Swine flu was first observed in 1918 (Koen, 1918) and coincided with the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic in humans. Influenza viruses were identified as the cause of febrile respiratory diseases in pigs as early as 1930. Outbreaks of swine flu were also reported in Europe between 1918 and 1959 (Lange et al. 2014). After these episodes, the virus was not detected for almost 20 years. In 1979, a new H1N1 virus emerged in the European pig population. All eight genes were closely related to avian H1N1 viruses, indicating a reassortment and transmission of avian viruses to pigs (Krumbholz et al. 2014). This "avian-like" A(H1N1) virus, referred to as the "Eurasian avian-like 1C lineage", replaced the classical swine influenza virus in Europe and continues to circulate in pigs today.
Since 1984, outbreaks of swine flu in Europe have also been frequently associated with H3N2 viruses antigenically related to human strains from the early to mid-1970s. In 1994, further reassortants between the avian swine influenza H1N1 virus and the human H3N2 influenza virus were discovered, leading to the establishment of human H1N2 viruses in European pigs (Brown et al. 1998). Triple reassortant swine H3N2 viruses that emerged in the USA in 1998 carried genes of seasonal human H3N2 viruses (HA, NA, PB1), classical swine H1N1 viruses (NP, M, NS) and North American avian influenza viruses (PA, PB2) (Karasin et al. 2000). The first isolation of a swine influenza virus from a human was in 1974. Transmission of swine influenza viruses to humans was suspected, but could only be confirmed after an outbreak of swine influenza in 1976 by antigen and gene analysis of H1N1 viruses isolated from pigs and a human contact.