| Literature DB >> 29970201 |
E Bennett1, I M Hall1, T Pottage1, N J Silman1, A M Bennett1.
Abstract
Two fatal drumming-related inhalational anthrax incidents occurred in 2006 and 2008 in the UK. One individual was a drum maker and drummer from the Scottish Borders, most likely infected whilst playing a goat-skin drum contaminated with Bacillus anthracis spores; the second, a drummer and drum maker from East London, likely became infected whilst working with contaminated animal hides.We have collated epidemiological and environmental data from these incidents and reviewed them alongside three similar contemporaneous incidents in the USA. Sampling operations recovered the causative agent from drums and drum skins and from residences and communal buildings at low levels. From these data, we have considered the nature of the exposures and the number of other individuals likely to have been exposed, either to the primary infection events or to subsequent prolonged environmental contamination (or both).Despite many individual exposures to widespread low-level spore contamination in private residences and in work spaces for extended periods of time (at least 1 year in one instance), only one other individual acquired an infection (cutaneous). Whilst recognising the difficulty in making definitive inferences from these incidents to specific residual contamination levels, and by extending the risk to public health, we believe it may be useful to reflect on these findings when considering future incident management risk assessments and decisions in similar incidents that result in low-level indoor contamination.Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus anthracis; anthrax; drumming-related; indoor contamination
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29970201 PMCID: PMC6090713 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268818001085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 4.434
PCR and culture results from samples taken from buildings in Scotland and England 2006
| Location | PCR-positive No. (% of total) | Culture-positive No. (% of total) | Total samples tested |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case's home | 0 | 0 | 103 |
| Village hall | 10 (52.6) | 2 (10.5) | 19 |
| Village farmhouse | 5 (12.2) | 0 | 41 |
| Village farmhouse (garage floor) | 1 (7.1) | 1 (7.1) | 14 |
| House, England (floors) | 12 (16) | 2 (2.6) | 75 |
| Van | 2 (12.5) | 0 | 16 |
| Drums | 3 (12) | 2 (8.0) | 25 |
| Skins | 2 (33.3) | 1 (16.6) | 6 |
| Total | 35 (11.7) | 8 (2.7) | 299 |
Summary estimates of the number of individuals exposed to primary exposure and subsequent low-level residual Bacillus anthracis environmental contamination
| Incident | Nature of primary exposure | Numbers potentially exposed to primary exposure | Numbers potentially exposed | Levels of secondary environmental spore contamination | Duration of secondary exposure | Number of cases resulting from any exposure | Estimated total of individuals potentially exposed to primary exposure and secondary contamination |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhalational anthrax (fatal), Scottish Borders, 2006 | Playing | ~74 (attendees at same drumming classes as fatal case) | ~400 | 333–1000 (CFU per 30 ml sample) (widespread contamination) | 5 months (village hall) | 0 | 478 |
| ~4 (in private residences) | 33–66 (CFU per 30 ml sample) (widespread contamination) | Up to 1 year in one residence | |||||
| Inhalational anthrax (fatal), London, 2008 | Drum making and manipulating contaminated animal hides | 1 (drum making colleague) | NA | No environmental contamination (contamination level on drums and hides ~1000 CFU) | Not known | 0 | 1 |
| Gastrointestinal anthrax, New Hampshire, USA, 2009 | Playing a contaminated drum or exposure to contaminated food | 79 (attendees at drumming workshop) | 5 (living or working at event site) | 20–44 (total CFU) | 3½ weeks (community centre) | 0 | 84 |
| Inhalational anthrax, New York City and Pennsylvania, 2006 | Manipulating/shaving contaminated animal hides for drum making | 4 | 4 (same individuals as previous column) | No quantitative sampling reported but widespread contamination | Not known | 0 | 8 |
| Cutaneous anthrax, Connecticut, 2007 | Manipulating/shaving contaminated animal hides for drum making | 0 | 4 (household members; including one anthrax case) | <10 | Not known | 1 | 4 |
| Estimated total |
Assumed to be most likely source of exposure following investigation.
Assuming there was a ‘one-time’ exposure.
Estimates based on reported information.
Number based upon estimate of hall users over a 5-month period.
The limit of detection by culture was 20 CFU per sample.
Culture limits of investigations not given.