Accuracy of Screening for Inhalational Anthrax after a Bioterrorist Attack
- 2 September 2003
- journal article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 139 (5_Part_1) , 337-345
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-139-5_part_1-200309020-00009
Abstract
Bioterrorism using anthrax claimed five lives in the United States in 2001 and remains a potential public health threat. In the aftermath of a large-scale anthrax attack, mass screening to identify early inhalational anthrax may improve both the management of individual cases and the efficiency of health resource utilization. To develop the evidence base for outpatient anthrax screening protocols by quantifying differences in clinical presentation between inhalational anthrax and common viral respiratory tract infections. Review, compilation, and data extraction from English-language case reports of inhalational anthrax and epidemiologic studies of influenza and other viral respiratory infections. 13 reports of 28 cases of inhalational anthrax from 1920 to 2001 and 5 studies reporting on the clinical features of 2762 cases of influenza and 1932 cases of noninfluenza viral respiratory disease. Characterization of presenting clinical symptoms in anthrax and viral disease and calculation of likelihood ratios for the presence of selected clinical features. Fever and cough do not reliably discriminate between inhalational anthrax and viral respiratory tract infection. Features suggestive of anthrax include the presence of nonheadache neurologic symptoms (positive likelihood ratio cannot be calculated), dyspnea (positive likelihood ratio, 5.3 [95% CI, 3.7 to 7.4]), nausea or vomiting (positive likelihood ratio, 5.1 [CI, 3.0 to 8.5]), and finding of any abnormality on lung auscultation (positive likelihood ratio, 8.1 [CI, 5.3 to 12.5]). In contrast, rhinorrhea (positive likelihood ratio, 0.2 [CI, 0.1 to 0.4]) and sore throat (positive likelihood ratio, 0.2 [CI, 0.1 to 0.5]) are more suggestive of viral respiratory tract infection. Inhalational anthrax has characteristic clinical features that are distinct from those seen in common viral respiratory tract infections. Screening protocols based on these features may improve rapid identification of patients with presumptive inhalational anthrax in the setting of a large-scale anthrax attack.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Management of AnthraxClinical Infectious Diseases, 2002
- Modeling the Public Health Response to Bioterrorism: Using Discrete Event Simulation to Design Antibiotic Distribution CentersMedical Decision Making, 2002
- Anthrax as a Biological Weapon: Updated Recommendations for ManagementInfection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 2002
- Prevention of Inhalational Anthrax in the U.S. OutbreakScience, 2002
- Fatal Inhalational Anthrax With Unknown Source of Exposure in a 61-Year-Old Woman in New York CityJAMA, 2002
- Bioterrorism-Related Inhalational Anthrax: The First 10 Cases Reported in the United StatesEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2001
- The Economic Impact of a Bioterrorist Attack: Are Prevention and Postattack Intervention Programs Justifiable?Emerging Infectious Diseases, 1997
- A fatal case of pulmonary anthrax.BMJ, 1976
- Radiological changes in inhalation anthrax a report of radiological and pathological correlation in two casesClinical Radiology, 1975
- Epidemiologic Study of a Fatal Case of Inhalation AnthraxArchives of environmental health, 1969