Cieslak Theodore J, Kortepeter Mark G, Wojtyk Ronald J, Jansen Hugo-Jan, Reyes Ricardo A, Smith James O
Department of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198.
Office of the Dean, School of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814.
Mil Med. 2018 Jan 1;183(1-2):e59-e65. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usx004.
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 weaponization. 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.
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.
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.
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.
国防政策规划者和对策开发者常常面临涉及资源和工作优先级的棘手问题。在生物防御领域尤其如此,每一次新出现的传染病疫情都会引发关于病原体武器化潜力的问题。西尼罗河病毒、严重急性呼吸综合征、猴痘和甲型H1N1流感的近期情况凸显了这一问题。相应地,在这些案例中的每一个,都引发了生物恐怖主义的可能性,尽管每次疫情最终都证明源于自然。事实上,确定一次疫情是否有非自然起源可能相当困难。因此,问题依然存在:这些及其他新出现的传染病疫情的病原体是否会构成未来的武器化威胁?这种威胁有多大?是否应该从其他国防工作中转移宝贵资源,以防范交战方可能恶意使用新型疾病?回答这些关键问题需要某种形式的系统威胁评估。
通过在北约生物医学咨询委员会内进行的广泛合作,我们开发了一个评分矩阵,用于评估此类疾病病原体的武器化潜力,并试图通过使用已知威胁病原体检查数据的可重复性来验证我们的矩阵。我们的矩阵包括潜在武器的12个属性,并连同详细的评分说明一起提供给6个北约国家的12组生物防御专家。要求研究参与者在0 - 3的量表上对这12个属性中的每一个进行评分:传染性、感染与疾病比率(可靠性)、可预测性(&潜伏期)、发病率和死亡率(毒力)、大规模生产和储存的难易程度、气溶胶稳定性、大气稳定性、传播的难易程度、传染性、预防性对策的可用性、治疗性对策的可用性以及检测的难易程度。通过检查平均得分的标准差(SD)来评估评分数据的可重复性。
我们的结果出人意料。我们的专家判断,炭疽和兔热病等几种常见的生物威胁疾病由于包括易于检测、缺乏传染性以及对策易于获得等多种因素而比许多其他疾病威胁性小。相反,专家们判断几种毒素作为威胁病原体具有非常高的潜力,部分原因是它们的可靠性、毒力以及缺乏可用对策。对于更熟悉的威胁,专家之间的一致性(由关于平均得分的较低标准差确定)更高。
我们的研究旨在提供一套简洁且易于应用的标准,北约国家可用于评估新出现的传染病在武器化潜力方面的威胁。我们的结果出人意料。我们认为缺乏适当的加权因素可能解释了这些结果,并建议未来的研究根据评估数据的预期用途和其他情况因素对提出的12个标准中的每一个进行加权。我们认为我们研究的最大价值在于对生物武器属性的编纂。