David Bacsik
@dbacsik.bsky.social
57 followers 140 following 7 posts
Tracing viruses in Perú w/ Dr. Pablo Tsukayama @ UPCH and Dr. Alex Greninger @ UW Virology Before: Developing single-cell methods for influenza biology w/ @jbloomlab.bsky.social MD/PhD Student @ University of Washington
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dbacsik.bsky.social
7/ Clinicians: The H5 subtyping PCR is available to order now through UW Medicine: testguide.labmed.uw.edu/view/FLUH5
Influenza A H5 Subtyping by PCR
testguide.labmed.uw.edu
dbacsik.bsky.social
5/ The CDC recommends subtyping all hospitalized flu A+ cases. With H5N1 still circulating widely in birds & cattle, monitoring remains critical—especially for patients with close animal contact, who face the highest risk.
dbacsik.bsky.social
4/ This suggests that, in Seattle, the 2024-2025 flu season has been driven by seasonal strains, with no H5N1 detected among this cohort of patients with lab-confirmed influenza A infections.
dbacsik.bsky.social
3/ So far, none of the samples tested have been H5-positive. All sequenced samples contained seasonal H3N2 or H1N1 viruses.
dbacsik.bsky.social
2/ In Dr. Alex Greninger’s lab at UW Virology, we developed a clinical RT-qPCR assay for H5 subtyping. We used it to differentiate seasonal influenza A infections from subtype H5 infections during Seattle’s 2024-2025 influenza season.
dbacsik.bsky.social
1/ How has H5N1 affected this year’s flu season in Seattle? Despite ongoing outbreaks in birds & cattle nationally, we detected zero H5N1 cases in 675 influenza A-positive specimens tested at UW Medicine.
Reposted by David Bacsik
lhmoncla.bsky.social
I agree with Scott. This is important because:

1. This shows that cattle are susceptible to other H5N1 viruses, not just B3.13.
2. D1.1 viruses are currently transmitting really efficiently through wild birds in North America, and are very widespread.
...
scottehensley.bsky.social
This is big because:
1. This is evidence of a 2nd avian-->cattle H5N1 introduction.
2. The D1.1 genotype was found in the severe case in British Columbia and the deadly case in Louisiana. It is possible that this genotype has an easier time adapting to human cells.

www.statnews.com/2025/02/05/u...
USDA milk testing shows different strain of H5N1 bird flu in Nevada dairy herds
The USDA said four Nevada dairy herds were infected with an H5N1 bird flu strain that has circulated in wild birds, making prospects for containment in cows appear dim.
www.statnews.com