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Langya, a new zoonotic virus, detected in China


 

FROM THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE

Between 2018 and August 2022, Chinese researchers identified 35 people infected with a new animal virus in eastern China. These cases were reported in The New England Journal of Medicine. When asked by Nature about this emerging virus that has until now flown under the radar, scientists said that they were not overly concerned because the virus doesn’t seem to spread easily between people nor is it fatal.

Researchers think that the virus is carried by shrews. It might have infected people directly or through an intermediate animal.

First identified in Langya

The authors describe 35 cases of infection with a virus called Langya henipavirus (LayV) since 2018. It is closely related to two other henipaviruses known to infect people – Hendra virus and Nipah virus. The virus was named Langya after the town in Shandong province in China where the first patient identified with the disease was from, explained coauthor Linfa Wang, PhD, a virologist at Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore.

Langya can cause respiratory symptoms such as fever, cough, and fatigue. Hendra virus and Nipah virus also cause respiratory infections and can be fatal, the article in Nature reports.

Hendra and Nipah

According to the World Health Organization, Nipah virus, which was discovered in 1999, is a new virus responsible for a zoonosis that causes the disease in animals and humans who have had contact with infected animals. Its name comes from the location where it was first identified in Malaysia. Patients may have asymptomatic infection or symptoms such as acute respiratory infection and severe encephalitis. The case fatality rate is between 40% and 75%.

Nipah virus is closely related to another recently discovered (1994) zoonotic virus called Hendra virus, which is named after the Australian city in which it first appeared. On that day in July 2016, 53 cases were identified involving 70 horses. These incidents remained confined to the northeastern coast of Australia.

Nipah virus and Hendra virus belong to the Paramyxoviridae family. “While the members of this group of viruses are only responsible for a few limited outbreaks, the ability of these viruses to infect a wide range of hosts and cause a disease leading to high fatalities in humans has made them a public health concern,” stated the WHO.

Related to measles

The research team identified LayV while monitoring patients at three hospitals in the eastern Chinese provinces of Shandong and Henan between April 2018 and August 2021. Throughout the study period, the researchers found 35 people infected with LayV, mostly farmers, with symptoms ranging from a cough to severe pneumonia. Participants were recruited into the study if they had a fever. The team sequenced the LayV genome from a throat swab taken from the first patient identified with the disease, a 53-year-old woman.

The LayV genome showed that the virus is most closely related to Mojiang henipavirus, which was first isolated in rats in an abandoned mine in the southern Chinese province of Yunnan in 2012. Henipaviruses belong to the Paramyxoviridae family of viruses, which includes measles, mumps, and many respiratory viruses that infect humans. Several other henipaviruses have been discovered in bats, rats, and shrews from Australia to South Korea and China, but only Hendra, Nipah, and now LayV are known to infect people, according to Nature.

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