Title: BIOTERRORISM
1BIOTERRORISM
- June 15, 2006
- Christina M. Cabott D.O.
2Introduction
- Bioterrorist event
- Release of biological agent into civilian
population - Purpose
- Creating fear
- Illness
- Death
- Disruption of social and economic infrastructure
3Introduction
- Biological agents
- Infectious agents
- Contagious
- Noncontagious
- Biologically produced toxins
- Act as chemical agents within human body
4Agents of Concern
- Agent selection
- 1. Potential for public health impact
- 2. Delivery potential
- Estimation of ease for development and
dissemination - Potential for person-to-person transmission of
infection - 3. Public perception (fear) of the agent
- 4. Special requirements for public health
preparedness
5Agents of Concern
- Ranking category
- Class A agents most severe potential for
widespread illness and death - Variola major (small pox)
- Bacillus anthracis (anthrax)
- Yersinia pestis (plague)
- Class B agents less potential
- Class C agents future threats
6Class A Agents
- Variola major (small pox)
- Incubation 12-14 days
- SS
- Initially fever, severe myalgias, prostration
- Within 2 days papular rash on face spreading to
extremities ? rash on palms and soles ? trunk - Lesions progress at same rate
- Vesicular ? pustular ? scabs
7Class A Agents
- Bacillus anthracis (Cutaneous anthrax)
- Incubation usually lt 1 day, up to 2 weeks
- SS
- Macule or papule enlarging into eschar
- Surrounding vesicles and edema
- Sepsis possible
8Class A Agents
- Bacillus anthracis (GI anthrax)
- Incubation usually 1-7 days
- SS
- Abdominal pain
- Vomiting
- GI bleeding leading to sepsis
- Mesenteric adenopathy on CT
9Class A Agents
- Bacillus anthracis (Oropharyngeal anthrax)
- Incubation usually 1-7 days
- SS
- Sore throat
- Ulcers on base of tongue
- Marked unilateral neck swelling
10Class A Agents
- Bacillus anthracis (Inhalational anthrax)
- Incubation usually lt 1 week
- SS
- 1st stage fever, dyspnea, cough, headache,
vomiting, abdominal pain, chest pain - 2nd stage dyspnea, diaphoresis, shock
- Hemorrhagic mediastinitis with widened
mediastinum on CXR
11Class A Agents
- Yersinia pestis (Bubonic plague)
- Incubation 2-8 days
- SS
- Fever, chills, painful swollen lymph nodes
- Nodes progress to bubo (possibly suppurative)
12Class A Agents
- Yersinia pestis (Pneumonic plague)
- Incubation 2-3 days
- SS
- Fever, chills, cough, dyspnea, nausea, vomiting,
abdominal pain - Clinical condition consistent with gram-negative
sepsis
13Class A Agents
- Yersinia pestis (Primary septicemic plague)
- Incubation 2-8 days
- SS
- After bubo formation, clinical condition
consistent with gram-negative sepsis, DIC
14Class A Agents
- Clostridium botulinum (Food-born botulism)
- Incubation 1-5 days
- SS
- GI symptoms
- Followed by symmetric cranial neuropathies,
blurred vision - Progresses to descending paralysis
15Class A Agents
- Clostridium botulinum (Inhalational botulism)
- Incubation 12-72 hours
- SS
- Symmetric cranial nerve palsies
- Progresses to descending paralysis
16Class A Agents
- Francisella tularensis (Tularemia)
- Incubation 2-5 days
- SS
- Abrupt nonspecific febrile illness
- Progressing to pleuropneumonitis
- May have mucocutaneous lesions
17Class A Agents
- Filoviruses and arenaviruses (Ebola virus)
- Viral hemorrhagic fevers
- Incubation 2 days 3 weeks, depending on the
virus - SS
- Initial nonspecific febrile illness, sometimes
with rash - Progresses to hematemesis, diarrhea, shock
18Class B Agents
- Coxiella burnetii (Q fever)
- Incubation 2-3 weeks
- SS
- Fever, myalgias, headache
- 30 develop pneumonia
19Class B Agents
- Brucella spp (Brucellosis)
- Incubation 2-4 weeks
- SS
- Fever, myalgias, back pain
- Possible CNS infections, endocarditis
20Class B Agents
- Burkholderia mallei (Glanders)
- Incubation 10-14 days
- SS
- Suppurative ulcers
- Pneumonia
- Pulmonic abscesses
- Sepsis
21Class B Agents
- Alpha viruses (VEE, EEE, WEE)
- Encephalitis
- Incubation variable
- SS
- Fever
- Headache
- Aseptic meningitis
- Encephalitis
- Focal paralysis
- Seizures
22Class B Agents
- Rickettsia prowazekii (Typhus fever)
- Incubation 7-14 days
- SS
- Fever
- Headache
- Rash
23Class B Agents
- Chlamydia psittaci (Psitticosis)
- Incubation 6-19 days
- SS
- Fever
- Headache
- Dry cough
- Pneumonia
- Endocarditis
24Class B Agents
- Toxins
- Ricin, Staphlococcus, Enterotoxin B
- Food safety threats
- Salmonella, Eschericia coli O157H7
- Water safety threats
- Vibrio cholera, Cryptosporidium parvum
25Class C Agents
- Emerging threats
- Nipah virus
- Hanta virus
26Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- Patient presents with signs, symptoms, or
immediately available diagnostic results that
obviously indicate a suspect disease process.
27Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- 2. Patient presents with protean symptoms, but
an astute clinician establishes enough criteria
(suspicious historical information, signs,
symptoms, short turn-around lab results, public
health corroborative information, etc.) to
designate the patient as a presumptive case until
diagnostic confirmation can be accomplished.
28Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- 3. Patient presents, is evaluated and admitted
or released, but not suspected as being a victim
of bioterrorism. Diagnostic test results (blood
cultures, immunoassays, etc.) subsequently
establish a diagnosis, potentially even post
mortem.
29Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- 4. Multiple patients present over a defined
period with similar symptoms or historical
characteristics, raising the suspicions of a
practitioner and causing that individual to
report the concern. Further investigation with
diagnostic testing and/or public health
epidemiological investigation of the cohort
establishes the cause.
30Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- 5. Public health surveillance systems establish
unusual patterns of signs, symptoms, or disease
in the community and correlate with further
investigation to establish the etiology.
31Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- Emergency physician should know
- Basic pathological principles for each agent
- Modes of dissemination and transmission
- Disease signs and symptoms
- Recommended diagnostic testing
- Recommended therapy
- Immunizations, medicines, or prophylaxis
- Infectious control practices
32Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- Pictorial resources
- Confirmatory tests
- Respond to notification of potential disease by
another health or medical professional - Querying the source for methodology of testing
that produced the concern
33Recognition of Bioterrorist Event
- Exposure to an unidentified substance
- Source substance and where obtained
- Coordination with outside agencies, such as law
enforcement and public health - Patient exposure risk stratification
34Design and Implementation of Community
Surveillance Systems
- Clinical duties are minimally affected
- Does not consume valuable clinician or support
staff time and attention - Financial investment is not carried by the
hospital or professional staff
35Design and Implementation of Community
Surveillance Systems
- Patient privacy and hospital proprietary issues
are addressed appropriately - Participation in the system provides direct
benefit to the acute care medical community - - All pertinent epidemiologic information is
disseminated in real time to the practitioners
36Initial Response to a Potential Bioterrorist
Threat
- Within hospital environment
- Infection control procedures
- Notification of hospital departments
- Administration
- Infectious disease
- Infection control
- Laboratory services
- Security
- Environmental services
37Initial Response to a Potential Bioterrorist
Threat
- Within hospital environment
- Activation of Emergency Operations Plan (EOP)
- Preplanned surge capacity configuration
- Security dept aid in protection of facility and
staff - Media relations
- Outside of hospital environment
- Notification of jurisdictional public health
department
38Initial Response to a Potential Bioterrorist
Threat
- Information that needs to be conveyed to public
health department - 1. Diagnosed or suspected agent of concern
- 2. Whether it is a presumed or definitive
diagnosis and how many diagnosis were made - 3. Patient demographics (including occupation)
- 4. Recent history of travel or participation in
special events (i.e. mass gatherings,
high-profile events, or at- risk gatherings)
39Initial Response to a Potential Bioterrorist
Threat
- Information that needs to be conveyed to public
health department - 5. Patient condition
- 6. Initial testing performed and further
diagnostic testing being conducted - 7. Treatment being provided
- 8. Public health assistance required (including
testing) - 9. Preferred method of contacting hospital or
treating physicians for follow-up
40Initial Response to a Potential Bioterrorist
Threat
41Initial Response to a Potential Bioterrorist
Threat
- Protective equipment
- Gowns, gloves, respiratory masks
- Patient isolation
- Patient decontamination
- Removal of clothing
- Soap and warm water
- NO bleach
42Integration with Local Department of Health
- Development of community wide patient evaluation
and treatment protocol - Screening
- Testing
- Treatment methodologies
- Patient and public education
43Integration with Local Department of Health
- Clear and concise definition for the suspicious
agent - Reporting requirements (surveillance) for
suspected or diagnosed cases - Type of information
- Method of reporting (e.g. phone, fax, Internet)
- Contact methods (e.g. 24 hr access for technical
advice)
44Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Variola major
- Vaccination Vaccinia vaccination
- Not recommended for general public use
- Contraindicated in immunocompromised pts and pts
with eczema - Useful in preventing disease if given within 4
days of exposure
45Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Variola major
- Prophylaxis Vaccinia immunoglobin
- Within 2-3 days of exposure
- Limited supplies available
- Consider giving it to those with
contraindications to the vaccine - Treatment
- Mainly supportive
46Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Bacillus anthracis
- Vaccination Anthrax vaccination
- 6 part series at 0,2, and 4 week, then 6,12, and
18 months - Annual boosters required
- Not available to the public
- Animal models efficatious in inhalational
anthrax
47Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Bacillus anthracis
- Prophylaxis
- Cipro or doxy for 60 days
- Amoxicilin if strain not resistant to treatment
- Treatment
- Cipro or doxy (amoxicillin if strain not
resistant) in combo with 2 others, including
clindamycin, rifampin, imipenem, aminoglycoside,
chloramphenicol, vancomycin, streptomycin, and
some macrolides
48Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Yersinia pestis
- Vaccination none
- Prophylaxis
- Cipro or doxy for 7 days
- Alt chloramphenicol
- Treatment
- Streptomycin or gentamycin
- Alt doxy, cipro, chloramphenicol
49Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Clostridium botulinum
- Vaccination
- Not available to public
- Pentavalent toxoid of C botulinum toxin types A-E
- 3-part series, with yearly booster
- Prophylaxis none
50Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Clostridium botulinum
- Treatment
- Antitoxin from local public health agency
- Antitoxin may preserve remaining neurologic
function, BUT does not reverse paralysis - May require prolonged, assisted mechanical
ventilation and supportive care
51Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Francisella tularensis
- Vaccination
- Live, attenuated vaccine under FDA investigation
- Prophylaxis
- Cipro or doxy for 14 days
52Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Francisella tularensis
- Treatment
- Streptomycin or gentamycin
- Alt doxy, cipro, chloramphenicol
53Treatment, Prophylaxis, and Immunizations
- Agent Filoviruses and arenaviruses (e.g. Ebola
virus) - Vaccination none
- Prophylaxis none
- Treatment
- Supportive therapy
- Ribavirin may have applicability in arenaviruses
54Treatment for Bioterrorism
- General Emergency Operation Plans
- Need to have enough staff to handle large surge
in general patient volume - Specialty requirements
- Patient with unusual medical conditions
- Patients who may be contagious
- Contamination risks to staff and other patients
55Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Disease containment
- Isolation
- Designation of staff to care for infected vs.
noninfected patients - Proper personal protective equipment
56Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Management of personnel
- Need more personnel to care for more patients
- Staff reluctance to care for potentially
infectious patients
57Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Logistics
- Limited supply of drugs and medical supplies
- Sharing of critical supplies, staff, and
equipment among local hospitals - National Pharmaceutical Stockpile
58Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Patient Management
- Addressing requirements of each patient encounter
- Preprinted instructions
- Category of risk stratification
- Why patient placed in that category
- How disease transmitted
- Measures to prevent spread
- Early signs and symptoms of disease
- Appropriate steps if symptoms occur
59Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Patient Management
- Appropriate follow-up
- Proper record keeping
- Organization of charts
60Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Vaccinations
- Not to be given in a pre-event setting to general
public - Recommended therapies
- Usually not for pregnant or lactating women
- Usually not approved for children
- Should be given if risk of infection and its
consequences exceeds risks of the medications or
vaccines
61Treatment for Bioterrorism
- Fatality Management
- Bodies are considered evidence
- Processed through coroner or medical examiner
62Sources of Expert Information
- http//jama.ama-assn.org
- http//www.bt.cdc.gov
- http//chemdef.apgea.army.mil/textbook/contents.as
p - http//www.apic.org
- Local poison control center
- CDCs emergency response center
- 1-770-488-7100