Abstract
Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious Gram-negative bacterium that is the etiologic agent of tularemia in animals and humans. The incidence of tularemia is very low with a lack of comprehensive data that describe disease in humans due to difficulty in understanding time and routes of exposure. Under the title Operation Whitecoat, researchers at Ft. Detrick, MD conducted 40 clinical studies of tularemia from 1958 to 1968. In these studies, one of the objectives was to evaluate candidate countermeasures for treatment or prophylaxis of disease after exposure to Francisella tularensis strain Schu S4 by inhalation. These studies were reviewed retrospectively to delineate the early signs and symptoms or natural history of pneumonic tularemia and examine the efficacy of tetracycline in controlled human clinical studies. Using vital signs, onset of fever was objectively defined and calculated for each subject, while Adverse Events reported after exposure were also used to define the timing of disease onset and symptoms of early disease. There was a dose response relationship between time to fever onset and exposed dose at 200 cfu (172.8 h), 700 cfu (163.2 h), 2,500 cfu (105.3 h), and 25,000 cfu (75.5 h). Onset of fever was typically the earliest sign of disease at all doses but was often accompanied by symptoms such as headache, myalgia, chest pain, and nausea, irrespective of dose except at 200 cfu where only 50% of subjects exhibited fever onset or symptoms. Examining the efficacy of different treatment regimens of tetracycline, ineffective treatments were indicated by relapse of disease (fever and Adverse Events) after cessation of antibiotic treatment. Stratification of the data suggested that treatment for <14 days or doses <2g/day was associated with increased percentage of subjects with relapse of disease symptoms. Although these types of human challenge studies would not be ethically possible now, the climate post-World War II supported human testing under rigorous conditions with informed consent. Thus, going back and analyzing these unique clinical human challenge studies has helped describe the course of infection and disease induced by a biothreat pathogen and possible countermeasures for treatment under controlled conditions.
Highlights
Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious Gram-negative bacterium that is the etiologic agent of tularemia in animals and humans [1]
Human cases of tularemia have been classified in six classic forms: ulceroglandular when skin ulceration and inflamed lymph nodes are present, glandular when inflamed lymph nodes exist without obvious skin ulceration, oculoglandular when eye involvement is present, pharyngeal when stomatitis and exudative pharyngitis or tonsillitis, abdominal pain, nausea, cervical lymphadenopathy, diarrhea, and gastrointestinal bleeding are present, typhoidal when no other route is obvious, and pneumonic, which includes the outcomes of infection by inhalation [5]
All human volunteer subjects were males on active duty in the Army and were studied for their responses upon vaccination with a tularemia vaccine (LVS) and/or exposure to Francisella tularensis strain Schu S4 by inhalation. The objectives of these studies varied throughout the years; evaluating the therapeutic efficacy of antibiotic regimens in alleviating the clinical symptoms associated with pneumonic tularemia, assessing the impact of disease on task performance by exposed subjects using a battery of standardized tasks, testing immunogenicity of vaccination strategies, and in some cases, determining the ability of vaccination strategies to protect against subsequent F. tularensis inhalation challenge
Summary
Francisella tularensis is a highly infectious Gram-negative bacterium that is the etiologic agent of tularemia in animals and humans [1]. All human volunteer subjects were males on active duty in the Army (primarily members of Seventh Day Adventist Church) and were studied for their responses upon vaccination with a tularemia vaccine (LVS) and/or exposure to Francisella tularensis (called Pasteurella tularensis at that time in the Operation Whitecoat studies) strain Schu S4 by inhalation The objectives of these studies varied throughout the years; evaluating the therapeutic efficacy of antibiotic regimens in alleviating the clinical symptoms associated with pneumonic tularemia, assessing the impact of disease on task performance by exposed subjects using a battery of standardized tasks, testing immunogenicity of vaccination strategies, and in some cases, determining the ability of vaccination strategies to protect against subsequent F. tularensis inhalation challenge. This report delineates the early signs and symptoms or natural history of pneumonic tularemia in a unique cohort of controlled human clinical studies and demonstrates the efficacy of tetracycline and streptomycin in treatment of disease in humans
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.