Biological terrorism is our future, and smallpox is a serious
threat, insists Ken Alibek, who headed the former Soviet
Union’s biological weapons program. Now vice chairman of Advanced
Biosystems, based in Alexandria, Va., Alibek was one of 200
epidemiologists and tropica disease experts who gathered in
Geneva last October to discuss how nations should prepare
for an outbreak. The U.S. has already outlined its plan a
voluntary regimen that aims to vaccinate a total of 10.5 million
people in phases.
Some scientists, however, see little data to support such
widespread vaccination. The plan is partly based on mock scenarios
and mathematical models that attempt to predict the magnitude
of an outbreak. One major problem is that they must use data
on smallpox transmission gathered from pre-1979 Africa, where
the last smallpox case occurred. The virus might behave completely
differently in today’s unvaccinated cosmopolitan societies.
And all models rely on assumptions that by their nature are
inaccurate.
The most grave outbreak scenario is Dark Winter, to which
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has referred a number
of times. It predicts that simultaneous attacks in three shopping
malls could balloon to as many as one million dead and three
million infected.
But many scientists find the scenario too extreme. What is
most contentious is the infection rate. Dark Winter assumes
that each infected person will transmit the virus to 10 others
and even to descendants for several generations. This is not,
however, what epidemiologists have observed in the field.
Rarely was smallpox transmitted to more than two or three
people, if at all, says J. Michael Lane, former director of
the smallpox eradication program at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, and most were infected by prolonged
exposure. What is more, the virus is not transmissible until
physical symptoms appear. By that time, Lane states, the person
usually feels so awful, that they are bedridden. And even
though the virus may not behave the same way today, Dark Winter
assumes that the sick are not effectively isolated, which
is totally unrealistic, he adds.
So instead of vaccinating millions, Lane would prefer to vaccinate
a core group of first responders around 40,000 people and
then only to vaccinate people who come into contact with an
infected person (the vaccine is also effective up to four
days after infection). His plan more closely reflects what
has actually transpired in terms of vaccination numbers [see
Spotty Defense, News Scan; Scientific American, May 2003].
Proponents of mass vaccination also cite a few exceptional
cases in which smallpox spread easily. In 1970 a young engineer
returned to his home in Meschede, Germany, after spending
some time in Pakistan. Soon after, he checked himself into
a hospital with flulike symptoms. Doctors quickly diagnosed
him with smallpox, but during his stay 19 other people also
became ill. The most bizarre case was the infection of a person
who had briefly walked into the hospital lobby, discovered
he was lost and left. The sick engineer had a cough, a highly
unusual symptom, but that nonetheless made the virus highly
transmissible. No one knows whether the smallpox strain was
unusually hardy or the patients uncharacteristically weak.
Another outbreak occurred in 1963 when a young man, who had
spent some time in India, came down with smallpox on returning
to his home in Poland. By the time health authorities figured
out he had smallpox several weeks later, 99 other people became
ill. To contain the outbreak, authorities vaccinated eight
million people, even though the population had been vaccinated
as infants. (The illness tends to be less severe in vaccinated
people, however.) Although scary, these stories are isolated
cases and clearly do not represent how the virus behaved in
the majority of outbreaks. Surveillance and containment strategies
were key components of the smallpox eradication program,
Lane notes. We must not lose sight of that.
Supporters of more widespread vaccination, however, are sticking
to their guns. Although everyone agrees that an attack is
unlikely, any outbreak, however small, would be economically
and psychologically devastating, Alibek states. Widespread
vaccination in his view would help preempt the chaos likely
to follow. (His company, Advanced Biosystems, conducts research
on therapeutics to counter biological weapons.) Countries
hoping to defend against a smallpox attack, it seems, will
have to strike the balance between science and fear.