SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. -- Despite the grateful lull that has followed
Sept. 11 and the anthrax scare in 2001, bioterrorism remains a very real
threat, a Food and Drug Administration counterterrorism official says.
Dr. Boris Lushniak, the FDA's assistant commissioner for
counterterrorism policy and assistant U.S. surgeon general, hopes that
vigilance remains active in medical offices and emergency departments
across the United States--but frankly, he has his doubts. "I
daresay we are going to be caught off guard," Dr. Lushniak said
during the Alfred L. Weiner Lecture at the annual meeting of the Noah
Worcester Dermatological Society.
A disturbing number of organisms meet all or some of the criteria
for an ideal agent of biological terrorism: easy to obtain and work
with; inexpensive to produce; able to be widely disseminated; fairly
stable in the environment; capable of producing high morbidity and
mortality; transmissible person to person; and difficult to diagnose and
treat, which would allow an attack to quickly overwhelm the health care
system.
On a positive note, the U.S. government has now stockpiled enough
vaccine against smallpox to inoculate every man, woman, and child in the
country, Dr. Lushniak reported.
Yet, when U.S. public health authorities were notified recently
about an individual with suspicious skin lesions on an inbound flight
from China, they were unable to find any hospital in a major
metropolitan area willing to admit and quarantine the 200 people aboard
until danger to the public was ruled out.
Fortunately, in that case, the threat was nullified during 4 hours
of frantic planning as the airliner approached U.S. shores, but it
stands as a wake-up call about preparedness. "If this is ever to
occur, we'd really have to change the way we do our business,"
he said.
The potential agents of greatest concern--labeled category A by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention--remain the same as ever:
anthrax, smallpox, plague, tularemia, viral hemorrhagic fevers, and
botulinum toxin.
The timing could be critical.
Anthrax, for example, can be controlled with antibiotics if it is
recognized and treated with postexposure prophylaxis before protein-rich
toxins are produced by the organism. "If you can nip it in the
spore bud, so to speak, then you really have solved the problem,"
he said.
Preventive efforts aimed at a potential bioterrorism attack have
health implications that physicians should recognize, Dr. Lushniak said.
He described a 2007 case of household transmission of the live
virus through a vaccine involving 1 of the nearly 500,000 Americans
inoculated against smallpox either through the military or a civilian
volunteer program. The active-duty father came into contact with his
infant son, who had eczema, within a month of the father having received
a smallpox vaccination prior to deployment overseas.
Although the father's vaccine site was covered during the
unplanned visit, the child developed a high fever and a generalized
papular, vesicular rash that began on the head and neck. Within days,
umbilicated lesions covered more than 50% of the child's body and
he required mechanical ventilation.
After a course of antiviral and vasopressor medications,
intravenous immunoglobulin, and supportive therapy, the child was
discharged from the hospital--48 days after admission.
"This ain't real smallpox, people!" Dr. Lushniak
said to emphasize the high level of transmission there would be in an
actual attack, and the importance of then having a "ring"
vaccination strategy aimed at everyone in contact with an exposed
subject within 3-4 days.
In the meantime, physicians should be aware of individuals at high
risk for vaccine reactions, including pregnant women, patients with skin
disorders characterized by epidermal disruption, immunodeficient
patients, those with life-threatening allergies or cardiovascular
disease, and their household contacts, he said.
RELATED ARTICLE: How Physicians Can Get Involved
* Learn more by going to www.bt.cdc.gov.
* Join the civilian volunteer Medical Reserve Corps and participate
in disaster response in your community (www.medicalreservecorps.gov).
* Train and deploy with a National Disaster Medical Assistance Team
(www.hhs.gov/aspr/opeo/ndms/teams/dmat.html).
* Join the active reserve corps of the U.S. Public Health Service
(http://usphs-ppac.org).
Source: Dr. Lushniak
BY BETSY BATES
Los Angeles Bureau
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