Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ability To Fight Flu Depends On Which Virus Strain Dominated In Childhood: Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2020 09:04 PM

    VANCOUVER - Researchers at two Canadian universities say the first type of influenza virus people are exposed to in early childhood dictates their ability to fight the flu for the rest of their lives.

     

    They say results of a study suggest exposure to one of the two flu strains that circulates every year — H1N1 or H3N2 — imprints itself on a person's immunity and disproportionately affects their lifelong response to the flu.

     

    The researchers at McMaster University in Hamilton and the University of Montreal say their findings could allow public health officials to assess who might be at greater risk in any given year, based on their age and the type of viruses that were dominant when they were born.

     

    Their study is published this week in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases and based on data from the 2018-19 flu season, which was highly unusual because both strains of influenza A dominated at different times.

     

    Matthew Miller, a co-author on the study and an associate professor at the Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease and the McMaster Immunology Research Centre, said people's prior immunity to viruses like flu could impact their risk of becoming ill during subsequent epidemics and pandemics.

     

    “Understanding how their prior immunity either leaves them protected or susceptible is really important for helping us to identify the populations who are most at risk during seasonal epidemics and new outbreaks,” he said in a release.

     

    Researchers say a natural experiment occurred last winter in Canada when the dominant H1N1 strain was progressively replaced by H3N2, which accounted for 80 to 90 per cent of flu by March 2019, allowing them to observe the age-specific incidence of the illness in a season.

     

    "As H3N2 replaced H1N1, the drop in incidence for the 40 to 49 years' age group noted during the previous 2017-18 season reappeared, while the incidence for older individuals rose markedly with age," the study says.

     

    The same researchers showed in a study published last year that the elderly in Quebec had a relatively low number of cases of influenza during recent seasons dominated by H1N1, mostly likely because they'd gained protection from repeated early-life exposure to that subtype of viruses that circulated from 1918 to 1956.

     

    The H1N1 strain of influenza A was responsible for the Spanish flu pandemic in 1918, which killed millions of people worldwide. An H1N1 subtype caused the swine flu in 2009 but the connection between the two outbreaks is not clear. The so-called Asian flu of 1957 occurred when H2N2 was dominant, before H3N2 brought along a wave of sickness in 1968.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ride-Hailing Begins In Metro Vancouver As Uber, Lyft Launch Service

    Ride-Hailing Begins In Metro Vancouver As Uber, Lyft Launch Service
    Uber activated its app Friday morning, while Lyft held a news conference outlining is operational area covering downtown Vancouver, the international airport in Richmond and part of east Vancouver.

    Ride-Hailing Begins In Metro Vancouver As Uber, Lyft Launch Service

    UBER And LYFT Arrive: Surrey Mayor McCallum Is Concerned About City's Taxi Industry

    As Uber and Lyft arrive to Vancouver, Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum issued a deep concern about the approval of ride hailing companies in Metro Vancouver by the Passenger Transportation Board. He says the decision does not change his position on this issue.

    UBER And LYFT Arrive: Surrey Mayor McCallum Is Concerned About City's Taxi Industry

    Man In Hospital After Stabbing In Richmond

    Man In Hospital After Stabbing In Richmond
    Officers located a 34-year-old male suffering from stab wounds. He was transported to a local area hospital in stable condition with non-life-threatening injuries.

    Man In Hospital After Stabbing In Richmond

    45-Year-Old Tonya Hyer Of Vancouver Is Third Homicide Victim Of 2020

    45-Year-Old Tonya Hyer Of Vancouver Is Third Homicide Victim Of 2020
    No arrests have been made, however, investigators are asking for anyone who has information to come forward.

    45-Year-Old Tonya Hyer Of Vancouver Is Third Homicide Victim Of 2020

    23-Year-Old Indian Girl Stabbed In Toronto: Family Seeks Help From MEA Minister S Jaishankar

    A 23-year-old Indian student was stabbed by an unidentified man near York University's campus in Toronto, Canada, police said.

    23-Year-Old Indian Girl Stabbed In Toronto: Family Seeks Help From MEA Minister S Jaishankar

    'Extremely Concerning': Surrey RCMP Investigating Sexual Allegation Against Delta Police Officer

    The Surrey Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) are conducting an investigation into the actions of a Delta Police officer, at the request of the Delta Police Chief.    

    'Extremely Concerning': Surrey RCMP Investigating Sexual Allegation Against Delta Police Officer