| Literature DB >> 12396909 |
Daniel B Jernigan1, Pratima L Raghunathan, Beth P Bell, Ross Brechner, Eddy A Bresnitz, Jay C Butler, Marty Cetron, Mitch Cohen, Timothy Doyle, Marc Fischer, Carolyn Greene, Kevin S Griffith, Jeannette Guarner, James L Hadler, James A Hayslett, Richard Meyer, Lyle R Petersen, Michael Phillips, Robert Pinner, Tanja Popovic, Conrad P Quinn, Jennita Reefhuis, Dori Reissman, Nancy Rosenstein, Anne Schuchat, Wun-Ju Shieh, Larry Siegal, David L Swerdlow, Fred C Tenover, Marc Traeger, John W Ward, Isaac Weisfuse, Steven Wiersma, Kevin Yeskey, Sherif Zaki, David A Ashford, Bradley A Perkins, Steve Ostroff, James Hughes, David Fleming, Jeffrey P Koplan, Julie L Gerberding.
Abstract
In October 2001, the first inhalational anthrax case in the United States since 1976 was identified in a media company worker in Florida. A national investigation was initiated to identify additional cases and determine possible exposures to Bacillus anthracis. Surveillance was enhanced through health-care facilities, laboratories, and other means to identify cases, which were defined as clinically compatible illness with laboratory-confirmed B. anthracis infection. From October 4 to November 20, 2001, 22 cases of anthrax (11 inhalational, 11 cutaneous) were identified; 5 of the inhalational cases were fatal. Twenty (91%) case-patients were either mail handlers or were exposed to worksites where contaminated mail was processed or received. B. anthracis isolates from four powder-containing envelopes, 17 specimens from patients, and 106 environmental samples were indistinguishable by molecular subtyping. Illness and death occurred not only at targeted worksites, but also along the path of mail and in other settings. Continued vigilance for cases is needed among health-care providers and members of the public health and law enforcement communities.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12396909 PMCID: PMC2730292 DOI: 10.3201/eid0810.020353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Demographic, clinical, and exposure characteristics of 22 cases of bioterrorism-related anthrax, United States, 2001
| Case no. | Onset date, 2001 | Date of anthrax diagnosis by lab testing | Statea | Age (yrs) | Sex | Race | Occupation | Case statusb | Anthrax presentationb | Outcome | Diagnostic tests |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 9/22 | 10/19 | NY | 31 | F | W | NY Post employee | Suspect | Cutaneous | Alive | Serum IgG reactive |
| 2 | 9/25 | 10/12 | NY | 38 | F | W | NBC anchor assistant | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy IHC+ / serum IgG reactive |
| 3 | 9/26 | 10/18 | NJ | 39 | M | W | USPS machine mechanic | Suspect | Cutaneous | Alive | Serum IgG reactive |
| 4 | 9/28 | 10/15 | FL | 73 | M | W, H | AMI mailroom worker | Confirmed | Inhalational | Alive | Pleural biopsy IHC+ / serum IgG reactive |
| 5 | 9/28 | 10/18 | NJ | 45 | F | W | USPS mail carrier | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy IHC+ and PCR+ / serum IgG reac. |
| 6 | 9/28 | 10/12 | NY | 23 | F | W | NBC TV news intern | Suspect | Cutaneous | Alive | Serum IgG reactive |
| 7 | 9/29 | 10/15 | NY | 0.6 | M | W | Child of ABC employee | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy IHC+ / blood PCR+ |
| 8 | 9/30 | 10/4 | FL | 63 | M | W | AMI photo editor | Confirmed | Inhalational | Dead | Cerebrospinal fluid culture + |
| 9 | 10/1 | 10/18 | NY | 27 | F | W | CBS anchor assistant | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy IHC+ / serum IgG reactive |
| 10 | 10/14 | 10/19 | PA | 35 | M | W | USPS mail processor | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Blood culture + / serum IgG reactive |
| 11 | 10/14 | 10/28 | NJ | 56 | F | B | USPS mail processor | Confirmed | Inhalational | Alive | Blood PCR+ / pleural fluid cytology IHC+ / serum IgG reactive |
| 12 | 10/15 | 10/29 | NJ | 43 | F | A | USPS mail processor | Confirmed | Inhalational | Alive | Pleural fluid IHC+ / bronchial biopsy IHC+ / serum IgG reactive |
| 13 | 10/16 | 10/21 | VA | 56 | M | B | USPS mail worker | Confirmed | Inhalational | Alive | Blood culture + |
| 14 | 10/16 | 10/23 | MD | 55 | M | B | USPS mail worker | Confirmed | Inhalational | Dead | Blood culture + |
| 15 | 10/16 | 10/26 | MD | 47 | M | B | USPS mail worker | Confirmed | Inhalational | Dead | Blood culture + |
| 16 | 10/16 | 10/22 | MD | 56 | M | B | USPS mail worker | Confirmed | Inhalational | Alive | Blood culture + |
| 17 | 10/17 | 10/29 | NJ | 51 | F | W | Bookkeeper | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy IHC+ and PCR+ / serum IgG reactive |
| 18 | 10/19 | 10/22 | NY | 34 | M | W, H | NY Post mail handler | Suspect | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy IHC+ |
| 19 | 10/22 | 10/25 | VA | 59 | M | W | Government mail processor | Confirmed | Inhalational | Alive | Blood culture + |
| 20 | 10/23 | 10/28 | NY | 38 | M | W | NY Post employee | Confirmed | Cutaneous | Alive | Skin biopsy culture + |
| 21 | 10/25 | 10/30 | NY | 61 | F | A | Hospital supply worker | Confirmed | Inhalational | Dead | Pleural fluid and blood culture + |
| 22 | 11/14 | 11/21 | CT | 94 | F | W | Retired at home | Confirmed | Inhalational | Dead | Blood culture + |
aNY, New York; FL, Florida; NJ, New Jersey; PA, Pennsylvania; VA, Virginia; DC, District of Columbia; MD, Maryland; CT, Connecticut; W, white; B, black; A, Asian; W,H, white with Hispanic ethnicity; NY, New York; NBC, National Broadcasting Company; AMI, American Media Inc.; USPS, United States Postal Service; CBS, Columbia Broadcasting System; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; IHC, immunohistochemical staining; + positive; IgG, immunoglobulin G. bCase status and anthrax presentation are described in the anthrax surveillance case definition in the Methods section.
Comparison of inhalational and cutaneous bioterrorism-related anthrax cases, United States, 2001
| Case characteristic | All cases, n=22 (%) | Inhalational cases n=11, (%) | Cutaneous cases n=11, (%) | p value (inhal. vs. cutan.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 46 (0.6–94) | 56 (43–94) | 35 (0.6–51) | <0.01 |
| Male sex (percent) | 12 (55) | 7 (64) | 5 (45) | 0.7 |
| Occupation/exposure sitea | ||||
| Mail handler | 12 (55) | 8 (73) | 4 (36) | 0.13 |
| Media company employees | 6 (27) | 1 (9) | 5 (45) | |
| Other | 4 (18) | 2 (18) | 2 (18) | |
| No./deaths (case-fatality ratio) | 5 (23) | 5 (45) | 0 (0) | 0.04 |
| No. of cases following contaminated lettersb | ||||
| September 18 mailing | 11 (50) | 2 (18) | 9 (81) | <0.01 |
| October 9 mailing | 8 (36) | 7 (64) | 1 (9) | |
Associations suggest that age and occupation varied between inhalational and cutaneous cases; however, it is uncertain if age or occupation were significant independent factors for having a case of anthrax. Wilcoxon two-sample test for nonparametric data was used. All other measurements used two-sided Fisher’s exact test. bBased on documented or presumed paths of contaminated envelopes; excludes three cases-patients who could not be linked to a particular mailing.
Figure 1Epidemic curve for 22 cases of bioterrorism-related anthrax, United States, 2001.
Figure 2Cases of anthrax associated with mailed paths of implicated envelopes and intended target sites. NY, New York; NBC, National Broadcasting Company; AMI, American Media Inc.; USPS, United States Postal Service; CBS, Columbia Broadcasting System. *Envelope addressed to Senator Leahy, found unopened on November 16, 2001, in a barrel of unopened mail sent to Capitol Hill; **dotted line indicates intended path of envelope addressed to Senator Leahy.