent Nipah virus that causes reoccurring outbreaks of deadly disease. Recent discoveries of Henipavirus-like species, including the zoonotic Langya virus, have revealed much higher antigenic diversity than currently characterized and prompted the reorganization of these viruses into the Henipavirus and Parahenipavirus genera. Here, to explore the limits of structural and antigenic variation in both genera, collectively referred to as HNVs, we construct an expanded, diverse panel of HNV fusion and attachment glycoproteins from non-redundant HNV strains that better reflect global HNV diversity. We express and purify the fusion protein ectodomains and the attachment protein head domains and study their biochemical and biophysical properties. We perform immunization experiments in mice, eliciting antibodies reactive to multiple HNV fusion proteins. Cryo-electron microscopy structures elucidate molecular determinants of differential pre-fusion state stability and higher order contacts. A crystal structure of the Gamak virus attachment head domain reveals an additional domain appended to the conserved 6-bladed, β-propeller fold. Taken together, these studies expand the known structural and antigenic limits of the HNVs, reveal cross-reactive epitopes within both genera and provide foundational data for the development of broadly reactive countermeasures.

Source: 


Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-74212-8

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Thursday, June 18, 2026

The #risk of #global #Ebola virus #spread is low: #epidemiology of Ebola disease cases outside Africa, 1976 to May 2026

 


Abstract

Following the Bundibugyo virus disease outbreak reported in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in May 2026, we reviewed all known Ebola disease cases outside Africa and found that intercontinental transmission risk remains low. We identified 28 confirmed epidemic-linked cases outside Africa; only four involved travellers with latent infection whose symptoms were detected after border screening. Excluding medically evacuated cases, the crude overall risk since 2000 was 0.17 Ebola disease cases outside Africa per 1,000 reported cases in Africa.

Source: 


Link: https://www.eurosurveillance.org/content/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2026.31.24.2600508?emailalert=true#abstract_content

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#Andes virus #outbreak linked to expedition cruise #ship travel, multi-country #investigation and response, April to June 2026



Abstract

As at 18 June 2026, 13 cases (12 confirmed and one probable) of Andes orthohantavirus have been reported (case–fatality: 23%), linked to the Dutch-flagged expedition cruise ship MV Hondius. The event involved individuals from 23 nationalities and required medical evacuation, repatriation, coordinated international contact tracing, isolation, quarantine and clinical and laboratory testing follow-up. To date, all cases have been passengers (10/121; 8%) or crew members (3/61; 5%). Ongoing monitoring and investigations aim to clarify the source of the outbreak, identify risk factors and prevent further spread.

Source: 


Link: https://www.eurosurveillance.org/content/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2026.31.24.2600477?emailalert=true#abstract_content

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#Biodiversity and emerging infectious #threats: the microbial dark matter of Southwest #China

 


Abstract

Southwest China is a global biodiversity hotspot, and its complex and diverse ecosystems harbor vast amounts of “microbial dark matter.” This paper systematically examines the distribution characteristics of microbial dark matter in hosts such as arthropods, mammals, and birds, as well as in environments including soil, hot springs, and high-altitude lakes, with a particular focus on the cross-species transmissibility and pathogenic potential of emerging pathogens. Research indicates that new microbial species in the Southwest exhibit significant geographic concentration and host specificity: Yunnan Province is a core hotspot, while the Tibet Autonomous Region contributes a wealth of microbial resources due to its extreme environments, with arthropods and mammals accounting for the highest proportion of novel species. Regarding public health risks, eight novel pathogens with evidence of human infection have been identified, spanning the three major groups of viruses, bacteria, and parasites. The cross-species transmission potential of some pathogens (such as DPRV rhabdovirus, PPV arenaviridae, Luxi hantavirus, Banna virus and a novel Babesia species) has been confirmed through serological surveys or molecular testing. Deepening the exploration of microbial dark matter and risk early warning in this region will provide critical scientific support for public health safety monitoring.

Source: 


Link: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2026.1846062/full

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#Nipah Virus Shedding in #Urine from Fruit #Bats, #SriLanka, 2018–2019

 


Abstract

Nipah virus causes outbreaks in humans with high case-fatality rates. In this study, we confirmed the presence of Nipah virus in Sri Lanka in Pteropus medius fruit bats, one of the known natural reservoir species. Sequences we generated were genetically related to Nipah virus strains from outbreaks in southern India.

Source: 


Link: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/32/7/25-1567_article

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#Virus-host #interactions on #volcanic #ash from Mount #Etna

 


Abstract

Volcanic ash represents an extreme and dynamic habitat, yet it hosts diverse microbial communities with largely unexplored viral diversity. This study investigated bacterial and viral populations in volcanic ash from Mount Etna (Italy) collected during the eruption, focusing on microbial novelty, activity, and virus-host interactions. Taxonomic profiling revealed that Pseudomonas and Telluria were the dominant bacterial genera, both frequently detected in airborne environments. In contrast, enrichment cultures with volcanic ash were dominated by spore-forming members of the phylum Bacillota, highlighting their resilience under harsh conditions. Metagenomic analysis recovered 19 high-quality metagenome-assembled genomes, including four previously undescribed bacterial species. Replication rate estimates showed that certain taxa were metabolically active, particularly at one sampling site. The presence of Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) systems with spacers matching viral sequences suggested viral predation pressure on volcanic ash. A total of 1139 viral operational taxonomic units (vOTUs) were identified, of only around half (660 vOTUs) showed similarities to known phages, underscoring the presence of novel viruses. Shared vOTUs across sites revealed the presence of both a core virome and site-specific viral populations. Virus-host predictions indicated frequent interactions with hosts from multiple Gammaproteobacterial genera. Additionally, a 336 kb jumbo phage genome exhibited extensive metabolic capabilities and genetic autonomy. Experimental work identified a unique lytic Bacillus-infecting phage (″Phoenix″) with limited propagation capacity. Furthermore, prophage induction experiments revealed active, morphologically diverse temperate phages across multiple bacterial host strains. Overall, these findings highlight volcanic ash as a reservoir of microbial and viral diversity, shaped by environmental extremes and dynamic ecological interactions.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.


Funder Information Declared

Swedish Research Council, https://ror.org/03zttf063, 2023-03310_VR, 2022-06725

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.17.732739v1?rss=1

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Lower limit of #detection of commercial respiratory virus RT – #PCR panels for #bovine #influenza #H5N1

 


Abstract

Objectives

The adaptation of clade 2.3.4.4b influenza A(H5N1) to dozens of mammalian species, including dairy cattle, raises concerns about potential spillover into humans. If the virus develops human-to-human transmissibility, sensitive diagnostics will be critical to containment efforts. We sought to determine the lower limit of detection of commercial influenza A tests for the circulating bovine-adapted strain of H5N1.

Methods

We determined the 95% lower limit of detection (LLOD) of 4 commercial respiratory virus panels for detecting inactivated bovine H5N1 (A/bovine/Ohio/B24OSU-439/2024). Two of the tested panels provide seasonal influenza A subtyping, the BioFire Respiratory Panel 2.1 (BioFire Diagnostics/BioMĂ©rieux) and the cobas eplex respiratory pathogen panel 2 (Roche Diagnostics), while 2 panels provide pan–influenza A detection, the Xpert Xpress CoV-2/Flu/RSV plus (Cepheid), and the Panther Fusion SARS-CoV-2/Flu A/B/RSV Assay (Hologic, Inc). Serial dilutions of H5 RNA (400-25 copies/mL) were prepared in respiratory virus–negative nasopharyngeal swab matrix, and 20 replicates were tested at each concentration. The 95% LLOD for each test was calculated using probit regression.

Results

All 4 tests detected H5 with 95% LLODs below 1000 H5 RNA copies/mL. Xpert demonstrated the highest analytical sensitivity (50 copies/mL; 95% CI, 39-160), followed by BioFire (297 copies/mL; 95% CI, 196-3955), Panther Fusion (531 copies/mL; 95% CI, 421-792), and eplex (883 copies/mL; 95% CI, 588-2741).

Conclusions

Existing commercial respiratory virus panels can effectively detect bovine H5N1. These platforms could support screening in the event of an H5N1 outbreak, followed by confirmation with specific H5 subtyping, as needed.

Source: 


Link: https://academic.oup.com/ajcp/article-abstract/165/6/aqag067/8709618?redirectedFrom=fulltext

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Mass #mortality of southern elephant #seals during multi-species #outbreak of HPAI #H5N1 on sub - #Antarctic Heard Island

 


Abstract

High pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) has spread across the sub-Antarctic, causing significant wildlife impacts. We report its first detection in an Australian external territory, Heard Island and McDonald Islands, which supports over one million breeding seabirds and seals. Drone and ground surveys (October 2025, January 2026), combined with viral genome analysis, confirmed infection with Influenza A H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b at Heard Island. Drone surveys revealed mass mortality in southern elephant seals, with 8,573 pups (62%) recorded dead across Heard Island by the final surveys. Mortality increased at an average rate of 5.6% per day in a subset of harems, and the highest observed mortality in a harem was 97%. Based on the average (76%) mortality in the final surveys, total estimated pup mortality at Heard Island was 13,359 (from a total population of 17,364 pups), though this may be an underestimate as mortality was ongoing at this time. HPAI was detected in six of nine species tested and, we suspect, led to elevated mortality in king and gentoo penguins. Phylogenetic analysis indicates the virus was introduced from Crozet Islands, with an estimated arrival around August 2025. These data show the continued easterly spread of HPAI around the sub-Antarctic, with severe but heterogeneous impacts across taxa. Our results demonstrate the value of drones for large scale monitoring, underscoring the need for continued and enhanced HPAI surveillance across the Southern Ocean.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.16.732752v1

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Wednesday, June 17, 2026

The Winners Take It All? #Global Evolutionary #Success of #H5Nx #Reassortants in the 2020–2024 #Panzootic

 


Abstract

Avian influenza viruses undergo frequent genetic reassortment, which can coincide with phenotypic changes in transmission, pathogenicity, and host species niche. Since 2020, clade 2.3.4.4b H5 high pathogenicity avian influenza viruses (HPAIVs) have driven a global panzootic, causing mass mortality in wild birds, poultry, and, for the first time, repeated spillover infections in a variety of mammalian species. This worldwide resurgence of H5 HPAIV has coincided with a dramatic increase in the number of circulating reassortant strains; however, the scale, impact and drivers of these reassortants remain unclear. Here, we combined statistical and phylodynamic modelling to reconstruct the global evolutionary dynamics of H5Nx viruses across four epizootic seasons (2020-2024). We identified 209 genetically distinct reassortants, stratified into three transmission categories based on their phylogenetic and epidemiological profiles. Accounting for sampling depth and HPAIV incidence, we estimated that reassortants emerged most frequently from Asia, but `major' reassortants associated with increased host range, inter-seasonal persistence, and long-range dissemination, more frequently emerged from Europe. Altogether, reassortant emergence followed an episodic pattern in which most reassortants were transient, but 2% seeded large clusters of secondary reassortants soon after their own emergence. Statistical modelling revealed that reassortant success was strongly shaped by ecological factors, including sustained circulation in specific wild bird orders and detection across a wider range of host niches. Collectively, our findings uncover global reassortment dynamics in H5 HPAIVs and identify key virological and ecological drivers underpinning the emergence and spread of successful reassortants. These insights support the importance of enhanced surveillance to track evolution of H5 HPAIV and identify traits relevant for consideration in pandemic risk assessment.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.


Funder Information Declared

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, BB/V011286/1, BB/X006204/1, BB/X006166/1, BB/Y007271/1, BB/Y007298/1

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council - Institute Strategic Grants, BBS/E/RL/230002C, BBS/E/RL/230002D

Medical Research Council, MR/Y015045/1, MR/Y03368X/1

National Natural Science Foundation of China, https://ror.org/01h0zpd94, 32061123001, 32425053, 32200416

National Key Research and Development Program of China, 2023YFC2307500, 2024YFE0106000

European Union, 727922, 874850, 101094685, 101084171, 874735

Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique, F.4515.22

Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek — Vlaanderen, G098321N

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.07.19.665680v2

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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

#Pathogens #analysis and modeling of #mortality #risk in #sepsis patients with #COVID19 and without COVID-19

 


Abstract

This study compared isolate-level pathogen profiles, antimicrobial susceptibility, clinical characteristics, and mortality predictors between sepsis patients with and without coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and developed cohort-specific nomograms for in-hospital mortality. This retrospective intensive care unit (ICU) cohort included 608 adults with sepsis: 158 in group COVID-19 and 450 in group non–COVID-19. All patients were assessed for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) detection status. Patient-level comparisons and mortality modeling used the full cohort, whereas microbiological analyses were restricted to 235 eligible bacterial or fungal isolates from baseline cultures after exclusion of colonizers, contaminants, clinically non-causative organisms, and duplicates. Candidate predictors were selected by least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) regression and entered into multivariable logistic regression; coefficients were pooled using Rubin’s rules when multiple imputation was performed. External validation used MIMIC-IV with fixed internal coefficients. Gram-negative organisms predominated, mainly Acinetobacter baumannii and Klebsiella pneumoniae, with substantial antimicrobial resistance. The COVID-19 and non–COVID-19 models showed apparent internal area under the curve values of 0.938 and 0.871, conservative optimism-corrected values of 0.913 and 0.871, and external validation AUC values of 0.841 and 0.859, respectively. Cohort-specific nomograms may provide supplementary risk-stratification information in critically ill patients with sepsis.

Source: 

Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-026-58450-w

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#Antibodies to #influenza A virus #hemagglutinin and #neuraminidase limit egress and alter the physical properties of released virus particles

 


Abstract

Influenza A virus (IAV)-specific antibodies neutralize mature virions by inhibiting functional sites or, in some cases, by promoting virion aggregation. Many antibodies also act on infected cells to reduce virion yields, but the underlying mechanisms and effects on the physical properties and function of released virus particles remain incompletely characterized. Here we use flow virometry to acquire high-sensitivity yield and size measurements of virus particles released in the presence of antibodies. Combined with digital-droplet PCR and electron microscopy, this approach enables comprehensive characterization of antibody-induced changes in particle genome-content and morphology. We show that antibodies rapidly and dynamically alter released particle distributions, reducing yields and inducing the production of larger particles. Both effects result in part from aggregation induced by crosslinking of viral antigen on the infected-cell surface and inhibition of viral NA. However, yield reduction is not fully explained by aggregation, and a subset of induced larger particles are elongated virions. Finally, particles formed in the presence of HA stem-binding antibody, which does not inhibit attachment of mature virions, show reduced attachment in subsequent rounds of infection. Altogether, we uncover an unappreciated mechanism by which antibodies interfere with viral infection that occurs only during budding and release. Our work highlights the necessity of studying how the immune response shapes virus populations in the context of active infection processes.


Competing Interest Statement

T.I. is involved on a patent related to the flow virometry methodology: PCT/US2022/042125, status pending. The authors declare no other competing interests.


Funder Information Declared

Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), ZIAAI001385

G. Harold & Leila Y. Mathers Foundation, https://ror.org/02a7hjv13

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.15.729605v1

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Saturday, June 13, 2026

#Genomic #wastewater #surveillance of seasonal and #zoonotic #influenza A viruses in #California during the 2024-2025 flu season

 


Abstract

Wastewater genomic surveillance provides an opportunity to detect human and animal influenza A virus (IAV). We aimed to implement an IAV genomic surveillance framework agnostic to subtype, which enables recovery of IAV from multiple hosts and estimation of proportions across subtypes. We conducted IAV genomic surveillance in wastewater during the 2024-2025 flu season at multiple sites in California and compared these data with available human clinical IAV sequences and test positivity. We applied a custom whole-genome, multi-host IAV probe enrichment panel and adapted our custom expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm to deconvolute IAV mixtures in wastewater and infer subtype relative abundances. Absolute IAV concentrations were quantified using RT-PCR-based assays. H5N1 wastewater and clinical sequences were further characterized by constructing a whole-genome maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree. Finally, we performed variant analysis to examine amino acid substitutions detected in wastewater. Our IAV probe enrichment method and EM algorithm successfully enriched all eight segments of three circulating IAV subtypes and accurately estimated subclade relative abundances for mixed IAV samples. Seasonal human H1N1pdm09 and H3N2 were detected throughout the study period from both wastewater and clinical sequencing data, with H1N1 subclades 6B.1A.5a.2a.1 and 6B.1A.5a.2a co-circulating, and H3N2 dominated by subclade 3C.2a1b.2a.2a.3a.1. Wastewater surveillance consistently detected H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b across three monitored wastewater sites, while clinical H5N1 detections, from anywhere in CA, were sporadic and rare. Whole-genome phylogenetic analysis revealed that wastewater H5N1 sequences clustered with reference sequences associated with dairy cow and avian infections, while all human clinical H5N1 sequences clustered exclusively with reference sequences associated with dairy cow infections. Amino acid substitutions were identified across viral segments, and no mutations associated with mammalian adaptation were observed from wastewater samples.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Source: 


Link: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.10.26355323v1

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