Title: Viral Agents with Bioterrorism Potential
1Viral Agents with Bioterrorism Potential
2Acknowledgements
- South Carolina Area Health Education Consortium
(AHEC) - Funded by the Health Resources and Services
Administration. - Grant number 1T01HP01418-01-00
- P.I. David Garr, MD, Executive Director AHEC
- BT Project Director Beth Kennedy, Associate
Program Director AHEC - Core Team
- BT Co-director Ralph Shealy, MD
- BT Project Manager Deborah Stier Carson, PharmD
- BT CME Director William Simpson, MD
- IT Coordinator Liz Riccardone, MHS
- Web Master Mary Mauldin, PhD
- P.R Coordinator Nicole Brundage, MHA
- Evaluation Specialist Yvonne Michel, PhD
- Financial Director Donald Tyner, MBA
3Acknowledgements
This presentation, and the accompanying
instructors manual (current as of 7/02), were
prepared by Jennifer Brennan Braden, MD, MPH, at
the Northwest Center for Public Health Practice
in Seattle, WA, and Jeff Duchin, MD with Public
Health Seattle King County and the Division
of Allergy Infectious Diseases, University of
WA, for the purpose of educating primary care
clinicians in relevant aspects of bioterrorism
preparedness and response. Instructors are
encouraged to freely use all or portions of the
material for its intended purpose. The
following people and organizations provided
information and/or support in the development of
this curriculum. A complete list of resources
can be found in the accompanying instructors
guide.
Jane Koehler, DVM, MPH Communicable Disease
Control, Epidemiology and Immunization section,
Public Health - Seattle King County Ed
Walker, MD University of WA Department of
Psychiatry
Patrick OCarroll, MD, MPH The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention Project
Coordinator Judith Yarrow Health Policy
Analysis, University of WA Design and Editing
4Viral Diseases of BT Potential Objectives
- List the agents most likely to be used in a
biological weapons attack and the most likely
mode of dissemination - Outline the clinical presentation(s) of the Viral
Category A agents and features that may
distinguish them from more common diseases - Outline the diagnosis, treatment recommendations,
infection control, and preventive therapy for
management of infection with or exposure to Viral
Category A agents.
5Biological Agents of Highest ConcernCategory A
Agents
- Easily disseminated, infectious via aerosol
- Susceptible civilian populations
- Cause high morbidity and mortality
- Person-to-person transmission
- Unfamiliar to physicians difficult to
diagnose/treat - Cause panic and social disruption
- Previous development for BW
6Viral Agents of Highest Concern Category A Agents
- Variola major (Smallpox)
- Filoviruses Arenaviruses (Viral hemorrhagic
fevers) - Report ANY suspected illness due to these agents
to Public Health immediately.
7Viral Agents of 2nd Highest ConcernCategory B
Agents
- Alphaviruses (Venezuelan, Western and Eastern
encephalomyelitis viruses)
8Viral Agents of 3rd Highest ConcernCategory C
Agents
- Emerging pathogens that could be engineered for
mass dissemination in the future - Nipah virus
- Hantaviruses
- Tick-borne hemorrhagic fever viruses
- Tick-borne encephalitis viruses
- Yellow fever
9Smallpox Overview
- Two strains variola major and variola minor
- Variola minor milder disease with case fatality
typically 1 or less - Variola major more severe disease with average
30 mortality in unvaccinated - Person-to-person transmission
10Smallpox Overview
- Killed approximately 300,000,000 persons in 20th
century - Routine smallpox vaccination in the U.S. stopped
in 1972 - WHO declared smallpox eradicated in 1980
- Vaccine has significant adverse effects
- No effective treatment
11Smallpox Overview
- Person-to-person transmission
- Average 30 mortality from variola major in
unvaccinated - A single case is considered a global public
health emergency
12SmallpoxCase Definition
- Clinical case definition
- An illness with acute onset of fever ?101?F
followed by a rash characterized by vesicles or
firm pustules in the same stage of development
without other apparent cause - Laboratory criteria for confirmation (Level C/D
lab) - Isolation of smallpox virus from a clinical
specimen, OR - Identification of variola in a clinical specimen
by PCR or electron microscopy
initial confirmation of outbreak requires
testing in level D lab (I.e., CDC)
13SmallpoxCase Classification
- Confirmed laboratory confirmed
- Probable meets clinical case definition has an
epi link to another confirmed or probable case - Suspected
- Meets clinical case definition but is not
laboratory-confirmed and does not have an epi
link OR - Atypical presentation not lab confirmed but has
an epi link to a confirmed or probable case
14Smallpox Pathogenesis
- Virus implants on oropharynx or respiratory
mucosa and is transported to regional lymph nodes
- Day 3-4 asymptomatic viremia followed by viral
multiplication in spleen, bone marrow, lymph
nodes, lung - Day 8 secondary viremia leads to fever and
toxemia on day 12-14
15Smallpox Pathogenesis
- Virus localizes in small blood vessels of
respiratory and pharyngeal mucosa, then dermis
characteristic rash and case communicability - Toxemia circulating immune complexes and variola
antigens
16Smallpox Transmission
- Infectious dose extremely low
- Spread primarily by droplet nuclei gtaerosols gt
direct contact - Maintains infectivity for prolonged periods out
of host - Contaminated clothing and bedding can be
infectious
17Smallpox Transmission
- Transmission does not usually occur until after
febrile prodrome - Coincident with onset of rash
- Slower spread through the population than
chickenpox or measles - Large outbreaks in schools were uncommon
- Less transmissible than measles, chickenpox,
influenza
18SmallpoxTransmission
- Secondary cases primarily household, hospital,
and other close contacts - Secondary attack rate 37-87 among unvaccinated
contacts - Patients with severe disease or cough at highest
risk for transmission - Greatest infectivity from rash onset to day 7-10
of rash - Infectivity decreases with scab formation and
ceases with separation of scabs
19SmallpoxClinical Features
- Prodrome (incubation 7-19 days)
- Acute onset of fever, malaise, headache,
backache, vomiting, occasional delirium - Transient erythematous rash
- Exanthem (2-3 days later)
- Preceded by enanthem on oropharyngeal mucosa
- Begins on face, hands, forearms
- Spread to lower extremities then trunk over 7
days
CDC
- Synchronous progression macules ?
vesicles ? pustules ? scabs - Lesions most abundant on face and
extremities, including palms/soles
20SmallpoxClinical Course
WHO
21SmallpoxClinical Presentation
CDC
22SmallpoxClinical Presentation
WHO
23SmallpoxClinical Presentation
WHO
24Smallpox Clinical Progression
WHO
25Smallpox Clinical Progression
Day 14
Day 10
Day 21
Thomas, D.
26SmallpoxClinical Progression
27SmallpoxClinical Types
- Ordinary smallpox 90 of cases
- Case-fatality average 30
- Occurs in non-immunized persons
- Modified smallpox
- Milder, rarely fatal
- Occurs in 25 of previously immunized persons and
2 of non-immunized persons - Fewer, smaller,more superficial lesions that
evolve more rapidly
28SmallpoxClinical Types
- Hemorrhagic smallpox lt3 of cases
- Immunocompromised persons and pregnant women at
risk - Shortened incubation period, severe prodrome
- Extensive viral multiplication, coagulopathy
- Dusky erythema followed by petechiae and
hemorrhages into skin and mucous membranes - Almost uniformly fatal within 7 days
29SmallpoxClinical Types
- Malignant, or flat-type smallpox 7 of cases
- Slowly evolving lesions that coalesce without
forming pustules - Associated with cell-mediated immune deficiency
- Usually fatal
- Variola sine eruptione
- Occurs in previously vaccinated persons or
infants with maternal antibodies - Asymptomatic or mild illness
- Transmission from these cases has not been
documented
30Malignant Smallpox
Thomas, D.
31SmallpoxComplications
- Encephalitis
- 1 in 500 cases Variola major
- 1 in 2,000 cases Variola minor
- Keratitis, corneal ulceration
- Blindness in 1 of cases
- Infection in pregnancy
- High perinatal fatality rate
- Congenital infection
32CDC Major Smallpox Criteria
- Febrile prodrome
- Occurring 1-4 days before rash onset fever
gt102F and at least one of the following
prostration, headache, backache, chills, vomiting
or severe abdominal pain - Classic smallpox lesions
- Deep, firm/hard, round, well-circumscribed may
be umbilicated or confluent - Lesions in same stage of development on any one
part of the body (e.g., face or arm)
33CDC Minor Smallpox Criteria
- Centrifugal distribution greatest concentration
of lesions on face and distal extremities - First lesions on oral mucosa or palate, face,
forearms - Patient appears toxic or moribund
- Slow evolution lesions evolve from macules to
papules to pustules over days - Lesions on palms and soles (majority of cases)
34CDC Criteria for Determining Risk of Smallpox
- High risk report immediately
- All three major criteria
- Moderate risk urgent evaluation
- Febrile prodrome and 1 major or ?4 minor criteria
- Low risk manage as clinically indicated
- No viral prodrome or
- Febrile prodrome and lt4 minor criteria (no major
criteria)
35CDC Recommended Evaluation of Patients at High
Risk of Smallpox
- Contact and airborne precautions
- Notify infection control
- Infectious disease and/or dermatology consult
- Notify local/state health dept immediately
- Response team advises on management and specimen
collection - Specimen testing at CDC
36CDC Recommended Evaluation of Patients at
Moderate Risk of Smallpox
- Contact and airborne precautions
- Notify infection control
- Infectious disease and/or Dermatology consult
- VZV and/or other lab tests as indicated
- If cannot rule out smallpox, contact local/state
health dept. immediately
37CDC Recommended Evaluation of Patients at Low
Risk of Smallpox
- Contact and airborne precautions
- Notify infection control
- Evaluate clinically for VZV
- Test for VZV and other conditions, as indicated
38Differential Diagnosis Variola vs. Varicella
Source CDC
39Differential Diagnosis Variola vs. Varicella
Source CDC
40Variola vs. Varicella Lesion Distribution
Chickenpox
Smallpox
WHO
41Variola vs. VaricellaLesion Distribution
Smallpox
Chickenpox
WHO
42Differential Diagnosis of Smallpox
- Varicella
- Disseminated herpes zoster
- Drug eruptions and contact dermatitis
- Disseminated herpes simplex
- Impetigo
- Erythema multiforme
- Scabies, insect bites
- Bullous pemphigoid
- Secondary syphilis
- Molluscum contagiosum
- Enterovirus exanthem
43SmallpoxMedical Management
- Respiratory and contact isolation for
hospitalized cases - Negative pressure room HEPA-filtered exhaust
- All health care workers employ aerosol and
contact precautions regardless of immunization
status - No specific therapy available
- Supportive care fluid and electrolyte, skin,
nutritional
44SmallpoxMedical Management
- Antibiotics for secondary infection
- Antiviral drugs under evaluation
- Notify Public Health and hospital epidemiology
immediately for suspected case
45SmallpoxDefinition of a Contact
- Contact A person who has had contact with a
suspected, probable or confirmed case of smallpox - Cases should be considered infectious from the
onset of fever, until all scabs have separated - Close contact Face-to-face contact (?6ft) with a
smallpox case
46Smallpox Vaccine
- Made from live Vaccinia virus
- 200 million doses in U.S. stores
- Intradermal inoculation with bifurcated needle
(scarification) - Pustular lesion or induration surrounding central
lesion (scab or ulcer) 6-8 days post-vaccination - Low grade fever, axillary lymphadenopathy
- Scar (permanent) demonstrates successful
vaccination (take) - Immunity not life-long
WHO
47Smallpox Vaccine Administration
WHO
JAMA 19992811735-45
48Smallpox Vaccine Take
WHO
49Smallpox Vaccine Complications
- More common in children and primary vaccinees
- Most common secondary inoculation
- Skin, eye, nose, genitalia
- 50 of all complications
- 529/million (30 in one study were contacts)
- Severe reactions less common
- Primary vaccination 1 death/million
- Revaccination 0.2 deaths/million
50Smallpox Complications Rates for Primary
Vaccination
- Complication rates lower with revaccination
- Primary vaccination 1 death/million
- Revaccination 0.2 deaths/million
- Most common complication
- Inadvertent auto- and secondary inoculation
(skin, eye) - 529/million (30 in one study were contacts)
- Sources MMWR June 22, 2001 / 50(RR10)1-25.
Vaccinia (Smallpox) Vaccine Recommendations of
the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP), 2001 - Vaccines 3rd Ed. Plotkin SA, Orenstein WA. W.B.
Saunders, Phila. 1999
51Smallpox Complication Rates for Primary
Vaccination
- Less common
- Post-vaccination encephalopathy (7-42.3/million)
- Post-vaccination encephalitis (12.3/million)
- 25 fatal 23 neurological sequelae
- Progressive vaccinia/vaccinia necrosum
(1.5/million) - Generalized vaccinia (241.5/million) severe in
10 - Eczema vaccinatum (38.5/million)
- Fetal vaccinia - rare
Sourced MMWR June 22, 2001 / 50(RR10)1-25.
Vaccinia (Smallpox) Vaccine Recommendations of
the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP), 2001 Vaccines 3rd Ed. Plotkin SA,
Orenstein WA. W.B. Saunders, Phila. 1999
52Smallpox Vaccine Complications
WHO
53Smallpox Vaccine Complications
WHO
54Smallpox Vaccine Pre-exposure Contraindications
- Immunosuppression
- Agammaglobulinemia
- Leukemia, lymphoma, generalized malignancy
- Chemo- or other immunosuppressive therapy
- HIV infection
- History or evidence of eczema
- Household, sexual, or other close contact with
person with one of the above conditions - Life-threatening allergy to polymixin B,
streptomycin, tetracycline, or neomycin - Pregnancy
55SmallpoxVaccinia Immune Globulin (VIG)
- Treatment of adverse reactions (AR)
- Approximately 25 ARs/100,000 vaccinations
- AR rate may be increased in immunocompromised
populations - Post-exposure prophylaxis (if available)
- Pregnant patients VIG vaccinia vaccine
- Eczema VIG vaccinia vaccine
- Immunocompromised patients no consensus on VIG
alone vs. VIG vaccinia vaccine - Current supplies very limited, but new lots are
being produced that conform to IV standards
56Distinguishing Smallpox from Chickenpox
Similar Epidemiologic Features
- Incubation period 14 (10-21) days
- Person-to-person transmission
- Seasonal transmission of disease highest during
winter and early spring
57Distinguishing Smallpox from Chickenpox Epi
Features that Differ
- Chickenpox (varicella)
- Most cases occur in children
- Expected case fatality rate 2-3/100,000
- Secondary attack rate of 80 among susceptible
household contacts
- Smallpox (variola)
- Most of the population expected to be susceptible
- Expected case fatality rate averages 30
- Secondary attack rate 60 in unvaccinated family
contacts
58Distinguishing Smallpox from Chickenpox
Clinical Features that Differ
- Chickenpox (varicella)
- Lesions superficial
- Rash concentrated on trunk
- Lesions rarely on palms or soles
- Lesions in different stages of development
- Rash progresses more quickly
- Smallpox (variola)
- Lesions deep
- Rash concentrated on face extremities
- Lesions on palms soles
- Lesions in same stage of evolution on any one
area of body - Rash progresses slowly
CDC
59Smallpox Summary of Key Points
- The clinical diagnosis of smallpox is a public
health emergency the local or state health
department and hospital infection control should
be notified immediately for suspected cases,
including cases that meet criteria of the CDC
smallpox case definition. - CDC criteria for determining the risk of smallpox
can help differentiate smallpox from varicella
and other rash illnesses.
60Smallpox Summary of Key Points
- Smallpox is transmitted person to person
standard contact and airborne precautions should
be initiated in all suspected cases until
smallpox is ruled out. - Vaccine-induced immunity wanes with time
therefore most people today are considered
susceptible to infection.
61Smallpox Summary of Key Points
- Smallpox cases should be considered infectious
from the onset of fever until all scabs have
separated.
62Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Diverse group of illnesses caused by RNA viruses
from 4 families - Arenaviridae, Bunyaviridae, Filoviridae,
Flaviridae - Differ by geographic occurrence and
vector/reservoir - Share certain clinical and pathogenic features
- Potential for aerosol dissemination, with human
infection via respiratory route (except dengue) - Target organ vascular bed
- Mortality 0.5 - 90, depending on agent
63Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Category A agents
- Filoviruses
- Arenaviruses
- Category C agents
- Hantaviruses
- Tick-borne hemorrhagic fever viruses
- Yellow fever
64Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers Transmission
- Zoonotic diseases
- Rodents and arthropods main reservoir
- Humans infected via bite of infected arthropod,
inhalation of rodent excreta, or contact with
infected animal carcasses - Person-to-person transmission possible with
several agents - Primarily via blood or bodily fluid exposure
- Rare instances of airborne transmission with
arenaviruses and filoviruses - Rift Valley fever has potential to infect
domestic animals following a biological attack
65Viral Hemorrhagic FeversPathogenesis
- Destruction of infected cells
- Occurs in filovirus, Rift Valley fever, and
yellow fever infections - Coagulopathy from hepatic dysfunction and
disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) - Most prominent in Rift Valley fever and yellow
fever
66Viral Hemorrhagic FeversPathogenesis
- Hemorrhage
- Filoviruses
- From direct damage to vascular endothelial cells
and platelets ? impaired microcirculation - Through immunological and inflammatory mediators
- DIC characteristic
- Arenaviruses
- Via stimulation of inflammatory mediators by
macrophages - Thrombocytopenia
- Inhibition of platelet aggregation
- DIC not characteristic
67Viral Hemorrhagic FeversClinical Presentation
- Clinical manifestations nonspecific, vary by
agent - Incubation period 2-21 days, depending on agent
- Onset typically abrupt with filoviruses,
flaviviruses, and Rift Valley fever - Onset more insidious with arenaviruses
68Viral Hemorrhagic FeversInitial Symptoms
- Prodromal illness lasting lt 1 week may include
- High fever
- Headache
- Malaise
- Weakness
- Exhaustion
- Dizziness
- Myalgias
- Arthralgias
- Nausea
- Non-bloody diarrhea
69Viral Hemorrhagic FeversClinical Signs
- Flushing, conjunctival injection
- Pharyngitis
- Petechiae, bleeding (with some agents)
- Edema
- Hypotension
- Positive tourniquet test
- Shock
70Clinical Identification of Suspected VHF
- Clinical criteria
- Temperature 101?F(38.3?C) for lt3 weeks
- Severe illness and no predisposing factors for
hemorrhagic manifestations - 2 or more of the following
- Hemorrhagic or purple rash
- Epistaxis
- Hematemesis
- Hemoptysis
- Blood in stools
- Other hemorrhagic symptoms
- No established alternative diagnosis
JAMA 2002287 Adapted from WHO
71Clinical Identification of Suspected VHF
- Inquire about potential natural exposures
- Travel, insect bites, exposure to animals or ill
persons - Report suspected cases immediately to
- Local and state health department
- Hospital infection control professional and
laboratory personnel
72Viral Hemorrhagic FeversDifferential Diagnosis
- Severe systemic illness due to other agents
- Bacterial
- Typhoid fever, meningococcemia, rickettsioses,
leptospirosis, toxic shock syndrome, borreliosis,
psittacosis, septicemic plague, gram neg sepsis - Protozoa
- Falciparum malaria, trypanosomiasis
- Viral and Other
- Measles, rubella, hemorrhagic smallpox,
vasculitis, TTP, Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS),
acute leukemia
73Medical Management of Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Supportive care
- Correct coagulopathies as needed
- No antiplatelet drugs or IM injections
- Investigational treatments, available under
protocol - Ribavirin for arenaviridae and bunyaviridae
- Convalescent plasma within 8 days of onset for
AHF
74Medical Management of Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Initiate supportive and ribavirin therapy
- If arenavirus or bunyavirus confirmed, continue
10 day course - If VHF excluded, or other VHF confirmed,
discontinue ribavirin
75Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers Management of Exposed
Persons
- Medical surveillance for all potentially exposed
persons, close contacts, and high-risk contacts
(I.e., mucous membrane or percutaneous exposure)
x 21 days - Report hemorrhagic symptoms (slide 47)
- Record fever 2x/day
- Report temperatures ? 101?F(38.3?C)
- Initiate presumptive ribavirin therapy
- Percutaneous/mucocutaneous exposure to blood or
body fluids of infected - Wash thoroughly with soap and water, irrigate
mucous membranes with water or saline
76Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers Management of Exposed
Persons
- Patients convalescing should refrain from sexual
activity for 3 months post-recovery (arenavirus
or filovirus infection) - Only licensed vaccine Yellow Fever
- Investigational vaccines AHF, RV, HV
- Possible use of ribavirin to high risk contacts
of CCHF LF patients
77Viral Hemorrhagic Fever Infection Control
- Airborne contact precautions for health care,
environmental, and laboratory workers - Negative pressure room, if available
- 6-12 air changes/hour
- Exhausted outdoors or through HEPA filter
- Personal protective equipment
- Double gloves
- Impermeable gowns, leg and shoe coverings
- Face shields and eye protection
- N-95 mask or PAPR
78Viral Hemorrhagic Fever Infection Control
- Dedicated medical equipment for patients
- If available, point-of-care analyzers for routine
laboratory analyses - If unavailable, pretreat serum w/Triton X-100
- Lab samples double-bagged and hand-carried to lab
- Prompt burial or cremation of deceased with
minimal handling - Autopsies performed only by trained personnel
with PPE
79Viral Hemorrhagic FeversSummary of Key Points
- A thorough travel and exposure history is key to
distinguishing naturally occurring from
intentional viral hemorrhagic fever cases. - Viral hemorrhagic fevers can be transmitted via
exposure to blood and bodily fluids.
80Viral Hemorrhagic FeversSummary of Key Points
- Contact and airborne precautions are recommended
for health care workers caring for infected
patients. - Diagnostic laboratory testing for viral
hemorrhagic fevers must be done in a bio-safety
level 4 lab (i.e., CDC) contact the local or
state health department before specimen
collection in suspected cases.
81Viral Hemorrhagic FeversSummary of Key Points
- Contact and airborne precautions are recommended
for health care workers caring for infected
patients. - Post-exposure management consists of surveillance
for fever and hemorrhagic symptoms, and possibly
ribavirin therapy for symptomatic individuals.
82Summary - Category A Critical Agents
infectious dose may be less in certain
circumstances
Modified from USAMRIIDs Medical Management of
Biological Casualties Handbook
83SummaryCategory A Critical Agents
- Decontamination of exposed persons
- Showering or washing thoroughly with soap and
water adequate for most bleach not necessary - Infection control
- Standard precautions all cases
- Airborne and contact precautions smallpox and
viral hemorrhagic fevers - Droplet precautions pneumonic plague
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