Title: Bioterrorism The New Threat
1Bioterrorism The New Threat
- Robert A. Wilson, MD
- LTC, CFS, NCANG, MC
2Definition
- Intentional release of a virus, bacteria, or
toxin upon a population with the purpose of
causing wide scale illness or death and resulting
in a state of panic.
3History of Bioterrorism
4History Remote
- 600 BC - Assyrians contaminated enemy wells with
Rye ergot. - 1346 - Tartar army catapult bodies of plague
victims over city walls of Kaffa, Italy. - French and Indian War - British gave American
Indians blankets infected with smallpox.
5History Recent
- 1969 - President Nixon halts all U.S. Biological
Weapons Research. - 1975 - Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, and Stockpiling of
Bacteriological and Toxin Weapons and on their
Destruction went into effect.
6History Recent
- 1979 - Sverdlovsk, former USSR - 68 deaths from
79 cases of inhalational anthrax follows
accidental release of aerosolized anthrax spores. - 1984 - The Dallas, Oregon - 751 cases of
Salmonellosis, 44 hospitalized after
Rajneeshpuram cult contaminated 2 local salad
bars with Salmonella Entiritidis.
7History Recent
- 1995 - Tokyo, Japan - Aum Shinrikyo cult released
Sarin in subway station. Previous attacks with
Anthrax and Botulism were unsuccessful. - 1999 - West Nile Virus outbreak in New York, New
York. (Possibly due to terrorism) - 2001 - 12 Cases of Inhalational Anthrax , 5
deaths following mail-based anthrax attack.
8Impact of an Attack
- 1970 - WHO (World Health Organization) estimates
250,000 deaths following aerosolized attack with
50 kg of Anthrax spores over city of 5 million. - 1993 - U.S. Congressional Office of Technology
Assessment estimates 1,300,000 to 3 million
deaths after aerosolized attack of 100 kg of
Anthrax on Washington D.C.. - Match or exceed Hydrogen Bomb of 1.0 Megaton over
same area
9Impact of an Attack
- Dark Winter - Biological war game played in
early part of 2001 - ? Variola Major (smallpox) virus released in
- 3 states.
- ? No disease was detected for 9 days
- ? After 13 days, thousands were infected in
- 25 states and 15 countries.
10Impact of an Attack
- Senator Sam Nunn
- - Senate Defense Expert Observer -
- ?  Raised doubts about U.S. ability to respond
and contain such an epidemic. - ?  U.S. hospitals lacked isolation rooms,
infection control equipment. - ?  Poor communication between local, state, and
national officials. - ? 15 million vaccine doses were inadequate.
11Impact of an Attack
- May 2000 - Exercise in which terrorist sprayed
concert with plague in Denver, CO. - 1000 people died but participants were able to
contain epidemic. - Wetter et al - Invoke theoretical attack with
anthrax causes 32,000 deaths. - Survey of hospital Emergency Departments in 4
states demonstrate a lack of preparedness for
effective treatment.
12 The Threat
- ? Category A - Agents most likely to cause mass
casualties if deliberately disseminated
generally as aerosol. - ?    Category B - Agents moderately easy to
disseminate with moderate morbidity and low
mortality could be used to contaminate
food/water. - ?    Category C - Emerging agents that could be
engineered for mass dissemination.
13 The Threat Critical Biological Agents
- CATEGORY A
- Variola major (smallpox)
- Bacillus enthracis (anthrax)
- Yersinia pestia (plague)
- Clostridium botulinum toxin (botulism)
- Francisella tularensis (tularemia)
- Areneviruses
- Lassa (lassa fever)
- Junin (Argentine hemorrhagic fever)
- Filoviruses
- Ebola (ebola hemorrhagic fever)
- Marburg (marburg hemorrhagic fever)
14 The Threat Critical Biological Agents
- CATEGORY B
- Coxiella burnetti (Q-fever)
- Brucella spp (burcellosis)
- Burkolderia mattei (glanders)
- Alphaviruses
- Ricin toxin from Ricinus communis (castor beans)
- Epsiton toxin of Clostridium perfingens
- Staphlococcus enterotoxin B
- A subset of Category-B agents includes pathogens
that are spread by food and water. These
pathogens include but are not limited to - Selmonella spp
- Shigella dysenteriae
- Escherichia coli 0157H7
- Vibrio cholerae
- Cryptosporidium parium
15 The Threat Critical Biological Agents
- CATEGORY C
- Nipah virus
- Hantaviruses
- Tick-borne hemorrhagic fever viruses
- Tick-borne encephalitis viruses.
- Yellow fever
- Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis
- Preparedness for Category-C agents requires
research to improve disease detection, diagnosis,
treatment, and prevention
16Detection
- ED physicians, physicians offices, and clinics
will be the first responders. - Epidemiological Warning networks such as
hospitals, local, state, and national public
health agencies will collect, analyze, and
disseminate information. - EMERGency ID NET and The Food borne disease
Active Surveillance Network could act as
framework for syndrome surveillance - Key to recognition is a high index of suspicion.
17Detection Features Indicative of Bioterrorism
- Multiple simultaneous patients with similar
clincal syndromes - Severe illness, especially among the young and
otherwise healthy individuals - Predominantly respiratory symptoms (if that was
the route of attack) - Unusual (nonendemic) organism(s)
- Unusual antibiotic resistance patterns
- Atypical clinical presentation of disease
- Unusual patterns of disease such geographic
co-location of victims - Intelligence information tips from law
enforcement, discovery of delivery devices, etc. - Reports of sick or dead animals or plants
18Detection
- Rapid Laboratory Confirmation
- Tier based Laboratory Network
- ? Level A labs refer suspicious isolates and
samples to higher level county or state
laboratories. - ? CDC provides a rapid response and advanced
technology laboratory. - - Process samples from suspect cases
- - Provide round the clock diagnostic support to
bioterrorism response teams. - - Help maintain chain of custody
- - Assess new rapid diagnostic assays before
dissemination to laboratory network.
19Detection
Specimen testing and referral
Level D Diagnosis Rare Agents
Training and Consultation
Highest level of Containment and Expertise
Level C Rapid Identification
Level B Agent Isolation
Level A Early Detection
20Epidemiology
- ?  Analyze incoming data from the field perhaps
through a single nationwide toll free number,
24-hour hot line. - ?   Contact appropriate authorities to initiate a
response to include the FBI, FEMA, OEP, and
Metropolitan Medical Response System for
individual cities. - ?  Rapid dissemination of public health
information through media - - Disease prevention information
- - Avoid possible public panic
21Epidemiology
- Roles of National Organizations
- ?  FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation)
- - Collect evidence for possible arrests and
prevention of future attacks. - ?   FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency)
- - Coordinates disaster consequence management.
- ? OEP (Office of Emergency Preparedness)
- - Coordinates all direct medical assistance.
- ?  Metropolitan Medical Response System
- - Teams of local personnel from 120 major
cities. - - First responders to a local disaster with
help of state military units. - ?  CDC (Center of Disease Control)
- - Provides advice and support to all agencies
involved.
22Health Care Defense
- ?  Decontamination
- - Not effective or necessary for aerosol
exposures. - - Patients may shower at home.
- - Skin contamination - wash patient with soap
and water, surfaces may - be washed with dilute bleach (0.5
hypochlorite) - ?  Isolation
- - Any patient with respiratory or skin rashes
should have respiratory - and contact precautions.
- - Smallpox requires HEPA mask (High Efficiency
Particulate Air). - - Pneumonic Plague requires droplet
precautions. - - Viral hemorrhagic fevers requires strict
barrier precautions.
23Treatment of Patients
- Hospitals must have access to pharmaceuticals and
supplies in large quantities. - CDC will coordinate regional antibiotic and
vaccine stockpiles under National Pharmaceutical
Stockpile Program. - Push Packs will be delivered by regional
airlift on 24-hour call. - Incorporate all public and willing private
institutions including the VA system.
24Psychiatric Impact
- Survivors of any disaster may require prolonged
care. - 1/3 of all hospitalized patients following Tokyo
Sarin attack suffered psychiatric problems. - 26 of local population following Three Mile
Island meltdown suffered from psychiatric
disorder 18 months later - Following tragedy, 75 are temporarily
bewildered, 25 become hysterical or paralyzed by
fear.
25Psychiatric Impact
- ? Therapists should provide crisis intervention
to include - - Psychologic debriefing within hours or days
- - Encourage survivors to verbalize their
experiences and concerns - - Spend time with injured and frightened
- - Help reunite children with parents
- - Refer psychiatric disorders for
hospitalization
26Preparedness Planning and Readiness Assessment
- Current Level of Preparedness not acceptable
- ? Recent study by Wetter et al evaluated US
hospitals level - of preparedness for Biological Attack.
- - Only 12 met the studys minimal requirements
for preparedness. - - 1/2 of hospitals did not have a
decontamination unit (Portable or ED). - - 62 did not have pralidoxime for possible
sarin attack. - - Only 1/2 hospitals had enough Cipro or
Doxycycline for 2-day supply for 50
patients. - - Fewer than 20 had plans for
Biological/Chemical attacks.
27Preparedness Planning and Readiness Assessment
- Necessary steps to enhance Preparedness
- ?  All hospitals require either portable or
isolated ED decontamination unit. - ?  Access to large quantities of medication
locally. - ?  Respiratory Protection and Chemical protection
garments. - ?  Chemical/Biological attack plan with defined
performance standards. - ?  Regular training to meet standards.
- PDLS (Physician Disaster Life Support).
28Preparedness Planning and Readiness Assessment
- PDLS
- ? Types of disaster and Initial Triage
- ?     Prehospital Management
- ?      Hospital Disaster Management
- ?      Terrorism - NBC and conventional.
- ?      Personal/Family Preparedness
- Â
29Types of Bioterrorism
30Anthrax
31Anthrax
- Disease produced by Bacillus anthracis.
- High Mortality.
- Relatively easy to manufacture.
- Long term storage in spore form.
- Easy to weaponize and disseminate
32Anthrax
- 3 types of Anthrax
- Cutaneous most common (2000 cases annually)
- GI follows ingestion of insufficiently cooked,
infected meat - Inhalational very rare but high mortality
- Commonly occurs in herbivores.
- Wool and goat skin workers traditionally at high
risk.
Inglesby TV, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense JAMA. 19992811735-1745
33Anthrax Microbiology
- Aerobic, gram positive, spore-forming, nonmotile
bacillus - Bamboo rod appearance
- Spores form in nutrient poor environment
Inglesby TV, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense JAMA. 19992811735-1745
34Anthrax Inhalational
- Caused by inhalation of spores
- Pathogenesis
- Deposition of spores in alveolar spaces.
- Macrophages ingest spores.
- Transported via lymphatics to mediastinal lymph
nodes. - Leads to release of toxins.
- Causes hemorrhagic mediastinal lymphadenitis
- May cause concurrent hemorrhagic meningitis
- Overwhelming sepsis and shock
35Anthrax Inhalational
- Clinical presentation 2 Stages
- Stage 1
- Mediastinal Widening
- Spectrum of nonspecific symptoms
- Fever, dyspnea, cough, abdominal and chest pain,
weakness, and vomiting - Stage 2
- Rapidly fulminant stage
- Fever, dyspnea, cyanosis, meningimus, delerium
- Rapid progression of shock to death
- Mortality rate of 89 in US
Inglesby TV, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense. JAMA. 19992811735-1745
36Anthrax Inhalational
- Physiological Sequella of Severe Infection
- Hypoglycemia/Hypokalemia
- Depression of Respiratory Center
- Anoxia/ Respiratory Alkalosis
- Hypotension/Terminal Acidosis
37Anthrax Cutaneous
- Infection follows deposition into previous wounds
- Pruritic macule progresses to vesicle and then to
round ulcer (Day 2) - Forms painless, black escar heals in 1-2 weeks
- Without antibiotics, 20 will develop systemic
anthrax and die
38Anthrax
- Results from ingestion of insufficiently cooked,
infected meat - Oral Pharyngeal or esophageal ulcers
- Can lead to regional adenopathy, sepsis, and
death. - Terminal ileum or ceceum
- Causes nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
- Progresses to bloody, diarrhea, massive ascites,
acute abdomen and death.
39Anthrax Diagnosis
- Sudden appearance of large number of patients
with flu-like symptoms and high mortality rate. - Rapid diagnostic test (Mayo Clinic recently
developed 5 minute Antigen Assay). - Recognition of widened mediastrium with
associated overwhelming flu. - Sputum or blood analysis gram-positive bacillus
- Post mortem evidence of thoracic hemorrhagic
necrotizing lymphadenitis or hemorrhagic
meningitis
40Anthrax Transmission
- Inhalation of spores
- Direct contact
- Ingestion of infected meat
- No person to person transmission
41Anthrax Treatment
- Treat all suspected cases initially with
Ciprofloxin, Doxycycline, - or PCN G.
- Delay of antibiotic even for a few hours may
decrease chance for survival. - Initial studies on monkeys done with Ciprofloxin
and Doxycycline. - Treatment for 60 days Inhibit secondary or
tertiary infections.
42Anthrax Vaccine
- US Anthrax Inactivated Cell-Free filtrate
produced by Bioport Corp. - Principal antigen is the protective antigen.
- A human live attenuated vaccine is produced and
used in countries of former Soviet Union - Study of experimental monkeys demonstrated high
rate of protection. - 590,000 doses have been given to US Armed Forces
with minimal side effects and no serious causal
effects. - Post exposure vaccination is recommended if
available after known attack
43Anthrax Treatment of Special Groups
- Children less that 6 years old
- Ciprofloxin initially then change to PCN after
susceptibility testing. - Doxycycline should be used initially if
Ciprofloxin not available. - Pregnant Women/ Immunocompromised same as
children
44Anthrax Treatment
- Recent Study by Shin et al, in Cell Biology and
Toxicology - Treatment with DHEA (dihydroepiandosterone) and
melatonin decreased release of TNF (tumor
necrosis factor). - TNF is responsible for necrotic lymphadenitis.
- May have a therapeutic role in late infection.
45Smallpox
46Smallpox
- Caused by Variola Major or Minor, large DNA virus
- Routine vaccinations stopped in the United States
in 1972. - Declared eradicated in 1980
- Protective Factor vaccine estimated to be
approximately 10 years - 15 million doses in United States, 20 million
stored at WHO
47Smallpox
- Incubation- Usually 12-14 days, Range 7-17 days
- Symptoms
- High fever, myalgias, malaise, vomiting, and
headache. - Abdominal pain
- Followed by synchronous rash which progresses
from
Macules
Papules
Pustular lesions
48Smallpox
- Signs
- Synchronous rash, progresses from extremities and
face to trunk - Pocks seen on palms and soles
- Involves mucous membranes
- Transmission
- Person to person, airborne, or direct contact
- Highly transmissible after patient becomes
febrile or until all lesions resolved
Henderson DA, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense JAMA. 19992812127-2137
49Smallpox Comparsion
- Smallpox
- Palms and soles
- Begins on face/ext
- Synchronous evolution
- Fever and malaise 2-4 days prior to rash
- Chickenpox
- Seldom on palms or soles
- Begins on trunk
- Asynchronous evolution
- No fever prior to rash
50Smallpox Treatment
- Index case and all contacts should be quarantined
for 17 days or until resolution - Vaccination recommended within 4 days of exposure
- Vaccine and Vaccina Immune Globulin (VIG)
recommended if more than 1 week elapsed - All immunocompromised or exfoliative skin
disorders should be given VIG - Cidofir has shown significant in vitro and in
vivo activity in animals
51Plague
52Plague
- Infectious disease carried by fleas
- Two forms
- Pneumonic
- Bubonic
53Plague Pneumonic
- Spread by droplet through respiratory exposure
- Incubation time 2-3 days
- Symptoms Sudden onset of fever, chills,
headache, vomiting, diarrhea, purpura, cough with
hemoptysis - Signs Bronchopneumonia with patchy or
consolidated infiltrates - Progression to sepsis, dyspnea, respiratory and
circulatory failure - Death 12-24 hours if not treated
Inglesby TV, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense. JAMA. 20002832281-2290
54Plague Bubonic
- Spread by vector or hemotogenous spread
- Incubation 2-3 days
- Symptoms
- High fever, severe headache, nausea/vomiting and
rigors - Altered mentation, abdominal pain, and chest pain
- Signs
- Bubo formation in 6-8 hours especially in groin,
axilla or cervical areas - Tachycardia, hypotension, and leukocytosis
Inglesby TV, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense. JAMA. 20002832281-2290
55Plague
- Diagnosis
- Culture of sputum, bubo aspirate, blood, or CSF
- Serum Immunoassays
- Suspect if large numbers of fulminant gram
negative pneumonia - Mortality 50
56Plague Treatment
- Streptomycin in 30 mg/kg/day IM daily in 2
divided doses - Doxycycline 100 mg po every 12 hours
- Gentamycin 5 mg/kg IV/IM daily
- Chloramphenicol 15 mg/kg IV 4 times per day for
meningitis - Prophylactic Doxycycline for known exposure
57Botulism
58Botulism
- Toxin produced by Clostridium Botulinum
- Neurotoxin which blocks release of acetylcholine
- 15,000 times more potent than Sarin gas
- Symptoms
- Cranial nerve palsies such difficulty speaking or
swallowing - Descending paralysis, generalized weakness,
progresses to respiratory failure
Arnon SS, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense JAMA. 20012851059-1070
59Botulism
- Signs
- Dilated or unreactive pupils
- Drooping eyelids
- Diploplia
- Slurred speech
- Descending paralysis with intact mental status
- Transmission
- Aerosol inhalation
- Food ingestion
- No person to person spread
60Botulism Treatment
- Botulinum Equine Antitoxin A, B, C, D, or E.
- Supportive therapy Mechanical ventilation
Experimental vaccine has been used in high-risk
lab workers and military - Vaccine is NOT effective post-exposure
- Decontaminate individuals with soap and water
- Surface decontamination with heat or a chlorox
solution (bleach)
61Tularemia
62Tularemia
- Aerosolized Francisella Tularenis can cause
systemic illness and pneumonia - Incubation 3-10 days
- Symptoms
- Flu-like illness
- Cough with associated pleuritic pain
- Rare hemoptysis
63Tularemia
- Signs
- Bilateral patchy infiltrates with associated
hilar adenopathy and pleural effusions - Diffuse, varied rash
- Mortality 35 without treatment
- Transmissions
- Inhalational
- No person to person
Dennis DT, et al. for the Working Group on
Civilian Biodefense JAMA. 20012852763-2773
64Tularemia Treatment
- Live attenuated vaccine available but NOT
recommended post-exposure - Gentamycin, Streptomycin, or IV Ciprofloxin once
symptomatic - Prophylaxis with Ciprofloxin, Doxycycline, or
Tetracycline during incubation for possible
exposure
65Viral Hemorrahagic Fever
66Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Include Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, and Congo Crimean
- Incubation periods vary
- Transmission
- Contact with infected blood or secretions
67Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Symptoms
- Fever/chills, flushing, myalgias, dizziness, and
headaches - Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
- Petechia, bleeding, and edema
- Signs
- Disseminated Intravascular Coagulopathy (DIC)
- Hypotension and shock
- Mortality 50-80
68Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
- Intensive supportive care with hemodynamic
resuscitation. - Ribarvirin IV Lassa fever
- Investigational vaccine is available.
- Isolation most require anteroom and contact
precautions. - Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, and Congo Crimean require
negative air pressure room, respiratory isolation
with a HEPA mask, and contact precautions. - Surfaces should be cleaned with a chlorine
solution - Lab specimens double bagged and exterior cleaned.
- Extreme caution with all sharps.
69Role of the Primary Care Physician
- Have a high level of suspicion
- Keep bioterrorism agents in differential
diagnosis - Recognize typical bioterrorism syndromes
- Be aware of unusual epidemiologic trends
- Know treatment/prophylaxis of bioterrorism agents
- Know how to report suspected bioterrorism cases
70Questions