Affiliation:
1. Microbiology Service, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
2. Clinical Pathology Service, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland 20889
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In October 2001, a letter containing a large number of anthrax spores was sent through the Brentwood post office in Washington, D.C., to a United States Senate office on Capitol Hill, resulting in contamination in both places. Several thousand people who worked at these sites were screened for spore exposure by collecting nasal swab samples. We describe here a screening protocol which we, as a level A laboratory, used on very short notice to process a large number of specimens (3,936 swabs) in order to report preliminary results as quickly as possible. Six isolates from our screening met preliminary criteria for
Bacillus anthracis
identification and were referred for definitive testing. Although none of the isolates was later confirmed to be
B. anthracis
, we studied these isolates further to define their biochemical characteristics and 16S rRNA sequences. Four of the six isolates were identified as
Bacillus megaterium
, one was identified as
Bacillus cereus
, and one was an unidentifiable
Bacillus
sp. Our results suggest that large-scale nasal-swab screening for potential exposure to anthrax spores, particularly if not done immediately postexposure, may not be very effective for detecting
B. anthracis
but may detect a number of
Bacillus
spp. that are phenotypically very similar to
B. anthracis
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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