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A Box of Forgotten Smallpox Vials Was Just Found In an FDA Closet

Jason Koebler writes: The last remaining strains of smallpox are kept in highly protected government laboratories in Russia and at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. And, apparently, in a dusty cardboard box in an old storage room in Maryland. The CDC said today that government workers had found six freeze-dried vials of the Variola virus, which causes smallpox, in a storage room at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland last week. Each test tube had a label on it that said "variola," which was a tip-off, but the agency did genetic testing to confirm that the viruses were, in fact, smallpox.

15 of 120 comments (clear)

  1. And I thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Forgetting my car keys was a big deal....

    1. Re:And I thought by mythosaz · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm not gay, but twenty bucks is twenty bucks.

    2. Re:And I thought by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Funny

      It didn't exterminate entire civilizations: leaving a pitiful remnant of shell-shocked survivors to envy the dead and wonder why their gods had forsaken them amidst the ruins of their culture is an important part of the smallpox outreach approach!

    3. Re:And I thought by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

      It didn't exterminate entire civilizations

      Actually, some ethnic groups are believed to have been completely exterminated by smallpox. For instance, the Beothuk tribe of Newfoundland, had only one survivor of a smallpox epidemic, and she later died with no offspring. Smallpox first spread through the Americas in the early 1500s, when most tribes were pre-literate, so there are probably some other exterminated tribes that are lost to history.

  2. Um.... by roc97007 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > And, apparently, in a dusty cardboard box in an old storage room in Maryland.

    And, who knows? Maybe a dozen other places. How did that rule of thumb go? For every security breach you find, there's probably several you didn't find.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:Um.... by sumdumass · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, this should be kept in mind every time someone says "we've eradicated disease X, lets destroy the lab samples".

      http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/artic...

    2. Re:Um.... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wasn't the rule of thumb "Take off and nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."?

  3. Ancient Demon Discovered by silvermorph · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We love fantasy novels where someone discovers a box that holds ancient power and destruction, and then the hero has to save the day.
    Well, it just happened.

    1. Re:Ancient Demon Discovered by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's a trifle less dramatic because most ancient evils can resist conventional incineration...

      The tales of "Pandora's autoclave" and "Bilbo 'biohazard' Baggins transports some stuff to the nearest incinerator" just haven't caught the public imagination.

    2. Re:Ancient Demon Discovered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      The tales of (...) "Bilbo 'biohazard' Baggins transports some stuff to the nearest incinerator" just haven't caught the public imagination.

      Frodo Baggins, on the other hand...

  4. Re: Patience, my pretty... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sure. Let's vaccinate against a disease that is eradicated in the wild. Never mind the possibility (likelihood, in a large enough population) of adverse side effects - eczema vaccinatum, progressive vaccinia, and postvaccinal encephalitis, for example. (14-52 people per million vaccinated, or .0014%-.0052%.)

    No vaccine is side effect free. In most cases, the risk of the side effects is justified by the fact that their likelihood is far, far lower than the likelihood of the disease in an unvaccinated population, and they tend to be far lower in severity than the disease. But for smallpox, given that it no longer occurs in the wild, the risk is unjustifiable.

  5. I always suspected... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm glad smallpox has finally come out of the closet.

  6. But don't worry... by Arkh89 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Don't worry, the box has already filled a complaint to Google in order to remove all search results related to this story...
    And it will gone for good...

  7. Re: Patience, my pretty... by mysidia · · Score: 5, Informative

    but if we just preemptively vaccinate then city zero won't be an issue.

    The Vaccine for Smallpox is not entirely safe, because the vaccine consists of essentially another virus called Vaccinia.

    This is an infectious virus; the Smallpox Vaccine infects the person who has been vaccinated.

    Unlike many other Vaccines -- however, there are significant rates of adverse reaction. Further improvements to the vaccine require human testing, and since the disease has been deemed eradicated --- no improvements can really be made:

    Average 1 in 1 to 2 million people vaccinated result in deaths, many more people experience severe complications but don't die. If there are 300 million people vaccinated; then you could estimate that 300 people would die of complications. It is quite unlikely for you to be one of the 300.......... it's also unlikely for the Smallpox vaccine to help you against Smallpox in the future. Still..... the complications can be pretty nasty, even if you do survive. Most people should probably deem the extra protection not worth the more immediate very real dangers:

    Post-Vaccinial Encephalitis: 1 in ~3 million people vaccinated. 25% of these: permanent neurological damage; 15-25% die.

    Vaccinia necrosum: Progressive tissue death ("necrosis") at the original injection site. 1 persion per 1 to 2 million vaccinations; almost always fatal before availability of vaccinia imunoglobins; people with T-Cell deficiencies are particularly at high risk.

    Vaccinia Keratitis: accidental transfer of vaccinia virus leading to lesions of the eye. Reaction: threatens eyesight, corneal scarring....

    Eczema Vaccinatum. Too horrible to think of; people who already have some form of eczema, atopic dermatitis, or sensitive skin are at high risk and fatalaties have resulted in the past. Virus produces extensive lesions throughout the skin. Patient's life may be saved with early hospitalization and urgent treatment.

    1 in 242 million vaccinated will contract a generalized vaccinia infection -- involving pustules forming about the skin distant from the site of injection and generalized rashes throughout the body; for some patients with weakened immune systems, this results in a toxic and potentially fatal course.

    1 in 1 million people to be vaccinated on average, develop a systemic reaction to the vaccine which has a likelihood of fatal outcomes; people who have been immunocompromised or have a weak immune system are particularly susceptible.

    Even more people have a severe adverse reaction which may be crippling or severe enough to give one pause about if one really needs the vaccine. Is it an appropriate risk tradeoff? What is the true risk of contracting smallpox VS the cost of taking the vaccine?

    Successful vaccination always produces a lesion at the vaccination site, within 4 days, and it will leave a permanent mark which may be undesirable; this will be highly itchy, and highly infectious --- easily carried by clothing, and easily transferred to hands or other body parts to come in contact with it. Contact or contact with anything that touched the lesion may result in infection/lesions of vaccinia on other part of the body, and also: contact with other people ("inadvertent vaccination of friends or family, for example").

    Weeks of malaise and discomfort after the vaccination are essentially guaranteed; the vaccine will essentially almost definitely make you feel sick, and likely for 3 to 7 days, similar to a cold.

    17% to 20% of vaccinees experience a fever exceeding 100 degrees, during the first 2 weeks after vaccination, and plenty of vaccinated experience a fever exceeding 102F for the first 5 days.

    Most people vaccinated experience significant irritation at the vaccination site: including significant soreness, and a variety of kinds of skin rashes plus myalgia lasting 5 to 7 days. More rarely: Stevens-Johnson syndrome results, in which necrosis ("tissue death") of the skin results, in a life-threatening condition involving the dermis of the skin separating from the epidermis.

  8. Re: Patience, my pretty... by mysidia · · Score: 4, Interesting

    But for smallpox, given that it no longer occurs in the wild, the risk is unjustifiable.

    There are some people, however... that should always be vaccinated against Smallpox:

    1. Anyone working at the secure facility where these samples are stored; especially any lab workers, security guards, and cleaning staff.
    2. Anyone working at a facility where the samples are used to study Smallpox are being handled.
    3. Healthcare professionals, doctors/nurses/... that see patients and are occasionally exposed to people with various skin diseases or work in foreign countries where smallpox used to be prevalent.
    4. Everyone that any of the people above are in daily contact with.