[Shadow_Group] Fw: "Major screw-up": Boot-camp virus runs rampant

shadowgroup-l at lists.resist.ca shadowgroup-l at lists.resist.ca
Mon Oct 4 23:22:04 PDT 2004


----- Original Message ----


The Seattle Times.

"Major screw-up": Boot-camp virus runs rampant 

Seattle Times Special Report 

By Michael J. Berens
Seattle Times staff reporter

 
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES 
Dr. Andrew Wiesen, head of the infectious-disease department at Madigan
Army Medical Center near Tacoma, hunts for predatory germs. He finds
cases of adenovirus infection each year among children of service
members. 
 
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times
 
More than three decades ago, the Pentagon created two pills to ward off a
lethal virus infecting boot-camp recruits. But defense officials
abandoned the program in 1996 as too expensive. Now recruits are dying,
thousands are falling ill, and the military is desperately racing to
bring back a vaccine it once owned. 
A top Pentagon official called it "a major screw-up," hobbling U.S.
efforts to rapidly deploy troops abroad. 

The respiratory virus now infects up to 2,500 service members monthly - a
staggering 1 in 10 recruits - in the nation's eight basic-training
centers, an analysis of military health-care records shows. 

Since the oral vaccinations stopped, the flulike germ, adenovirus, has
been associated with the deaths of at least six recruits, four within the
past year, according to military records and internal reports obtained by
The Seattle Times. 

In addition, hundreds of bed-ridden recruits miss critical training and
have to be sent through boot camp again, at a cost of millions of dollars
each year. Some are dismissed permanently with medical disabilities. 

The virus is expected to kill an additional six to 10 recruits before a
vaccine is again available, according to a classified Defense Department
briefing this year. 

The virus can strike beyond military boundaries as well. 

 SOURCE DOCUMENTS 
Key military documents and transcripts: 
Army "information paper"
Wyeth asked the military as early as 1984 for financial help. Also,
discloses four deaths in the last year. 

Defense Dept. health-care budget
The adenovirus program was suppressed for higher-priority expenditures. 

AFEB transcripts
The Armed Forces Epidemiological Board, an advisory panel of civilian
doctors, discusses the history and status of the adenovirus vaccine: 

Feb. 19, 2002
 · p.84 - How the vaccine was lost
 · p.91 - Lapse called a "major screw-up"
 · P.92 - Adenovirus history


Feb. 17, 2004
 · p.71 - "Our single greatest priority"
 · p.81 - Process of virus production
 · p.87 - "Missing the sense of urgency"
 · p.91 - What to do now
  PowerPoint
  · p.06 - Recommendations 
  · p.13 - Infection-rate chart
  · p.26 - Schedule for restoration
  · p.57 - Two recent fatal cases


May 12, 2004
 · p.103 - FDA helps speed process
 · p.116 - Plans for clinical trials
 · p.126 - Factors include cost, time
 · p.132 - "We are taking this seriously"
 · p.135 - Pregnancy risks unknown
 · p.142 - Bottom line: the vaccine works
 · p.149 - "Families will thank you"
 PowerPoint
  · p.04 - Recommendations 
  · p.48 - Summary


 
 
 
Six children of service members in the Puget Sound area were diagnosed
with the virus last winter, according to doctors at Madigan Army Medical
Center near Tacoma. 

Most people rebound from the infection within four days, but if
untreated, it can quickly turn ferocious, with fever, sore throat and
labored breathing leading to severe respiratory problems such as
pneumonia and even death. 

Adenovirus spreads by cough or touch, thrives in confined places such as
overcrowded barracks, and targets those with weakened immune systems.
Overstressed recruits, trying to get in shape and adapt to the military,
turn out to be ideal incubators for the virus. 

Nationally, the virus has killed more than two dozen civilian children
and adults in outbreaks in medical facilities in Illinois, Louisiana,
Iowa, Tennessee and New York, the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention reports. 

Military foot-dragging and high turnover of procurement officers have
caused the replacement vaccine to fall behind schedule, making pills
unavailable until at least 2007, possibly 2009, military health-care
records show. 

Dr. Margaret Ryan, a commander at the Naval Health Research Center in San
Diego and an expert on the virus, calls the vaccine lapse "indefensible."


Original vaccine manufacturer Wyeth Laboratories warned as early as 1984
that it would stop churning out pills costing $1 each unless defense
officials allocated $5 million to repair a deteriorating production
plant. 

Wyeth executives shuttered the facility in 1996. A military health budget
later gave a reason: "suppression of program to pay higher priority
items." 

The Pentagon's unwillingness to spend $5 million on health care is now
costing taxpayers tens of millions of dollars to remedy. 

In September 2001, plagued by boot-camp outbreaks, defense officials
finally agreed to spend $35.4 million to develop a new vaccine through
Barr Laboratories of Forest, Va. 

Shortly afterward, Assistant Secretary of Defense William Winkenwerder
Jr. ordered vaccine efforts accelerated, according to transcripts of a
Feb. 19, 2002, meeting at North Island Naval Air Station in San Diego. 

"This is one of the most disappointing facts and stories that I've
learned upon coming into my position," he said. "I don't want to cast
aspersions on anybody who had responsibility in the past, but to be blunt
this is a major screw-up. " 

Abandoning vaccine 

Lulled by seeming success, some military officials questioned the need to
continue the program. 

Few vaccinations have proved as easy or free of adverse reactions.
Recruits swallow two off-white pills, which cause a mild intestinal
infection that in turn creates protective antibodies against the two most
virulent strains, Type 4 and 7. 

Although adenovirus thrives best in barracks, the virus can prosper
anywhere. Most people experience at least one attack by age 10 and
recover in a few days. The germ is fatal in rare cases, particularly to
children or those with weak immune systems. 

  
MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES 
Spc. Karl Miller scours a culture from a patient for evidence of
contagious germs in a laboratory at Madigan Army Medical Center near
Tacoma. 
 
 
The military began using the vaccine in 1971 after adenovirus blanketed
military bases during the 1950s and '60s, killing an undisclosed number
of troops. The vaccine essentially vanquished the germ, military studies
show. 

Later, doctors ruefully noted that a newer, younger cadre of Pentagon
leaders failed to understand that the latent virus was controlled - not
eliminated - and that it could escape once again if vaccine restraints
were loosened. 

Pentagon funds "were unavailable" for Wyeth in the mid-1990s so the
company "was forced to end vaccine production," said Army epidemiologist
Terrence Lee of the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive
Medicine at an April 2002 symposium. 

Wyeth spokesman Douglas Petkus said the vaccine did not appear to have a
"high priority" at the time. 

As vaccine production came to a halt in 1996, vaccine stockpiles were
rationed to extend partial protection for three more years, with the
vaccine being dispensed only from September through March. 

After Wyeth's shutdown, defense officials scouted for a new manufacturer.
There were no bidders for a $14 million contract offer. In the interim,
the military pushed for better hygiene, such as hand washing, records
show. 

Other Pentagon officials, particularly in the Air Force, questioned the
need to restart a costly vaccine program, according to records at the
Army Surgeon General's Office. 

At Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Air Force officials, acting on
their own, had quietly stopped giving recruits the pills in 1987. There
had been no outbreaks and scant infections since, Air Force commanders
assured the Pentagon in April 1997. 

As a result, defense officials adopted a wait-and-see strategy. They
waited just seven weeks. 

On May 22, 1997, a feverish soldier staggered into the medical clinic at
Fort Jackson, S.C., the Army's largest basic-training center. Within
weeks, he was followed by 673 confirmed adenovirus diagnoses of Type 4,
peaking at 70 hospitalizations weekly. 

The outbreak was quickly detected - and deaths averted - because of the
foresight of Dr. Gregory Gray, a supervisor at the Navy's health-research
center in San Diego. He was worried about what would happen when the
vaccine was halted and, working in collaboration with others, had
established a system to track adenovirus at boot camps. 

But the military responded sluggishly after learning of the outbreak. It
took seven months to ship the vaccine from its dwindling supply to Fort
Jackson as the infection raged, according to records at the Army Surgeon
General's Office. The epidemic stopped once the pills were in use. 

Dr. Kevin Russell, a Navy commander at the San Diego center, said, "We
saw, as we feared and as we expected, adenovirus rates jump up." Russell,
who works with Ryan, says his research with Marine platoons shows that
only half of infected troops seek treatment, suggesting that adenovirus
has penetrated the military far deeper than suspected. 

Before long, adenovirus struck another boot camp, this time at the
Lackland base, starting in October 1999 during its grueling, first-time
"Warrior Week." Over the next eight months, with no pills available,
1,371 cadets ended up flooding the base hospital, Lackland records show. 

The adenovirus had irrevocably "found a home in Lackland" after all, Air
Force Col. Dana Bradshaw would later acknowledge. 

Virus turns deadly 

Within three months in 2000, the virus killed two recruits. 

What is adenovirus? 


Adenovirus is a common virus that attacks the respiratory system, causing
labored breathing, sore throat and fever. Most people experience at least
one attack by age 10 and recover in a few days. Spread by cough or touch,
the germ can be fatal, particularly to children or those with weak immune
systems. 
 
 
 
It wasn't long before adenovirus killed a recruit, the first one in 28
years. On May 19, 2000, a healthy 21-year-old man arrived at the Great
Lakes Naval Recruit Training Center, just north of Chicago, where up to
15,000 white-clad recruits packed the shoreline installation daily. 

The trainee developed a fever June 20 and sought medical treatment and
returned to his barracks. When symptoms remained unabated, he revisited
the clinic June 23 and was given an antibiotic for suspected bronchitis.
On June 24 he was found unconscious in the barracks. He never regained
consciousness and died July 3, according to case reports from the CDC. 

Within three months, the virus killed another young recruit at Great
Lakes. The 18-year-old had gone to the medical clinic three times
complaining of respiratory difficulties, and had been given a
decongestant and acetaminophen. On Sept. 18, he went back a fourth time,
suffering from severe indigestion, severe weakness and a purplish rash on
his legs, suggesting hemorrhaging. He died nine hours later, according to
CDC records. 

At the San Diego Navy research center, Ryan investigated the deaths. Her
findings provided a chilling warning: The virus could quickly kill
healthy people. 

"Therefore, it is quite possible that undetected adenoviral illness
contributed to many more recruit deaths - especially those deaths with
ill-defined causes or no pathogen identified - after the vaccine was
lost," Ryan wrote this year in the American Journal of Preventive
Medicine. 

After the two highly publicized Navy deaths, the Institute of Medicine,
an independent advisory committee of civilian doctors in Washington,
D.C., began to investigate the abandonment of the adenovirus vaccine. In
a scathing report, the doctors pointed to seven adenovirus epidemics at
bases that could have been prevented had the vaccine been properly
funded. 

Their November 2000 report said the military's procurement system proved
"incapable" of securing adenovirus vaccine, and its $14 million contract
offer was "clearly not sufficient." It called for "extreme urgency." 

Spurred by the report and the rising infection rates, the Defense
Department signed the $35.4 million contract with Barr in September 2001.


However, the vaccine will not be finished until at least 2007, with a
"potential push out" date of 2009, Alan Liss, Barr's senior director of
biotechnology, said. Although the new vaccine is a mirror of the old
formula, he said the drugmaker still must adhere to a lengthy
clinical-trial process. 

The military has closely held information about four of the six deaths
associated with adenovirus. The Times learned of the four deaths, each of
which occurred in the past year, when it obtained an internal March 31
report by the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command at Fort
Detrick, Md. 

"Within the past six months, four military recruits died from suspected
adenovirus infection," the report said. "This accentuates the urgent need
to quickly develop the adenovirus vaccines." 

Another report by the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board in February gave
scant details about three of the four deaths: the death of a Marine
recruit in San Diego on Sept. 3, 2003; the death of an Army recruit at
Fort Sill, Okla., on Nov. 3; and the Dec. 3 death of an Army recruit who
had just returned home from Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. 

When contacted for this story, the military would not provide names of
the recruits or information on the fourth death. 

Spreading to civilians 

The virus has killed children at several civilian facilities. 

At Madigan Army Medical Center near Tacoma, Dr. Andrew Wiesen, chief of
epidemiology and disease control, is trying to keep the potentially fatal
adenovirus from spreading within his hospital and leapfrogging into the
community. He tests all young patients exhibiting respiratory-disease
symptoms at Madigan, which sees about 3,000 patients a day. 

Wiesen, a lieutenant colonel, detects four to six cases of severe
pediatric adenovirus each year, usually in children of current or former
service members living in the Fort Lewis area. 

  
 
 
 
 
By segregating infected patients and treating symptoms aggressively,
doctors manage to keep the isolated cases from sparking outbreaks. 

Researchers have never linked a major civilian outbreak to exposures by
infected military personnel, although some military doctors fear that has
been the case, according to records at the Army Surgeon General's Office.


Military and public-health professionals are deeply concerned about one
of the virus' most deadly strains: Ad7d2. This strain flared up in the
civilian world in June 1996, just months after the military began
limiting the vaccine pills in boot camps to the winter months. The
outbreak killed seven children and infected six others at a pediatric
chronic-care facility in Houma, La. 

In November 1998, the Ad7d2 strain killed eight children and infected 23
others in a long-term pediatric care center in Chicago. 

The Chicago center was just miles away from the Great Lakes naval base
that had been hit the year before with an Ad7d2 outbreak that infected
396 recruits, CDC records show. 

The germ spread rapidly child to child, carried by nurses who didn't wash
their hands or who had become ill themselves, a CDC investigation found. 

In Iowa, four children at a pediatric chronic-care facility died from
Ad7d2 in October 2000. Sixteen others were infected. 

Dr. Gray, who had set up the boot-camp tracking system for the germ, now
is spearheading the nation's most ambitious civilian studies of
adenovirus, at the University of Iowa. He has a $2.8 million grant from
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to collect
adenovirus samples over three years. Doctors at Children's Hospital &
Regional Medical Center in Seattle will submit a proposal to participate
in the study. 

Gray said he thinks the Ad7d2 strain has become prevalent nationally. The
15-city study targets high-risk populations, including young children,
transplant patients and military recruits. 

At Madigan, Wiesen suspects the study will confirm that adenovirus is a
largely unrecognized civilian problem. 

"Nobody routinely tests for adenovirus because it looks like other
respiratory diseases," he said. "If you don't test, you'll never know
it's a problem." 

Michael J. Berens: 206-464-2288 or mberens at seattletimes.com<mailto:mberens at seattletimes.com>

 
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