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Category A Agents

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Title: Category A Agents


1
  • Category A Agents
  • Anthrax

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2
Objectives
  • Understand and explain the major anthrax case
    studies
  • Explore the toxic mechanisms associated with
    anthrax infection
  • Study the epidemiology of anthrax infections

3
Anthrax Case Studies
  • Post 9/11 Attack
  • Gruinard Island
  • USSR

4
Anthrax Incidents Post 9-11 Letters
5
Anthrax Letters
  • Letters laced with the Ames Strain of anthrax
    were sent to American Media, The New York Post,
    Senators Leahy and Daschele, and TV Newsman, Tom
    Brokaw
  • Additional letters were believed to have been
    sent to ABC, CBS, and possibly other media
    organizations. The ABC/CBS letters were believed
    to have been addressed to Peter Jennings and Dan
    Rather
  • Post marks from Trenton, NJ on 2 dates October 8
    and September 18

6
Anthrax Letters
  • The Daschle and Leahy envelopes had cellophane
    tape around the edges. 
  • Was it there to prevent any anthrax from getting
    out of the envelope to contaminate the mail
    system? 
  • Most "experts" think the tape was an attempt to
    keep the anthrax from getting out before the
    letter was opened - which it failed to do.

7
Letters were Xerox-ed copies (2 total
letters)The paper is odd shaped
8
Anthrax Letters
9
The Pharmaceutical Fold
  • The "pharmaceutical fold" is the way small
    quantities of medicinal powders were dispensed
    for centuries (and its also the way small
    quantities of cocaine and heroin are sold
    today). 
  • The fold is done with two horizontal folds
    followed by two vertical folds, so that the
    powder inside the paper is neatly packaged. 
  • Most scientists do not think the terrorist
    intended to contaminate the postal system

10
Anthrax Letters
  • The actual letters are obviously meant to be seen
    as coming from some Muslim terrorist. 
  • There is nothing in the letters that would be
    known only to a Muslim. 
  • Experts in such things say that these phrases are
    not common usage.  "Allah is great", for example,
    is not a common expression. 
  • It is more common for a Muslim to say "Allahu
    akbar", which means "God is great".

11
Anthrax Letters
  • All the anthrax found in the letters is now known
    to be from the "Ames strain", which originated in
    Texas and was sent to the US Army for research in
    1980. 
  • The Army later distributed it to various academic
    institutions for study. 
  • Since that time the strain has been further
    widely distributed to researchers around the
    world. 
  • A DNA analysis shows that the anthrax originated
    at an US Army facility in Fort Detrick, MD. 
  • While other government laboratories obtained Ames
    anthrax from Ft. Detrick, the number of such labs
    is not very large.

12
Anthrax Letters
  • The FBI has stated "The anthrax utilized in (the
    Daschle letter) was much more refined, more
    potent, and more easily disbursed than letters
    (to the New York Post and NBC)'
  • The Leahy and Daschle letters contained enough
    refined anthrax spores to kill over 100,000
    people.

13
Anthrax Letters - Victims
  • Age    Location         type       
    name
  • 7 mos  ABC - New York   cutaneous   child
    23     NBC - New York   cutaneous   Casey
    Chamberlain 27     CBS - New York  
    cutaneous   Claire Fletcher 30     New York
    Post    cutaneous   Joanna Huden 32    
    NJ Post Office   cutaneous   Teresa Heller
    34     New York Post    cutaneous   male
    38     NBC - New York   cutaneous   Erin
    O'Connor 38     New YOrk Post   
    cutaneous   Mark Cunningham 39     NJ Post
    Office   cutaneous   Richard Morgano
    61    New York         inhalation 
    Kathy Nguyen 63    AMI - Florida   
    inhalation  Bob Stevens 73     AMI -
    FLorida    inhalation  Ernesto Blanco

14
Anthrax Letters - Victims
  • Age    Location         type        name
  • 35     NJ Post Office   cutaneous   Patrick
    O'Donnell 43     NJ Post Office   inhalation 
    female 47    DC Post Office   inhalation 
    Joseph Curseen 51     NJ Post Office  
    cutaneous   Linda Burch 55    DC Post Office  
    inhalation  Thomas Morris 56     NJ Post
    Office   inhalation  Norma Wallace 56     DC
    Post Office   inhalation  Unk. 57     DC Post
    Office   inhalation  Leroy Richmond 59     DC
    Mail Center   inhalation  David Hose 94   
    Connecticutt     inhalation  Ottilie Lundgren

15
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16
Anthrax Letters Clean-up
17
Anthrax Letters Clean-up
  • The Hart Senate Building was fumigated for 13
    hours (9 hours pumping it in, 4 hours removing
    it) with chlorine dioxide gas (ClO2)
  • The decon effort was lead by Richard Rupert of
    the EPA
  • Initial efforts to decon had failed -
    afterwards, it was determined that the air was
    too dry
  • The humidity was raised to 75 and the 2nd decon
    was successful

18
Anthrax Letters - Summary
  • Later information indicated that the anthrax in
    the letters to the two Senators was ten times as
    pure as the anthrax in the letters to the media.
  • Because the anthrax spores in the mailing to the
    Senators were much plentiful and thereby more
    deadly, they did more harm. 

19
Anthrax Letters - Summary
  • In all the letters, individual spores could pass
    through the porous paper (All paper has tiny
    openings or pores that are too small for the eye
    to see). 
  • Merely handling the unopened letter sent to The
    New York Post was enough to give three people
    cutaneous anthrax. 
  • The Senators' letters allowed fine powdered
    anthrax to escape into the air and cause several
    deaths.

20
Anthrax Letters - Summary
  • Officials believe the attacks, which killed five
    people, made 13 others ill and caused more than
    30,000 people to take precautionary antibiotics,
    were the work of a scientist who had access to
    the a specific strain of the bacteria - the Ames
    strain.

21
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22
Anthrax Spore Trap
23
Anthrax
  • Gruinard Island

24
Anthrax Island (Gruinard, G.B.)
25
Gruinard Island, G.B.
26
Anthrax Island
  • During WWII (1942), British scientists
    experimented with anthrax as a potential
    biological warfare agent by using it to wipe out
    a flock of sheep on Gruinard, a small island off
    of Scotland.
  • Not only did it do the job, it made the island
    uninhabitable for almost 50 years.

27
Anthrax Island
  • Sheep were taken to an open field, secured in
    wooden frames, and exposed to a bomb that
    scattered the spores. The sheep started dying
    three days later.
  • Despite attempts to disinfect Gruinard Island,
    the spores left by the experiments kept the
    island in quarantine for 48 years.
  • The final WW II report on the Gruinard Island
    tests suggested anthrax could be used to render
    cities uninhabitable "for generations".

28
Anthrax Island
  • In 1986 an English company was paid half a
    million pounds (over 800,000) to decontaminate
    the 520-acre island by soaking the ground in 280
    tons of formaldehyde diluted in 2000 tons of
    seawater.
  • Topsoil was also removed in sealed containers.

29
Anthrax Island
  • To prove that the clean-up was successful a flock
    of sheep was allowed to graze the island at the
    behest of an independent watchdog set up by the
    Ministry of Defense.
  • On 24 April, 1990, the then junior Defense
    Minister, Michael Neubert, made the half-mile
    journey from the mainland to declare Gruinard
    safe by removing its red warning sign.

30
Symbolic Removal of Gruinard Island Sign
31
Anthrax
  • USSR
  • Compound 19

32
U.S.S.R. Compound 19
  • People were stumbling into hospitals and clinics
    with high fevers, headaches, coughs, vomiting,
    chills and chest pains.
  • Eventually at least 66 people died, and likely
    many more, never knowing the real reasons why.
  • It was the beginning of one of the strangest and
    most horrifying episodes of the Cold War.
  • In April, 1979, in the city of Sverdlovsk, an
    epidemic of deadly anthrax disease was spreading
    through homes and factories.
  • Soviet authorities blamed the outbreak on
    contaminated meat.

33
U.S.S.R. Compound 19
  • In the weeks that followed, scientists carried
    out dozens of autopsies and found the anthrax
    bacteria in lungs and lymph nodes of those who
    had died, indicating it had been carried through
    the air, not by contaminated meat.
  • The victims were all downwind from a top-secret,
    walled compound that was a Soviet biological
    warfare research center. -COMPOUND 19

34
U.S.S.R. Compound 19
  • G.I. and Inhalational Anthrax
  • President Boris Yeltsin, who at the time of the
    epidemic was the Communist Party head of
    Sverdlovsk, said in May 1992 that "the KGB
    admitted that our military developments were the
    cause." But Yeltsin has never elaborated.

35
U.S.S.R. Compound 19
36
Compound 19 Today
37
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38
U.S.S.R. Bioweapons Program
  • Known as Biopreparat
  • Included 6 research laboratories
  • Included 5 production facilities
  • Employed 55,000 scientists

39
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40
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41
Sverdlovsk Anthrax Spread
42
Anthrax
  • Toxicology, Epidemiology and Treatment

43
Anthrax
  • Zoonotic disease caused by Bacillus anthracis
    enters the human population (normally) through
    contact with infected animals
  • Described in biblical times
  • First animal vaccine developed by Louis Pasteur
    in 1881
  • Used for bioterrorism in 2001

44
Bacillus anthracis
  • Gram-positive aerobic bacteria
  • Spores may remain viable in soil for years
  • Spores inactivated by paraformaldehyde vapor,
    hypochlorite, phenol, or autoclave
  • Toxins responsible for tissue damage and edema

45
Anthrax Toxins
46
Anthrax Pathogenesis
  • Spores enters through broken skin or mucous
    membranes
  • Germinate in macrophages, replicate in lymph
    nodes and intracellular space
  • Bacteria produce antiphagocytic capsule
  • Production of toxins cause tissue destruction and
    edema

47
Anthrax Pathogenesis
  • Inhaled spores may reside in alveoli without
    germination for weeks
  • Antibiotics effective against vegetative form but
    not spores
  • Disease may develop after antibiotics
    discontinued
  • Delayed onset not described for cutaneous or
    gastrointestinal forms

48
Anthrax Clinical Features
  • Three clinical forms
  • cutaneous (most common in natural exposure
    situations)
  • gastrointestinal (rare)
  • inhalation

49
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Incubation period 1-12 days
  • Papule, then vesicle, then necrotic ulcer
    (eschar) with black center
  • Usually painless
  • Case-fatality
  • without antibiotics 5-20
  • with antibiotics - lt1

50
Gastrointestinal Anthrax
  • Incubation period 1-7 days
  • Pharyngeal involvement includes oropharyngeal
    ulcerations with cervical adenopathy and fever
  • Intestinal involvement includes abdominal pain,
    fever, bloody vomiting or diarrhea
  • Case-fatality estimated at 25-60

51
Inhalation Anthrax
  • Incubation period 1-7 days (range up to 43
    days)
  • Prodrome of cough, myalgia, fatigue, and fever
  • Rapid deterioration with fever, dyspnea, cyanosis
    and shock, often with radiographic evidence of
    mediastinal widening
  • Case fatality
  • without antibiotic treatment 86- 97
  • with antibiotic treatment - 75 (45 in 2001)

52
Anthrax Laboratory Diagnosis
  • Gram stain of clinical samples (skin lesion,
    blood, pleural fluid, CSF)    
  • Culture
  • Adjunct Assays
  • PCR
  • Serology (PA based ELISA)
  • Immunohistochemistry

53
Anthrax Medical Management
  • Antibiotics
  • ciprofloxacin or doxycycline and gt1 additional
    drug active against B. anthracis
  • IV, then PO
  • 30 to 60 days duration
  • Aggressive supportive care

rifampin, vancomycin, penicillin, ampicillin,
chloramphenicol, imipenem, clincamycin,
clarithromycin
54
Anthrax Epidemiology
  • Reservoir Infected animals, soil
  • Transmission Direct contact (cutaneous)
  • Ingestion (gastrointestinal)
  • Inhalation
  • Temporal pattern None
  • Communicability Not communicable (inhalation)
  • or rare (cutaneous)

55
Anthrax EpidemiologyPersons at Risk
  • Agricultural exposure to animals (rare)
  • Laboratorians exposed to B. anthracis spores
    (rare)
  • Processors of wool, hair, hides, bones or other
    animal products (extremely rare)
  • Biological terrorism

56
  • Anthrax - United States, 1951-2001

57
Anthrax Bioterrorism Attacks United States, 2001
  • 22 cases (11 inhalation, 11 cutaneous) in 4
    states and DC
  • B. anthracis sent through U.S. mail
  • Most exposures occurred in mail sorting
    facilities and sites where mail was opened

58
Bioterrorism-Related Anthrax United States, 2001
NYC Letters
DC Letter
October
September
MMWR 200150941-8, 1077-9.
inhalation case
59
Safe Mail Handling
  • Do not open suspicious mail
  • inappropriate or unusual labeling
  • strange or no return address
  • postmark different from return address
  • excessive packaging material
  • Keep mail away from face
  • No not blow or sniff mail or mail contents
  • Wash hands after handling
  • Avoid vigorous handling (tearing, shredding)
  • Discard envelopes

60
Anthrax Vaccines
  • 1881 Pasteur develops first live attenuated
  • veterinary vaccine for livestock
  • 1939 Improved live veterinary vaccine
  • 1954 First cell-free human vaccine
  • 1970 Improved cell-free vaccine licensed

61
Anthrax Vaccine
  • Cell-free culture filtrate of toxigenic strain of
    B. anthracis
  • Filtrate contains protective antigen (PA) and
    other cellular products
  • Adsorbed to aluminum hydroxide as an adjuvant
  • Contains small amounts of benzethonium chloride
    (preservative) and formaldehyde (stabilizer)

62
Anthrax Vaccine Efficacy
  • 95 seroconversion following 3 doses
  • One controlled human trial using earlier vaccine
  • 92.5 efficacy (cutaneous and inhalation disease
    combined)
  • Animal models suggest protection against
    inhalation anthrax
  • Duration of immunity unknown

63
  • Anthrax Vaccine Efficacy in Macaques

64
Anthrax Vaccine Schedule
  • Initial doses at 0, 2, and 4 weeks
  • Additional doses at 6, 12, and 18 months
  • Annual booster doses thereafter
  • Alternative schedules being investigated

65
Anthrax VaccinePreexposure Vaccination
  • Persons working with production quantities or
    concentrations of B. anthracis cultures
  • Persons engaged in activities with a high
    potential for production of aerosols containing
    B. anthracis
  • Persons with increased risk of exposure to
    intentional release of B. anthracis (e.g.,
    certain military personnel)

66
Anthrax VaccinePostexposure Vaccination
  • No efficacy data for postexposure vaccination of
    humans
  • Postexposure vaccination alone not effective in
    animals
  • Combination of vaccine and antibiotics appears
    effective in animal model

67
Anthrax Postexposure Prophylaxis Vaccine Combined
with Antibiotics
  • Henderson, et al (1956) earlier PA-based
    vaccine
  • Methods 5 days of penicillin compared to
    penicillin plus postexposure vaccination
  • Results 9 of the 10 receiving just penicillin
    died, while all of the macaques receiving both
    penicillin and vaccine survived
  • Friedlander et al (1993) aluminum hydroxide PA
    filtrate vaccine (current FDA-licensed vaccine)
  • Methods 30 days of various antibiotics compared
    to 30 days of doxycycline plus postexposure
    vaccination
  • Results 9 of the 10 animals in the
    doxycycline-alone arm survived, while all
    receiving doxycycline and vaccine survived

68
Anthrax Vaccine Adverse Events
  • Local reactions
  • minor 20-50
  • severe 1
  • Systemic symptoms 5-35
  • Severe reactions rare

69
Anthrax VaccinePrecautions and Contraindications
  • Severe allergic reaction following a previous
    dose or to a vaccine component
  • Previous anthrax disease
  • Moderate or severe acute illness

70
Anthrax Postexposure Antibiotic Prophylaxis
  • Ciprofloxicin, doxycycline, and procaine
    penicillin G approved for postexposure
    prophylaxis after aerosol exposure to B.
    anthracis
  • Due to latency of spores in lung, antibiotics
    should continue for 30-60 days or more
  • Discontinue antibiotics after third dose of
    vaccine

71
Recommended Postexposure Prophylaxis to Prevent
Inhalational Anthrax
Initial Therapy Duration Adults Ciprofloxacin
60 days (including pregnant 500 mg PO BID
women and OR immunocompromised) Doxycycline
100 mg PO BID Children Ciprofloxacin 60 days
10-15 mg/kg PO Q 12 hrs OR Doxycycline gt8
yrs and gt45 kg 100 mg PO BID gt8 yrs and lt45 kg
2.2 mg/kg PO BID lt8 yrs 2.2 mg/kg PO BID
Ciprofloxacin dose should not exceed 1 gram per
day in children.
72
Anthrax in Biological Terrorism
  • B. anthracis considered likely biological
    terrorism threat
  • aerosolized stable spore form
  • human LD50 8,000 to 40,000 spores (one deep
    breath at site of release) Clearly Debated
  • acute illness with high fatality rate

73
  • Anthrax Cutaneous

Vesicle developmentDay 2
Day 6
Day 4
Day 10
Eschar formation
74
Anthrax Cutaneous
75
Anthrax Cutaneous
NEJM 1999 341 815 826
76
  • Anthrax Cutaneous

Healing after treatment
77
Anthrax Cutaneous
78
Anthrax Cutaneous
Notice the edema and typical lesions
79
Anthrax Inhalational
?Mediastinal widening JAMA 199928117351745
80
Mediastinal Widening and Pleural Effusion on
Chest X-Ray in Inhalational Anthrax
81
Bioterrorism Information
  • CDC Bioterrorism website
  • www.bt.cdc.gov
  • Smallpox and anthrax vaccine ACIP statements
  • www.cdc.gov/nip/publications

82
National Immunization Program
  • Hotline 800.232.2522
  • Email nipinfo_at_cdc.gov
  • Website www.cdc.gov/nip
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