Beyond the Dirty Dozen: A Proposed Methodology for Assessing Future Bioweapon Threats

被引:25
作者
Cieslak, Theodore J. [1 ]
Kortepeter, Mark G. [2 ]
Wojtyk, Ronald J. [3 ]
Jansen, Hugo-Jan [4 ]
Reyes, Ricardo A. [5 ]
Smith, James O. [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nebraska, Med Ctr, Dept Epidemiol, Coll Publ Hlth, Omaha, NE 68198 USA
[2] Uniformed Serv Univ Hlth Sci, Sch Med, Off Dean, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA
[3] Canadian Forces Hlth Serv Grp Headquarters, Operat Med Div, Directorate Hlth Serv Operat, Ottawa, ON K1A 0K6, Canada
[4] Netherlands Minist Def, Support Command, Expert Ctr Force Hlth Protect, Doorn l MPC 56A, The Hague, Netherlands
[5] Walter Reed Natl Mil Med Ctr, Hlth Phys Off, Bethesda, MD 20889 USA
[6] Off US Army Surg Gen, CBRN Program Off, Falls Church, VA 22041 USA
关键词
BIOLOGICAL TERRORISM; BIOTERRORISM; OUTBREAKS; WARFARE; DISEASE; AGENTS;
D O I
10.1093/milmed/usx004
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Defense policy planners and countermeasure developers are often faced with vexing problems involving the prioritization of resources and efforts. This is especially true in the area of Biodefense, where each new emerging infectious disease outbreak brings with it questions regarding the causative agent's potential for wea-ponization. Recent experience with West Nile Virus, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, Monkeypox, and H1N1 Influenza highlights this problem. Appropriately, in each of these cases, the possibility of bioterrorism was raised, although each outbreak ultimately proved to have a natural origin. In fact, determining whether an outbreak has an unnatural origin can be quite difficult. Thus, the questions remain: could the causative agents of these and other emerging infectious disease outbreaks pose a future weaponization threat? And how great is that threat? Should precious resources be diverted from other defense efforts in order to prepare for possible hostile employment of novel diseases by belligerents? Answering such critical questions requires some form of systematic threat assessment. Methods: Through extensive collaborative work conducted within NATO's Biomedical Advisory Council, we developed a scoring matrix for evaluating the weaponization potential of the causative agents of such diseases and attempted to validate our matrix by examining the reproducibility of data using known threat agents. Our matrix included 12 attributes of a potential weapon and was provided, along with detailed scoring instructions, to 12 groups of biodefense experts in 6 NATO nations. Study participants were asked to score each of these 12 attributes on a scale of 0-3: Infectivity, Infection-to-Disease Ratio (Reliability), Predictability (& Incubation Period), Morbidity & Mortality (Virulence), Ease of Large-Scale Production & Storage, Aerosol Stability, Atmospheric Stability, Ease of Dispersal, Communicability, Prophylactic Countermeasure Availability, Therapeutic Countermeasure Availability, and Ease of Detection. Reproducibility of scoring data was assessed by examining the standard deviations (SD) of mean scores. Results: Our results were unexpected. Several familiar biothreat diseases such as anthrax and tularemia were judged, by our experts, to be less threatening than many others owing to a number of factors including ease of detection, lack of communicability, and the ready availability of countermeasures. Conversely, several toxins were judged by experts to have very high potential as threat agents owing, in part, to their reliability, virulence, and a lack of available countermeasures. Agreement among experts, as determined by lower SD about a mean score, was greater for more familiar threats. Discussion: Our study was designed to provide a concise and east-to-apply set of criteria that could be used by NATO nations to evaluate emerging infectious disease threats with respect to their weaponization potential. Our results were unexpected. We believe that a lack of appropriate weighting factors may explain these results and suggest that future studies weigh each of the 12 proposed criteria based on the intended use of the assessment data and other situational factors. We believe that the greatest value of our study lies in a codification of the attributes of a biological weapon.
引用
收藏
页码:E59 / E65
页数:7
相关论文
共 25 条
  • [1] Alibek K., 1999, Biohazard
  • [2] [Anonymous], 2004, HSPD 10
  • [3] [Anonymous], 2000, FIELD MAN TREATM BIO
  • [4] Carus WS, 2001, WORKING PAPER BIOTER, P61
  • [5] The weapon potential of a microbe
    Casadevall, A
    Pirofski, L
    [J]. TRENDS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2004, 12 (06) : 259 - 263
  • [6] SCIENCE AND SOCIETY Microbial threat lists: obstacles in the quest for biosecurity?
    Casadevall, Arturo
    Relman, David A.
    [J]. NATURE REVIEWS MICROBIOLOGY, 2010, 8 (02) : 149 - 154
  • [7] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1999, CRIT AG HLTH PREP SU
  • [8] Biological warfare - A historical perspective
    Christopher, GW
    Cieslak, TJ
    Pavlin, JA
    Eitzen, EM
    [J]. JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1997, 278 (05): : 412 - 417
  • [9] Darling RG, 2009, DISASTER MED
  • [10] Discernment between deliberate and natural infectious disease outbreaks
    Dembek, Z. F.
    Kortepeter, M. G.
    Pavlin, J. A.
    [J]. EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION, 2007, 135 (03) : 353 - 371