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Aerosols and Aerobiology Chad J. Roy, Ph.D. Tulane University School of Medicine Trends in Science and Technology Relevant to the Biological Weapons Convention 1-3 November 2010 Beijing, CHINA Aerosols and Aerosol-Acquired Disease • Natural epidemics and airborne communicable disease – Few ‘obligate’ airborne pathogens – Nearly impossible to study dynamic phenomena empirically • Experimental characterization & infection – Synthetic aerosols from anthropometricallyderived sources – Optimized for delivery, deposition The aerobiologic pathway of communicable infectious disease from Roy and Milton, NEJM, 2005 natural (communicable) and experimental infection • ‘natural’ infection – – – – heterogeneous size/dispersion (temporal) exposures microbial characteristics • experimental infection – homogeneity – synchronization • aerosol-acquired disease – primary v. communicable (natural) infection • disease (model) development – microbial susceptibility/infectivity – ‘quantal’ biological response – comparative pathogenesis/size modality An exemplar of natural airborne infection: communicable transmission of M.tb • modulation of particle size changes aerosol microbial efficiency • What can be derived from the study of natural aerosol transmission of M.tb? 1e+6 sneeze cough 8e+5 number of particles • transmission of M.tb in the context of aerosol exposure • only obligate pathogen transmitted as in air/by aerosol • models to study this phenomena • corollary to vaccine & pathogenesis studies • experimental infection uses the same size distribution (1-2 m MMAD) regardless of model species 6e+5 4e+5 2e+5 0 <1-1 1-2 2-4 size range (m) 4-8 8-15 estimating the quanta of infection (C C o ) Iqt P 1 exp nC a where P is the probability of infection for susceptible individual, I is the number of infectors, q is the quantum generation rate by an infected person, t is the total exposure time, n is the number of people in the ventilated space, C and Co are the average CO2 concentration indoors and outdoors, respectively, and Ca is the CO2 concentration added to exhaled breath during breathing. • host – innate susceptibility – the nature and number of interactions with ‘producers’ – P is dynamic (too much so to model) • pathogen – innate microbial fitness – source (from host) – particle aging/duration while in transit – dynamic size while in transit M.tb aerosol (oshkosh) temporal development of clinical tuberculosis • • 106 the probability of exposure and ‘infection’ from in the context of naturallygenerated aerosols dynamics of aerosol transmission DI85 Dp = 7 CFU SigH (H) *** FI48 Dp = 8 CFU ** 105 106 EL04 Dp = 4CFU EK70 Dp = 4 CFU *** ** 1.0e+7 1.0e+6 105 exhaled breath particles 1.0e+5 -14d 1.0e+4 -7d naive PRE +30D +60D 1.0e+3 1.0e+2 1.0e+1 +7d +14d +21d +28d +35d +42d +49d +56d +63d postexposure • • 1.0e+0 1.0e-1 1.0e-2 0.3 0.5 1.0 5.0 10 25 -14d -7d naive +7d +14d +21d +28d +35d +42d +49d +56d +63d postexposure significant parameters in temporal development of clinical disease physiological changes are induced in clinical tb (EBA production) experimental aerobiological infection: noteworthy considerations • Microbial characterization – microbial susceptibility in the environment – compensatory mechanisms of pathogens in stress environments – distribution from various generators • Physical characterization – Particle size and heterodispersity – Multimodal distributions (environment and sythentic) • Initial deposition/interaction in the respiratory system • Host-pathogen interaction in the respiratory system • innate response v. immune evasion mechanisms employed by some pathogens • Modeling aerosol-acquired disease in appropriate animal species • differential pathogenesis from exposure to distinct particle distributions modeling airborne-acquired infection source generation airborne droplet nuclei pretreatment generation viability delivery Y. pestis in aerosol Organism infectivity E. coli Bacillus globigii, vegetative Bacilus globigii, spore Bacillus smegatis Strepococcus hemolyticus Strepococcus viridans Staphylococcus aureus Bacteriophage Influenza virus Mycobacterium tuberculosis runs relative vunerability* 6 5 9 4 13 13 5 - 1.00 1.68 0.22 0.52 0.97 0.93 1.35 2.14 1.36 0.84 Sample Efficiencies of Biological Threat Agents in Aerosol Impact of Viability upon Estimated Aerosol Concentration 1e-5 spray factor 1e-6 1e-7 1e-8 1e-9 Y. pestis B. anthracis B. mallei VEE ricin Viability Differences with a bacterial species Burkholderia mallei acapsular (avirulent) 1e-4 1e-5 spray factor 1e-6 wild-type (pathogenic) quorum-sensing (attenuated) 1e-7 Type III SS (avirulent) 1e-8 1e-9 1e-10 1e-11 ATCC23344C DD3008 I1 IVA Differences between genomically similar bacterial species B. mallei v. B. pseudomallei 1e-4 BP wild-type (saprophyte) 1e-5 spray factor 1e-6 BM wild-type (obligate) 1e-7 1e-8 1e-9 1e-10 1e-11 ATCC23344C 10266C Aerosol biophysical characteristics • Concentration – a function of the number and size of particles generated • Particles characterized by: – geometric and aerodynamic size – shape, density and surface area – electrical charge / conductance – number and strength of interactions – between other particles or cloud components Biological Aerosol Size • Use equivalent diameter that derives from particle property relevant to bioaerosol exposures – Mechanism of deposition – Particle size • Aerodynamic diameter: diameter of a unit-density sphere having the same gravitational settling velocity as the particle being measured Irregular Shape Varying Densities Equivalent Diameter = 1 g/cm3 = 4 g/cm3 = 9 g/cm3 = 1 g/cm3 d=? d = 3 m d = 2 m d = 6 m particle generation methods for infectious agents • Standard generation methods employed for generating larger particle pathogencontaining aerosols that retain viability – spinning top aerosol generator – compared to standard industrial nebulizer and resulting distribution 1e+5 SPG - number SPG - mass LPG - number LPG - mass 1e+4 1e+3 1e+2 1e+1 1e+0 1e-1 1e-2 1e-3 1e-4 1e-5 0 2 4 6 8 10 particle diameter (m) 12 14 Source-Based Particle Distribution 10 MMAD,1.2 m; g,1.4 10 8 6 2 1 10 particle size () >25 10.0-25.0 5.0-10 1.0-5.0 4 0.5-1.0 0.1 0.3-0.5 dM/dlogDp 1 Initial Deposition and Clearance • Particle deposition defines the organs/tissues with first contact • Clearance defines the duration the body is in contact with the agent – bulk clearance – mucociliary clearance – alveolar clearance • Ultimately both play major roles in the agents pathology and pathogenesis Human deposition patterns From ARL, PSU, 2007 From Edwards et al., 2009 Optimization of particle distributions 1.0 URT TB LRT TOTAL deposition fraction 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.01 0.1 particle diameter (m) 1 10 Initial host-pathogen interaction • Targeted tissues at the most susceptible portion of the respiratory tract • Syntheticallyprepared pathogencontaining aerosols take advantage of deposition into the LRT agent/host response in mutimodal exposures • Minimal database for understanding differences in host response from exposure to particle size • regional differences in deposition • ↑ importance in locally-acting agents (e.g., ricin toxin) • primary endpoint → death • secondary endpoint → wt loss • ↑ importance in organ-targeting agents (e.g., alphaviral agents, EEE, VEE) • ↓ importance for agents that induce systemic, but not necessarily pneumonic disease state comparative pathogenesis: ricin toxin A B Nasal turbinates (A) and olfactory epithelium (B) of a mouse exposed to 5 m aerosols by whole-body chamber configuration. Epifluorescent ricin particles localized to the olfactory epithelium in the turbinates (A; 40X) whereas particles are localized to all levels of the olfactory epithelium (B; 100X). A B Lung section of mouse exposed to 5 m ricin aerosols (A; 200X) or 1 m particles (B; 400X). The lungs of the mouse exposed to the nonrespirable aerosol (A) shows no significant lesions. The lung of the mouse exposed to a respirable ricin aerosol (B) indicates marked interstitial pneumonia with alveolar edema, fibrin and hemorrhage. from Roy et al., 2003 Advances is inhalation delivery (mucosal immunization) • why? – scientific • concept of ‘dual immunity’ – elicits protective immunity – Needed for protection against enteric disease – Immunity at mucosal surfaces (route of entry) – Both serological IgG and IgA • equivalent seroconversion • • • • Lower adverse advents target-specific potency Rapidity of boost dosing – practical • self-administration • logistics – stockpile – holding temperature • reduction of healthcare personnel Aerosol Vaccination Against Infectious/Toxic Agents some recent (and not so recent) efforts • ‘biodefense’ vaccines – anthrax1, tularemia2,3, VEE3, SEB7 • other – Tuberculosis6,7 diptheria4, tetanus5, measles8,10, rubella9,10 1 Aleksandrov et al., Experiment of mass aerogenic vaccination against anthrax (1959) et al., Aerogenic immunization of the monkey and guinea pig with live tularemia vaccine (1961) 3 Sawyer et al., Simultaneous aerosol immunization of monkeys with live tularemia and live VEE vaccines (1964) 4 Muromstev et al., Experimental reimmunization with diptheria toxoid by inhalation (1960) 5 Yamashiroya et al., Aerosol vaccination with tetanus toxoid (1966) 6 Cohn et al., Airborne immunization against tuberculosis (1958) 7 Tseng et al., Humoral immunity to aerosolized SEB vaccinated with SEB toxoid-containing microspheres (1995) 8 Fernadez de Castro et al., Measles vaccination by the aerosol method in Mexico (1997) 9 Ganguly et al., Rubella virus immunization in pre-school children via the respiratory tract (1974) 10Sepulveda-Amor, J. et al., A randomized trial demonstrating successful boosting reaponses following simultaneous aerosols of measles and rubella (MR) vaccines in school age children (2002) 2 Eigelsbach Early Abandonment of the Effort lack of advanced technology paired with suboptimal reagents • early crude vaccines were reactogenic • mainly live attenuated or toxoids used – adverse events over injection – no identified mucosal adjuvants • Individual inhalation devices largely unavailable • failure to identify ‘dual immunity’ concept • troop compliance – was ‘cold chain’ logistical support up to the task? Alternative Delivery: Inhalation recent trends in biopharmaceuticals • Therapeutics1 – – – – – – – – calcitonin (osteoporosis) teriparatide (osteoporosis) rGH (GH disorder) interferon (hepatitis C) heparin (deep-vein thrombosis) insulin (diabetes) extendin-4 (diabetes) 1-antitrypsin (congenital emphysema) • Vaccines – (EZ) measles – influenza 1Minter, B.A., Emerging Delivery Systems for Biopharmaceuticals, Decision Resources, 2001 Aerosol Vaccination for Measles and Rubella 1 Acute Adverse Events (% incidence) N Reactions (307) SC (225) AEROSOL P Fever Rhinitis Cough joint pain Diarrhea 6.5 3.3 17.2 4.9 1.3 1.6 0.4 0.4 0 0 0.004 0.02 0.0001 0.0001 0.4 Seropositivity/Seroconversion Rates (geometric mean) SC AEROSOL P PV seropositivity Seroconversion Ab titers 99.7 55.1 153.5 98.8 52.9 159.0 0.04 0.6 0.4 PV seropositivity Seroconversion 92.2 82.4 99.6 98.8 0.001 0.001 Measles Rubella 1Data from Sepulveda-Amor, J. et al., 2002 Micro- and Nano-particle Vaccine Delivery Systems Monolithic micro- and nano-particles that are ideal for encapsulation of subunit or inactivated vaccine Reservoir or ‘balloon’ microcapsules designed for live vaccine or active protein. Encapsulation Strategies: Oral and Intranasal Delivery • Microcapsules: 200μm to 2000μm • Nanoparticles: 50-300 nm concluding remarks • Aerosols and aerosol-acquired disease – Clear distinction between natural and experimental infection – Unique characterization of pathogen precedes optimized viability, size, and concentration • Demonstrative in focused animal studies • Emerging technologies in biopharmaceutics that have facilitated the rapid development of speciallyformulated inhalable biologics • Recent proliferation in active development of inhalable biologicals continues to advance the science of microbially-active inhalable preparations