A surge in severe strep A infections has prompted health warnings. Here's what we know
Ukraine's interior minister and 15 other people have been killed in a helicopter crash outside Kyiv
For the latest flood and weather warnings, search on ABC Emergency
Keep up with all the action on day 3 of the Australian Open
Keep across all the live scores and results from the Australian Open at Melbourne Park
Australia and Pakistan are in Brisbane for the second ODI of the series
A surge in severe cases of group A streptococcal disease has prompted Australian health authorities to raise awareness of the potentially deadly illness.
"Strep A", as it is colloquially called, has been around for a very long time.
It mostly presents as a mild illness that many people recover from without ever seeing a doctor, infectious diseases consultant and Telethon Kids Institute executive director Jonathan Carapetis said.
However, a rise in the rarer, life-threatening version of the disease known as invasive strep A is causing concern.
So what is the illness, why is the invasive version so serious, and what could be behind the rise?
Strep A disease is caused by bacteria known as group A streptococcus.
It is a common infection that can cause sore throats, scarlet fever or impetigo, otherwise known as school sores.
In less common cases, it can become a serious illness requiring hospitalisation — invasive group A streptococcus, also known as invasive strep A or iGAS.
Indicators of the severe illness include fever, a fast heart rate, cold hands and feet or a mottled look to the skin, difficulty waking or increased lethargy or confusion.
Queensland doctors are on alert for cases of invasive group A streptococcus disease after several countries report a recent spike.
Symptoms to look out for in young children that may indicate severe illness include irritability, difficulty waking, high-pitched crying, refusal to eat/feed, fewer or no wet nappies or decreased urination, cold or mottled limbs, and difficulty breathing.
Young children and the elderly are most at risk of infection.
"People haven't been aware of it as perhaps they should be," Professor Carapetis said.
"It's just as severe as meningococcal."
People most at risk are those over 65 or under five, pregnant and post-partum women, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, intravenous drug users and immunocompromised people.
There were surges of the disease in the 90s and early 2000s, but the latest rise, Professor Carapetis said, was "very dramatic".
National data prior to 2022 is patchy, as invasive strep A only became a notifiable condition last year.
However, records kept by the federal health department show the number of cases rose sharply in 2022.
The trend looks to be continuing into 2023, with more cases reported so far this month than in all of January 2022.
The World Health Organization has also documented a rise in a number of countries around the world.
There are at least three hypotheses as to why strep A cases are surging, according to the University of Queensland's Mark Walker:
Despite the surge, health authorities say the overall risk of invasive strep A to the community remains low.
Professor Carapetis said invasive strep A had a high death rate.
"Usually between seven and 20 per cent of cases that get the nasty strep infection will end up dying," he said.
An alert issued last month by Victoria's hospital safety watchdog, Safer Care Victoria, said during 2022, 42 cases of invasive strep A infections were detected at the Royal Children's Hospital (RCH) and Monash Children's Hospital.
Two Victorian children died with the illness last year.
There will be, but it's not ready yet. Professor Carapetis is co-director of the Australian Strep A Vaccine Initiative (ASAVI), which is among other bodies globally working towards a vaccine.
"Within three years, we will have a vaccine actually in a trial in kids to see if we can prevent strep infection," he said.
"If it works, then, hopefully, [after a few years] we'll have the opportunity for all kids and potentially other high-risk groups to receive it. That would be the game changer.
"It's a bit like meningococcal disease — there’s lots of stuff we can do to treat strep A but the nasty one, it can just come out of the blue and you won’t know it and the only way we can be sure of preventing that will be to get a vaccine."
The hope is that in the near future, a vaccine against strep A will become part of the national vaccination schedule, just like the meningococcal vaccine.
The most important thing with invasive strep A is to get in "very, very early", Professor Carapetis said.
Most doctors will start by prescribing broad-spectrum antibiotics and then after a blood test confirms strep A, they will hone in on it with penicillin.
We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.
This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.
AEST = Australian Eastern Standard Time which is 10 hours ahead of GMT (Greenwich Mean Time)