National Academies Press: OpenBook

Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response (2008)

Chapter: 5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities

« Previous: 4 Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences Thailand Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 97
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 98
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 99
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 100
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 101
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 102
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 103
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 104
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 105
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 106
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 107
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 108
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 109
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 110
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 111
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 112
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 113
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 114
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 115
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 116
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 117
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 118
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 119
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 120
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 121
Suggested Citation:"5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities." Institute of Medicine. 2008. Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11974.
×
Page 122

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

5 Naval Medical Research Unit 3 Egypt Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities U .S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 (NAMRU-3) is a U.S. Navy research biosafety level 3 enhanced (BSL-3E) laboratory with exten- sive human and animal viral diagnostic capacity located in Cairo, Egypt. NAMRU-3 is one of the largest medical research laboratories in the North Africa-Middle East region and is also the regional influenza refer- ence laboratory for the Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) of the World Health Organization (WHO) with close ties to the influenza laboratory at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (DoD-GEIS, 2007a). NAMRU-3 was formally established by the U.S. Secretary of the Navy in 1946 at the site of the former Typhus Commission in Cairo, Egypt (IOM, 2001; DoD-GEIS, 2007a). The early work at NAMRU-3 focused, in col- laboration with the Egyptian Ministry of Health, on rickettsial diseases and febrile diseases (smallpox, meningitis, etc.) in patients admitted to the adjacent Abbasia Fever Hospital, Egypt’s largest fever hospital (DoD-GEIS, 2007a). In addition, NAMRU-3 has been heavily involved in avian and pandemic influenza surveillance. Though NAMRU-3 has historically been dedicated to a laboratory- and field-based infectious-disease research mis- sion, influenza surveillance activities have been conducted at NAMRU-3 since the 1999 initiation of funding from the Department of Defense Global Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System (DoD-GEIS) for seasonal influenza surveillance activities. DoD-GEIS support for NAMRU-3 influenza surveillance and response projects totaled $4 million in fiscal year 2006. Using these funds, NAMRU- 97

98 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS FIGURE 5-1  DoD’s regional presence in influenza surveillance (Africa), 2007. SOURCE: DoD-GEIS, 2007b. 3 expanded a number of its activities, such as conducting training on influ- enza diagnosis, helping to build national influenza laboratory capacity in Egypt and the region (including Afghanistan, Jordan, Libya, and Ghana), and assisting with the WHO global influenza surveillance program through bilateral and trilateral influenza surveillance projects (see Figure 5-1). Lim- ited migratory bird surveillance is also being conducted using DoD-GEIS figure 5-1 and 6-1 funds. This surveillance has become more robust with the addition of avian influenza/pandemic influenza (AI/PI) funding from DoD-GEIS. Revised A site visit team of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) Committee for the Assessment of DoD-GEIS Influenza Surveillance and Response Programs visited NAMRU-3 from March 4-9, 2007. A list of the people with whom the site visit team met and the itinerary that was followed can be found at the end of this chapter.   Prior to the committee’s visit to NAMRU-3, the laboratory staff provided the committee with detailed background information on NAMRU-3 and the pandemic/avian influenza activi- ties it was supporting. These materials are available from the IOM in the Public Access File.

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 99 INFLUENZA IN EGYPT The first confirmation of H5N1 in Egypt was made in February 2006 (WHO, 2007a). At that time, seven outbreaks of avian influenza (AI) vi- rus subtype H5N1 were reported throughout seven governorates in Egypt (Cairo, Giza, Menia, Qina, Kalyubeya, Behera, and Dakahlia) (USDA, 2006). These outbreaks were diagnosed by the Animal Health Research In- stitute, Egypt’s national laboratory, and confirmed as H5N1 by NAMRU-3 (OIE, 2006). Reports of outbreaks continued to be received until December 2006 (WHO, 2007a). In addition to the poultry outbreaks affecting both backyard and com- mercial poultry, Egypt has had 36 human cases of avian influenza infection, the highest number of bird flu cases among humans outside of Asia. Of these 36 cases, 15 have resulted in death (WHO, 2007b). Though avian influenza has been found in several areas of Africa, Egypt is one of only two African countries—the other being Nigeria—to have reported a human case of the infection (WHO, 2007a). MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING Generally, DoD-GEIS activities at NAMRU-3 are coordinated by the director of the Research Sciences Department and carried out by other research departments, including virology research, disease surveillance, en- teric disease research, and vector biology research. DoD-GEIS AI/PI supple- mental funding is managed primarily by the virology program head. It is reportedly challenging to manage the large sums of money related to AI/PI activities, especially when the financing arrives late in the fiscal year, although in fiscal year 2006, when NAMRU-3 staff had to receive and obligate funds and then implement projects in a short period of time, they proved flexible enough to do so. In the future, additional personnel in both the finance and supply departments would potentially help to streamline the acquisition of equipment and reagents, but in 2006 the major delay was due to external circumstances. The purchase of high-dollar equipment or initiation of contracts must be routed through the Fleet and Industrial Supply Center (FISC). NAMRU-3 experienced up to a six-month delay when purchasing equipment since FISC did not award many contracts until September 2006 even though the purchase requests were submitted in April of that year. Staffing All of the research departments at NAMRU-3 have a variety of ongo- ing projects, only some of which are AI/PI-related. There are no dedicated

100 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS DoD-GEIS personnel. However, the AI supplemental funding is being used to support 22 persons associated with 18 full-time equivalent (FTE) posi- tions. These personnel include two virologists, three molecular biologists, two medical epidemiologists, four laboratory technologists, and two data clerks. The NAMRU-3 has supported a variety of employees with the supplemental funding, including a number of U.S. Government Service employees, non-personnel service contractors, and locally employed staff (Egyptian nationals). As the capacity of the laboratory increases, NAMRU- 3 would like to hire additional laboratory technologists in the areas of viral isolation and molecular biology. While there is still great need at the laboratory for expanded epidemio- logical expertise, with the increased personnel from CDC’s global disease detection and response program NAMRU-3 expects that these deficits will be covered. At the time of the IOM team’s site visit, it was still unclear what role the CDC staff would play at the laboratory, and a memorandum of understanding regarding the exact nature of tasks and activities that CDC will perform had not yet been written. Given the importance of its geopolitical location in the Middle East, one of NAMRU-3’s greatest strengths is its reliance on Foreign Service Na- tionals to play key roles in the management and activities of the laboratory. NAMRU-3 has used this strength in expanding its avian/pandemic influ- enza programs and broadening its laboratory capacity, thus strengthening activities for the countries in the EMRO region. Technology and Information Management The technology capabilities of NAMRU-3 were found to be substan- tial and more than adequate to manage the current increase in activity resulting from additional AI funding. At the moment, NAMRU-3 relies on informal information-sharing methods to provide status reports to rel- evant government officials. While these methods do serve to strengthen personal relationships between NAMRU-3 staff and government officials, if ­human-to-human transmission occurs these informal channels will not be sufficient to provide timely and accurate information early in a pandemic. As more cases of avian influenza are identified in Egypt and the region, it will become increasingly important for key laboratory network hubs like NAMRU-3 to have formal systems in place to share information at the local, regional, and global levels in an accurate and timely way. Various sources of information, including findings from human surveillance, avian surveillance, and outbreak investigations, will have to be coordinated and shared with the relevant governments and with the international agencies involved in setting policy and implementing prevention and intervention efforts.

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 101 One mechanism that NAMRU-3 is using to share relevant information in the country and the region is the production of a weekly bulletin on the influenza situation in the Middle East. While these bulletins are cur- rently very useful, NAMRU-3—in conjunction with the host governments, EMRO, and WHO headquarters—will need to develop a real-time system if human-to-human transmission occurs. Conclusions The site visit team noted that the planning and implementation of spe- cific projects being conducted by NAMRU-3 were well executed but the organizational strategy needed to guide the laboratory’s future influenza activities is lacking. NAMRU-3 staff were planning to hold a meeting re- garding the laboratory’s organizational direction and how NAMRU-3 can best meet the needs of countries in the region. RECOMMENDATION 5-1. NAMRU-3 should prepare a short-term (2-3 years) strategic plan that identifies its priorities (surveillance/re- search and implementation/service delivery) in the AI/PI program and indicates NAMRU-3’s role in the prepandemic stage. The staffing is acceptable for the current activities, but NAMRU-3 may need to make staffing and equipment adjustments when it moves into the early pandemic phase. For example, staff members from other units may be cross-trained and deployed to assist with enhanced surveillance when their research activities are no longer a priority, due to the emergency. NAMRU-3 staff members suggest that their method of information sharing—making telephone calls to pertinent local and international offices in order of priority—is adequate. It may not be adequate, however, in the case of an outbreak of pandemic influenza. The committee concluded that the development of the manual system as well as a web-based, password- protected reporting system would benefit NAMRU-3 and the host countries with which it works. Redundancy in reporting systems may also be useful. Radio, telephone, web and satellite communications are all vulnerable to breakdown due to overuse. In a pandemic phase, all of the data being produced by NAMRU-3 would ideally be available on a protected website for partners like WHO and the Ministry of Health. Avian influenza data could be linked with the infectious disease database managed by the Ministry of Health. NAMRU- 3 should develop an improved system of communication that enables all qualified partners to access information without reliance on individual phone or e-mail communication, such as a protected website or blast fax system.

102 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS RECOMMENDATION 5-2. NAMRU-3 should develop and imple- ment a comprehensive information-management system as soon as possible in order to prepare for the expanded needs that will be present during a potential pandemic and to improve routine information shar- ing in the EMRO region. SURVEILLANCE NAMRU-3 has greatly contributed to the avian influenza surveillance effort in Egypt and the Middle East. While most of its activities focusing on human influenza surveillance are related to building the capacity of national influenza centers, NAMRU-3 is participating in a targeted project for U.S. military personnel. In addition, NAMRU-3 is working with the Ministry of Environment in Egypt and its sister DoD laboratory, the U.S. Army Medical Research Unit- Kenya (USAMRU-K), to conduct surveillance of migratory birds. Human Surveillance Both independently and in its role as a WHO collaborating center, NAMRU-3 works to strengthen national laboratory capacity and also functions as a reference laboratory for countries across the region. In its effort to make best use of the supplemental funding for AI/PI influenza and strengthen the regional influenza network, NAMRU-3 has focused most of its funding for human influenza surveillance on providing support equipment and technical assistance to national influenza laboratories in places like Egypt, Afghanistan, Syria, Pakistan, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and Morocco (NAMRU-3, 2007b) (see Figure 5-2). Through these capacity- building activities, NAMRU-3 hopes to expand the regional surveillance network and establish a flow of influenza data and isolates from countries previously not represented in this network. Additional information is pro- vided in the Capacity section below. One primary benefit to the capacity-building efforts of NAMRU-3 is access to influenza samples and isolates from across the region. While NAMRU-3 is not collecting samples directly, researchers at NAMRU-3, working through partner governments’ laboratory systems and previously established seasonal influenza sites, are able to analyze samples from across the region and to provide that information to U.S. agencies like the CDC and to multilateral coordinators like the Food and Agricultural Organiza- tion (FAO) and WHO. Between July 2006 and January 2007, NAMRU-3 received 2,470 sam- ples from its seasonal influenza and H5 referencing activities, of which it processed 2006 (NAMRU-3, 2007c). These samples came from 11 coun-

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 103 Avian Influenza Assessment Avian Influenza Missions Outbreak Support 2006/2007 Figure 5-2 NAMRU-3 avian influenza assessment missions and outbreak support. SOURCE: NAMRU-3, 2007b. tries in the EMRO region plus Nigeria, with the majority of samples coming Figure 5.2 from NAMRU-3’s host country, Egypt. Fifty-one of the samples received were sent to NAMRU-3 for H5 reference testing by laboratories in Egypt, Iraq, Yemen, and Afghanistan; 22 of these samples were processed, result- ing in four positive results for H5N1 (NAMRU-3, 2007c). All the samples positive for influenza H5N1 were from Egypt. NAMRU-3 has also contributed to the development and implementa- tion of an influenza-related surveillance project managed out of Doha, Qa- tar, looking at respiratory disease in active-duty U.S. military populations. A satellite laboratory allows for the collection of respiratory samples from troops on rest and recuperation from Afghanistan and Iraq. NAMRU-3 has also provided reference support to diagnose respiratory diseases among troops deployed in Iraq and at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.

104 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS Animal Surveillance NAMRU-3 supports avian influenza surveillance in migratory birds in Ukraine, Egypt, and Kenya. NAMRU-3’s location in Egypt provides a unique opportunity to collect specimens and identify isolates from migra- tory birds traveling from Europe through the Egyptian flyways to sub- Saharan Africa. In addition, NAMRU-3 acts as a reference laboratory in the EMRO region for other suspected H5N1 animal cases. In Egypt, NAMRU-3’s migratory bird surveillance is conducted in col- laboration with the Ministry of Environment throughout the Nile Delta region, as this is a major location for stopover of migratory birds during their transit. Current environmental ministry collection sites are Port Said (Rasheed), El-Sharkeya, El-Manzala, Port Fouad, El-Fayoum, El-Arish, Sharm El-Sheik, Aswan, El-Minya, Alexandria, and Domietta. NAMRU-3 and the MoE have provided active surveillance of wild migratory birds since October 2003 in an effort to detect circulating influenza viruses. Specimens are collected using the appropriate personal protective equipment. Speci- mens such as tracheal swabs, cloacal swabs, tissue, serum, and so on are collected based on the method performed. As a result of these activities in Egypt, NAMRU-3 received and processed 490 wild bird samples in Janu- ary 2007. Of these 48 (9.8 percent) tested positive for influenza A, 2 (0.3 percent) tested positive for H5, and none were found to be positive for H5N1 (NAMRU-3, 2007c). NAMRU-3 has established similar surveillance activities in Kenya and Ukraine. As a result of NAMRU-3’s ongoing migratory bird surveillance activities in Ukraine, it was able to confirm an H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza outbreak among migratory birds in February 2006. Through its animal H5 reference testing, NAMRU-3 was the first laboratory to diagnose and confirm influenza H5N1 infections in poultry in Afghanistan, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, and Kazakhstan. Between July 2006 and January 2007, NAMRU-3 received 51 animal samples for H5 reference testing. Of the 46 which were processed by NAMRU-3, nine samples, most of which came from chickens and doves found dead, were found positive for influenza H5N1. Conclusions While NAMRU-3 is not conducting any human surveillance activities itself, the committee found that NAMRU-3 is an integral advisor to host country government in development of its surveillance programs and the as- sociated laboratory capacity. As the regional surveillance network expands, the committee feels it would be beneficial to expand diagnostics to include

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 105 emerging influenza pathogens beyond H5N1 as well as to integrate seasonal influenza and AI/PI programs as much as possible. RECOMMENDATION 5-3. NAMRU-3 should assist the host country to develop the capacity to find emerging influenza pathogens beyond H5N1 and should integrate seasonal influenza and AI/PI programs as much as possible. In terms of avian surveillance, the committee found that NAMRU-3 is working successfully with the Ministry of Environment to conduct influenza surveillance on wild bird populations in Egypt. However, NAMRU-3 does not conduct routine surveillance on domestic bird or poultry populations in Egypt. The Ministry of Agriculture reportedly does conduct surveillance at sites of previous H5N1 infection or sites of major poultry production, but little information on these activities was available. RECOMMENDATION 5-4. NAMRU-3 should explore opportunities to support the Ministry of Agriculture in increasing surveillance of domestic birds kept in homes and back yards. LABORATORY NAMRU-3 headquarters in Cairo, Egypt, has extensive laboratory capacities, particularly in virology (DoD-GEIS, 2007a). The NAMRU-3 campus houses two BSL-3 laboratories. Using DoD-GEIS supplemental funding, NAMRU-3 has been able to increase the laboratory capacity at its headquarters, including equipment, reagents, BSL-3 space, reverse tran- scription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) capability, and personnel (NAMRU-3, 2007b). NAMRU-3’s H5 surveillance sample testing is based mainly on RT-PCR methodology. NAMRU-3’s mobile laboratory response capability has been increased by the addition of four mobile RT-PCR de- vices, which have enhanced both its ability to address multiple outbreaks concurrently and to perform training at external sites. NAMRU-3 currently has the laboratory capability to do subtyping for influenza A, H5, H9 and N1 by RT-PCR; influenza A by ELISA; and H1, H16 and B by HI assays. NAMRU-3 has also identified four satellite laboratories in Libya, Jor- dan, Ghana, and Afghanistan in which it plans to expand diagnostic ca- pacity, both to strengthen this capacity closer to the bulk of U.S. troops in the region and to expand the regional surveillance network (NAMRU-3, 2007b). These NAMRU-3-established satellite laboratories will soon have the capacity for virus isolation and molecular identification of respiratory viruses. NAMRU-3 is working to increase the capacity of these laboratories

106 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS though the acquisition of incubators, light cyclers, -80°C freezers, centri- fuges, and other necessary supplies and equipment. While NAMRU-3 is not leading any avian influenza surveillance activi- ties, the NAMRU-3 laboratory is currently participating at various levels in the testing of samples and the isolation of virus from avian influenza surveillance systems across the EMRO region and beyond. The laboratory system used for influenza surveillance in the EMRO region is quite cen- tralized. Laboratories located outside the capital cities have very limited capacity and thus are relegated solely to collecting specimens; some central labs are still working to develop the needed capability to process avian influenza samples. Because of NAMRU-3’s status as a WHO collaborat- ing center, the laboratory has a different role from some other DoD-GEIS laboratories with regard to avian influenza surveillance. For example, in Egypt NAMRU-3 is currently acting as the Ministry of Health’s quality as- surance mechanism. Possible AI samples are confirmed by NAMRU-3 after being sent to the central laboratory from identified fever and chest hospi- tals. In other countries, such as Libya, Jordan, Ghana, and Afghanistan, NAMRU-3 is still doing primary screening while these countries work to establish national laboratories with PCR capabilities. For suspected cases of AI in humans, NAMRU-3 turns around samples on the same day, while for seasonal flu virus isolation and subtyping the turnaround time is ap- proximately 2 weeks. Results are reported to the Ministry of Health, WHO, NAMRU-3, and other influenza partners as appropriate (DoD-GEIS, the Naval Medical Research Center, CDC, and so on). In Egypt, the Ministry of Agriculture processes all of the domestic and poultry specimens at its central laboratory in Cairo. Although the Ministry of Agriculture and the Ministry of Health have real-time RT-PCR capacity, the Ministry of Environment has NAMRU-3 do the primary screening of wild bird samples under an active surveillance program funded by DoD- GEIS because it does not have the needed PCR capabilities. NAMRU-3 reports to the Ministry of Environment on migratory bird surveillance specimens within 10 days of submission. NAMRU-3 also does the primary screening of wild bird samples for its other collaborative wild bird surveil- lance sites, including samples sent to Egypt from NAMRU-3’s sister labora- tory, USAMRU-K. Conclusions NAMRU-3 facilities play an essential role in supporting influenza sur- veillance in Egypt and the region. Because of the laboratory’s unique po- sition, NAMRU-3 has an opportunity to contribute to the knowledge of specific viral and bacterial agents in respiratory disease and should consider the purchase of multiplex diagnostic equipment in order to simplify quality

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 107 control, increase automation, and expand the laboratory’s ability to detect a broad array of etiologic agents. RECOMMENDATION 5-5. NAMRU-3 should explore the expansion of laboratory capacity to include multiplex diagnostic equipment for respiratory diseases. At the current time NAMRU-3’s laboratory facilities are adequate for its influenza activities. However, as the number of avian influenza cases increases, changes will have to be made to the regular operations of the laboratory. In the days, weeks, or months before a pandemic takes over completely, laboratory testing that is rapid and accurate will help to dimin- ish panic if it can rule out the pandemic strain where possible and rule in the pandemic strain where necessary. Planning out a move to a response mode in advance will be critical. The committee concluded that determin- ing what equipment would be needed to increase laboratory output on a per-FTE basis—e.g. automated extraction, additional real-time PCR, and redundancy in sequencing devices if considered critical—will be central to NAMRU-3’s ability to handle an increase in samples. Instead of expand- ing laboratory staffing, automation might be increased to optimize the throughput and the speed of processing. For example, automated extraction devices, which have throughput similar to that of real-time PCR instru- ments, would increase the capacity of the laboratory without necessarily increasing the laboratory staff. In addition, while NAMRU-3’s research is valuable, justified, and leads to good information, a significant portion could be suspended in the case of a pandemic. RECOMMENDATION 5-6. NAMRU-3 should develop a plan to ex- pand its laboratory capacity in an early pandemic phase based on an assessment of how instrumentation and cross-training can be employed to optimize the laboratory and move from moderate throughput to high throughput with minimal staffing changes. RESPONSE CAPACITY NAMRU-3 has two primary response capacity functions. First, since it serves as a reference or quality control laboratory for many of the national central laboratories in the EMRO region, it has been called upon to pro- vide surge capacity when the number of either human or animal samples exceeds the capacity of national laboratories. Second, NAMRU-3 has often been called on by WHO or national ministries of health to participate in outbreak-response teams (NAMRU-3, 2007b) (see Figure 5.2).

108 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS Outbreak Response Avian influenza outbreak response requires portable PCR capacity, ap- propriate personal protective equipment, adequate supplies, reagents, and a diverse mix of staff. Using DoD-GEIS AI supplemental funding, NAMRU-3 has been able to increase its outbreak-response capability with regards to equipment, reagents, and personnel (NAMRU-3, 2007b). The four addi- tional mobile real-time PCR machines have greatly enhanced its ability to simultaneously deploy to multiple sites to assist in outbreak response. Cur- rently, NAMRU-3 has the capacity to field up to four teams simultaneously to support forward outbreak response. Teams are generally made up of a laboratorian, epidemiologist, and a veterinarian. In the past six months, NAMRU-3 has conducted respiratory disease outbreak investigations in humans and poultry in Kazakhstan (confirmed H5N1), Ukraine (confirmed H5N1), Iraq (H9), Yemen (Newcastle disease) and Ethiopia (non-AI) (NAMRU-3, 2007b). To date, no human samples tested have been positive for avian influenza. Field teams have deployed with personal protective equipment, ruggedized light cyclers, reagents, and supplies. Teams have performed field and laboratory necropsies on poultry and done testing for avian and human influenza. In addition to providing diagnostic support, NAMRU-3 provided training on the proper sampling, handling, and diagnosis of avian influenza. NAMRU-3 reported not being able to meet all of the requests it is cur- rently receiving for outbreak response or assistance. To meet the regional needs for assistance and respond to outbreaks, NAMRU-3 has found it necessary to give priority to certain requests, such as those with the great- est risk of H5N1 and those with new data or isolates. This prioritization helps the laboratory staff to balance its commitment to rapid deployment to outbreaks occurring simultaneously in different regions with its commit- ment to maintaining assessment and training capacity. Surge Capacity Because of its role as a WHO collaborating center, NAMRU-3 will extend its functions beyond outbreak response in the next influenza pan- demic. As has occurred in the past, NAMRU-3 will be called upon to pro- vide surge capacity as the number of possible pandemic influenza samples increases. For routine operations—normal workdays over a five day work week by current virology program personnel—NAMRU-3 estimated it would be able to process 450 specimens per week at the headquarters in Cairo us- ing molecular diagnostics on any of multiple ABI 7300/7500 systems and targeting A, H5, and N1 genes along with an RNP (internal human RNA

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 109 TABLE 5-1 Summary of Surge Capability at NAMRU-3—Routine Operations Condition NAMRU-3 Field Sites × 4 Total Samples Molecular Diagnostics 450 specimens/ 450 specimens/ 2,250 specimens/ week week week Sequencing 60 specimens/week 0 60 specimens/ week Culture (SPF & MDCK) 30 specimens/week 0 30 specimens/ week Microneutralization 50 specimens/week 0 50 specimens/ week Antiviral Susceptibility 300 specimens/week 0 300 specimens/ week SOURCE: NAMRU-3, 2007a. control) gene. NAMRU-3 also estimated that the DoD-GEIS field sites in Afghanistan, Jordan, Libya, and Ghana could function at 450 specimens per week if needed (NAMRU-3, 2007a) (see Table 5-1). If the testing algorithm were altered to first test for influenza A and then, if positive, to test for H5, NAMRU-3 did not expect that the decrease in gene targets would lead to a corresponding increase in the number of tests that could be performed because the rate-limiting step is RNA extrac- tion, which runs at 24 samples per person per hood over a two-hour period (see Table 5-2). NAMRU-3 did say that in order to increase the overall number of extractions performed per day—thereby increasing its weekly in-house throughput—it would require the laboratory to allocate four personnel to each of four molecular diagnostic biological safety cabinets to perform RNA extractions. TABLE 5-2 Summary of Surge Capability at NAMRU-3—Altered Algorithm (Influenza A and H5 first) Condition NAMRU-3 Field Sites × 4 Total Samples Molecular Diagnostics 1,600 specimens/ 450 specimens/ 3,400 specimens/ week week week Sequencing 60 specimens/ 0 60 specimens/week week Culture (SPF & MDCK) 30 specimens/ 0 30 specimens/week week Microneutralization 50 specimens/ 0 50 specimens/week week Antiviral Susceptibility 300 specimens/ 0 300 specimens/week week SOURCE: NAMRU-3, 2007a.

110 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS Because NAMRU-3 receives WHO and courier shipments, it is expected that the number of specimens arriving daily would vary (e.g., 200 specimens one day, 750 another, and so on). During surge efforts NAMRU-3 would deal with the specimens received using a first in/first out rule. Under the scenario of working 24 hours a day, seven days a week, the virology program would divert molecular diagnostic personnel from all of the programs at NAMRU-3. Virology has seven personnel competent in molecular diagnostics. Six personnel from enterics, three from disease surveillance, and one from vector biology have been given formal training on influenza diagnostics or are competent in molecular techniques such as RNA extraction, or both. Four individuals would be performing extractions at all times while one person would begin real-time runs on selected gene targets, which adds up to a requirement of five molecular diagnostics personnel required per 9- hour shift, with some overlap. Each individual would extract approximately 90 specimens over a 9-hour shift. Thus the best case scenario is 360 speci- mens per shift, 1,080 specimens per day, or 7,560 specimens per week at NAMRU-3. This estimate was reduced by NAMRU-3 to 7,000 specimens per week in order to anticipate transitional delays (see Table 5-3). The laboratory components of NAMRU-3’s outbreak response teams use the 32-well format mobile RT-PCR machine. To maintain quality con- trol and assurance, as well as biosafety, it would not be advisable to have the single laboratorian run more than 150 specimens (five runs, 30 speci- mens per run, plus controls) per day (see Table 5-4). Furthermore, deploy- ing forward laboratory support will eliminate one molecular biologist from NAMRU-3, thereby requiring additional consideration in terms of staffing. TABLE 5-3 Summary of Surge Capability at NAMRU-3—24-Hours-a- Day, Seven-Days-a-Week Operations and Altered Algorithm (Influenza A and H5 first) Condition NAMRU-3 Field Sites × 4 Total Samples Molecular Diagnostics 7,000 specimens/ 450 8,800 week specimens/week specimens/week Sequencing 160 specimens/ 0 160 week specimens/week Culture (SPF & MDCK) 210 specimens/ 0 210 week specimens/week Microneutralization 500 specimens/ 0 500 week specimens/week Antiviral Susceptibility 1,050 specimens/ 0 1,050 week specimens/week SOURCE: NAMRU-3, 2007a.

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 111 TABLE 5-4 Summary of Surge Capability at NAMRU-3—Outbreak Support Condition NAMRU-3 Field Sites × 4 Total Samples Molecular Diagnostics 1,050 specimens/ 0 1,050 specimens/ week week SOURCE: NAMRU-3, 2007a. It should also be mentioned that a deployed team is limited in terms of total specimens it can test, based on local storage facilities and space constraints. It is likely that testing 1,000 total specimens run by a deployed team is ap- proaching the maximum. A total of 500 specimens is more feasible during one deployment period. Conclusions In terms of laboratory diagnosis, field investigation, and collaboration (e.g., with the Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population and the WHO), NAMRU-3 is well situated to respond to infectious disease outbreaks such as avian influenza in the region. The DoD-GEIS AI/PI funding has enhanced and strengthened the unique regional capacity of NAMRU-3. However, in an early influenza pandemic, NAMRU-3 will most likely be needed to provide both outbreak response and laboratory surge capacity simultaneously. For these activities its laboratory capacity will need to be expanded. NAMRU-3 has sufficiently strengthened its mobile outbreak response capabilities by expanding deployable RT-PCR capacity. Over the next few years this capacity will not need to be expanded. Instead, there will be a need for more centralized automated diagnostic capacity in order to increase throughput. CAPACITY BUILDING The AI supplemental funding has been used to strengthen NAMRU-3’s internal capacity, which includes its service as the WHO Regional Influenza Reference Laboratory, and also its capacity in countries within the region, such as Jordan, Libya, Ghana, and Afghanistan, where NAMRU-3 has satellite laboratories (NAMRU-3, 2007b). NAMRU-3 Laboratory Capacity NAMRU-3 capacity has increased by adding additional BSL-3 space to fulfill a WHO terms-of-reference requirement to have one BSL-3 labo-

112 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS ratory for animal-specimen processing and a separate facility for human specimens. NAMRU-3 has increased capacity for specimen processing by purchasing additional laboratory-based real-time PCR machines and ad- equate reagents and consumables to support any surge. NAMRU-3 has added technical staff to assist in both field and laboratory activities. In ad- dition, four mobile RT-PCR machines were purchased to bolster outbreak- response capacity. NAMRU-3 is reportedly now capable of responding to four simultaneous outbreaks by providing forward laboratory support with appropriate personal protective equipment, reagents, and consumables for a sustained period. Building Capacity of Regional Laboratory System and Training NAMRU-3 has spent a significant amount of funding and effort on consulting with, training, and equipping more than 20 laboratories in the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) and U.S. European Command ( ­ EUCOM) areas of responsibility (see Figure 5.2). This was done in order to achieve the laboratories’ capacity-building goal of creating a surveillance network that, with minimal continued support, can provide the necessary virological surveillance information for its own internal use while also contributing to the WHO-led global effort. To this end NAMRU-3 has ex- panded influenza surveillance expertise and diagnostic capacity throughout the region, including the countries of Azerbaijan, Djibouti, Egypt, Ghana, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Libya, Mo- rocco, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. Capacity-building endeavors undertaken by NAMRU-3 generally in- corporate a preliminary on-site assessment to determine the exact needs of the laboratory in terms of both infrastructure and expertise. NAMRU-3, WHO, FAO, various ministries of health, agriculture, and environment, DoD-GEIS headquarters, and other relevant partners determine how DoD- GEIS resources will be spent in the region. Capacity-building programs involving large-scale equipment placement take into account the geographic location of the laboratory, burden of disease, current political climate, lo- cation of deployed military forces, the location of NAMRU-3 assets, and other relevant factors. Capacity building involving training is prioritized and typically performed on a space-available basis. NAMRU-3 training will often be tailored to the laboratory capacity of the trainees’ home country in such a way that NAMRU-3 can immediately put it to use. The timing of training is coordinated with the delivery of anticipated labora- tory equipment via external grants (e.g., from the World Bank). NAMRU-3 also provides limited supplies and reagents, thereby facilitating immediate diagnostic capacity in the trainees’ countries. Once NAMRU-3 has assisted in the establishment of the national influenza laboratories, oversight to en-

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 113 sure quality will continue at each of these locations as they further develop their skills. NAMRU-3 has continued to work in this way with the Egyptian Min- istries of Health and Environment to expand its surveillance and laboratory capacities. In addition to its work in Egypt, NAMRU-3 has used the fiscal year 2006 DoD-GEIS-AI supplemental funding to substantially expand labora- tory capacity in four targeted satellite laboratories in Jordan, Libya, Ghana, and Afghanistan. Equipment and reagents were purchased and delivered to all of these countries to establish their first national influenza centers. These sites, each of which has been assessed and will continue to receive equip- ment, supplies, and training as deemed appropriate by NAMRU-3 staff and national and global partners, will be capable of performing extensive diagnostics on both avian and seasonal influenza. NAMRU-3 has delivered to Kabul, Afghanistan, all the necessary equip- ment (including four 6-foot biological safety cabinets) to set up two com- plete laboratories (one for the Ministry of Health and one for the Ministry of Agriculture). NAMRU-3 sent one medical repair technician to Kabul to oversee equipment installation and to certify the biological safety cabinets. After the equipment was in place, NAMRU-3 sent a molecular biologist to Kabul to conduct training in the laboratory itself. Currently there is a NAMRU-3 staff member temporarily assigned to Afghanistan. Jordan has agreed to enter into the Trilateral Agreement with NAMRU- 3 and the WHO. Under this agreement, NAMRU-3 is now training ap- proximately three veterinarians a month from Jordan in avian influenza diagnostics. After being requested to conduct an assessment of public health labora- tory capacity in Libya, NAMRU-3 identified the laboratory site within the Center for Infectious Disease in Tripoli and oversaw the purchase of equip- ment and reagents. Equipment is slated to be trucked to Tripoli in the very near future. In addition there are plans for a medical repair technician to accompany the equipment in order to certify the biological safety cabinets prior to initiation of work. This certification is a biosafety initiative that NAMRU-3 imposed on all of the collaborating sites. In preparation for the opening of this laboratory site, NAMRU-3 hosted four Ph.D. scientists from Libya for a two-week hands-on training course on avian influenza diagnostics. This marked the first time NAMRU-3 has had Libyans training side-by-side with U.S. and Egyptian scientists. Building on relationships established through NAMRU-3’s detachment in Ghana, NAMRU-3 is supporting the establishment of a national influ- enza center in Accra, Ghana, located within the Noguchi Memorial Insti- tute. All equipment and reagents have been purchased to outfit this site, and all of the previously used biological safety cabinets in its BSL-3 facility have been decontaminated and certified by NAMRU-3. All of the labora-

114 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS tory staff has been trained on-site in Ghana in molecular diagnostics as well as in viral isolation and typing. In addition to the work undertaken at these four satellite labs, NAMRU- 3 provides as-needed capacity building, training, and technical assistance to many other laboratories in the region. For example, NAMRU-3 conducted a brief collaboration with a laboratory site in Tbilisi, Georgia, which now functions almost independently. NAMRU-3 also scheduled a two-week influenza-related training for a Ph.D.-level Djibouti scientist, followed by additional on-site training in Djibouti City. After the initial intensive assistance from NAMRU-3, countries should value and support their own laboratories. NAMRU-3 should transition to a technical assistance role—following up, providing quality assurance, and adding capacity as necessary through activities such as training. Conclusions NAMRU-3 has developed a process of assessing the needs of national laboratories, assisting in the acquisition of necessary equipment and sup- plies, training relevant laboratory staff, and providing follow-up technical assistance and confirmatory services as needed. This process has the po- tential to create sustainability and to establish a high-quality regional early warning system. WHO acts as a quality-control entity, and NAMRU-3 will have to continue to coordinate its activities with WHO and EMRO representatives. As NAMRU-3 establishes appropriate national laboratories in various countries in the EMRO region, it will need to move to a role more focused on follow up, confirmation of results, advanced virology, and quality assurance. RECOMMENDATION 5-7. In order to assure the quality and sustain- ability of the regional influenza surveillance system, NAMRU-3 should work to establish standards and foundation documents for each of the steps in its laboratory-establishment process as well as to provide tech- nical assistance for a new regional quality-assurance entity including (1) the development of a solid plan of strengthening regional countries’ laboratory capacity with regard to avian influenza and maintaining this capacity through training, quality assurance, and proficiency testing; (2) continued collaboration with WHO to develop an external quality- assurance system for national central laboratories in the EMRO region; and (3) the use of NAMRU-3’s extensive experience in capacity build- ing (training, supervision, and mentoring) to develop structured (yet adaptable to each context) laboratory assessment checklists, training guidelines, and monitoring tools.

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 115 COLLABORATION AND COORDINATION NAMRU-3 has many partners, including the Egyptian Ministries of Health, Environment, and Agriculture, governmental agencies of other countries in the EMRO region, other DoD departments, and a range of technical and financial partners such as the WHO and the CDC. NAMRU- 3 is a WHO collaborating center for influenza. Information-sharing rela- tionships between NAMRU-3 and its partners appear strong but seem to be informal, person-based, and circumstance-dependent. Host Country Government As a regional influenza reference laboratory, NAMRU-3 has the ca- pacity to serve as a reference laboratory for all of the countries in the EMRO region, confirming influenza testing for ministries of health in the region. NAMRU-3 also extends assistance to the central Asian republics, West Africa, and countries such as Ukraine, Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Azerbaijan. The Ministry of Health is the lead agent in Egypt’s influenza surveil- lance effort. NAMRU-3 staff work very closely with representatives from the Ministry of Health, expanding the national human surveillance sys- tem and sharing results of laboratory testing on possible avian influenza samples. In addition, NAMRU-3 staff members participate at all coordina- tion meetings with the Egyptian High Committee. The close relationship between NAMRU-3 and the Ministry of Health has enabled NAMRU-3 to work strategically and efficiently in Egypt in support of the national avian influenza surveillance network. In terms of other Egyptian national partners, NAMRU-3 and the Egyp- tian Ministry of Environment have a strong collaborative relationship focused on the surveillance of migratory birds and routinely share informa- tion between each other, as NAMRU-3 performs all diagnostic assays. While NAMRU-3 has collaborated with the Ministry of Agriculture on surge capacity for animal samples (specifically during outbreak situations) and for molecular characterization, their relationship needs strengthening. The Ministry of Agriculture shares limited information with relevant part- ners. This has made it difficult to bridge the gaps in information between human and wild bird surveillance activities being conducted by the Minis- tries of Health and Environment and supported by NAMRU-3. In other countries where NAMRU-3 has ongoing influenza-related activities, it works directly with the ministries of health. These collabora- tions are based on mutual benefit. The national governments’ commitment of personnel is instrumental in the timely collection and processing of in- fluenza specimens. In turn, NAMRU-3’s reporting of results significantly

116 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS reduces response time. These relations typically result in positive outcomes both in terms of the expansion of influenza surveillance at the national and global levels and in terms of the medical diplomacy of the U.S. government in general. Multilateral Agencies Because of NAMRU-3’s status as a WHO regional influenza reference laboratory, it works very closely with both EMRO and WHO headquar- ters in Geneva. This role was determined in collaboration with WHO and EMRO based on NAMRU-3’s technical expertise and facilities capacity. NAMRU-3 is expected to become a WHO H5 reference center in the near future, which will strengthen even further its WHO regional and headquar- ters partnerships. At the current time, NAMRU-3 provides personnel and support to WHO and EMRO for outbreak investigations in the region. At WHO headquarters in Geneva, NAMRU-3 is a member of the Global Outbreak Alert Response Network (GOARN). NAMRU-3 staff routinely participate in the WHO regional pandemic/avian influenza meetings of EURO, EMRO, and AFRO (WHO Regional Office for Africa). They also conducted a WHO avian influenza training course for approximately 200 clinicians, laboratorians, and public health officials in Kiev for the countries of Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Belarus, and Uzbekistan. No financial resources are regularly committed by WHO to NAMRU-3 as a WHO collaborating center. Currently, NAMRU-3 is using GEIS AI supplemen- tal funding to perform all regional specimen processing, diagnostics, and characterization. NAMRU-3 coordinates its animal-surveillance activities with FAO to ensure an optimal use of funds. FAO funding has been well complemented because it provided for a logistical base for field surveillance while the DoD-GEIS funding provided the resources to support reference laborato- ries, as in the case of the laboratory in Kabul. U.S. Government Agencies NAMRU-3 activities in Cairo, Egypt, are directly linked with the U.S. Department of State and other U.S. government agencies. Monthly re- ports and weekly updates are available to other U.S. government partners, such as CDC, HHS, and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and assist in coordinating efforts. As a WHO collaborating center, NAMRU-3 collaborates with the CDC and routinely sends the CDC avian influenza specimens for further characterization. The CDC has committed its time to processing and relaying information back to both NAMRU-3 and WHO-Geneva.

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 117 The upcoming assignment of CDC public health professionals to NAMRU-3 will strengthen its relationship with CDC as a key technical partner in Egypt. As of July 2007, NAMRU-3 was working with CDC to fill five positions at the laboratory including a senior epidemiologist to work as the director of the CDC International Emerging Infections Program (IEIP) in Cairo, an epidemiologist, a public health advisor, a Resident Advi- sor for the CDC Field Epidemiology Training Program, and a U.S. Public Health Service Captain to serve as influenza coordinator. NAMRU-3 staff expects that once the IEIP director is selected, administrative issues related to the organizational relationships will be determined collaboratively. USAID is an additional collaborating partner of NAMRU-3 in a num- ber of countries in which it conducts avian influenza activities. NAMRU-3 staff are routinely invited to USAID-sponsored meetings to provide input as regional experts. These meetings often lead to additional opportunities for avian influenza capacity building outside the regions in which NAMRU-3 is typically engaged. For Bulgaria and Macedonia, NAMRU-3 provided assistance with laboratory design, specimen-throughput consultation, and multiple training sessions, both at NAMRU-3 and in-country. Relations with USAID-Egypt seem to be less productive, though there are efforts under way to strengthen this collaboration. Other DoD Entities In terms of DoD in general, NAMRU-3’s strategic location enables it to support CENTCOM, EUCOM, and a future AFCOM (U.S. African Com- mand) with diagnostic support, outbreak response capacity, and training. To date, NAMRU-3 has been able to contribute by providing specimen col- lection to a number of military preventive medicine units in Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, and Djibouti. In addition, NAMRU-3 has responded to outbreaks in Azerbaijan, Iraq, Sudan, and Djibouti. Other DoD entities, such as the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) and other military laboratories operating overseas, are also essential partners with NAMRU-3. There are a number of ongoing project-specific collaborations between NAMRU-3 and other DoD entities related to avian influenza. All reporting on regional efforts is sent to a variety of DoD offices in the United States, including DoD-GEIS headquarters, NMRC, and the Naval Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. NAMRU-3 also collaborates with USAMRIID by providing influenza RNA to assist USAMRIID in its development of future diagnostics. NAMRU-3 has worked extensively with the Naval Health Research Center to assist with specimen provision for the development of an electrospray ionization mass spectrometry device for respiratory pathogen identification. NAMRU- 3 works with the Air Force Institute for Operational Health to provide ac-

118 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS curate surveillance data. Using the supplemental funding, NAMRU-3 has also expanded its wild bird surveillance via their collaboration with DoD personnel at the U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Kenya. While there are certainly fruitful collaborations taking place between NAMRU-3 and other DoD entities, it was not completely clear to the IOM site visit team how communication and coordination with the DoD-GEIS headquarters and other DoD-GEIS sites is realized. Private Organizations The virology program at NAMRU-3 works with Idaho Technology Incorporated (ITI) to validate primer/probe sets dedicated for the military- deployable mobile real-time PCR systems. These will eventually be used to further support NAMRU-3’s outbreak response. ITI provides limited sup- plies to conduct these validation studies, while DoD-GEIS AI supplemental funding covers labor costs and additional supplies. No cash resources are provided to NAMRU-3 by ITI. Conclusions NAMRU-3 has excellent long-term relationships with all of its partners in Egypt and the region. In particular, the AI/PI activities have increased the possibilities for capacity building with the Egyptian Ministry of Health in support of improved surveillance and response. RECOMMENDATION 5-8. NAMRU-3 should continue to serve in a technical advisory role to the Egyptian Ministry of Health and carry out medical diplomacy by developing relationships with strategic part- ners while maintaining its role as an independent research agency with primary allegiances to the U.S. Navy. NAMRU-3 has been actively engaged in host country collaborations and is heavily committed in terms of personnel and resources in Egypt and the wider region. However, NAMRU-3 leadership stated that targets of op- portunity often drive its activities, and this creates problems when trying to develop longer-range plans for the organization. RECOMMENDATION 5-9. NAMRU-3 should develop country- and region-specific 3-year strategies that focus on host sustainability as well as on the development, expansion, and maintenance of an influenza early warning system.

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 119 The committee encourages NAMRU-3 to continue its complementary and integrated relationship with CDC. The committee concluded that the development of a memorandum of understanding that defines roles and responsibilities and the chain of command would facilitate this relation- ship and related influenza activities at NAMRU-3. In addition, increased bilateral information sharing with USAID, including more collaboration on complementary activities such as development of information, education, and communication materials for AI awareness, could benefit the influenza activities of both U.S. agencies. These efforts to improve its collaboration with USAID could be facilitated by the U.S. mission. References DoD-GEIS (Department of Defense Global Emerging Infections System). 2007a. U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3. http://www.geis.fhp.osd.mil/GEIS/Training/namru-3.asp (accessed June 12, 2007). DoD-GEIS. 2007b. Department of Defense influenza surveillance sites worldwide, 2007 (unpublished). IOM (Institute of Medicine). 2001. Perspectives on the Department of Defense Global Emerg- ing Infections Surveillance and Response System: A program review. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. NAMRU-3. 2007a. Estimated laboratory surge capacity (unpublished). NAMRU-3. 2007b. Viral and zoonotic disease research program. PowerPoint presentation presented during site visit March 4, 2007 Cairo, Egypt (unpublished). NAMRU-3. 2007c. Regional surveillance for influenza and other respiratory viruses in the Middle East, central Asia, Africa, and Eastern Europe. PowerPoint presentation pre- sented during site visit March 4, 2007 Cairo, Egypt (unpublished). OIE (Organisation Mondiale de La Santé, World Organization for Animal Health). 2006. Avian influenza in Egypt follow-up report No. 1. http://www.oie.int/eng/info/hebdo/ AIS_28.HTM#Sec7 (accessed June 12, 2007) USDA (United States Department of Agriculture). 2006. Avian influenza, Egypt: Impact Work- sheet. http://www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/ceah/cei/taf/iw_2006_files/foreign/hpaiegypt022306_ files/hpaiegypt02232006bb.htm (accessed June 12, 2007). WHO (World Health Organization). 2007a. H5N1 avian influenza: Timeline of major events. http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/Timeline_2007_03_20.pdf (accessed Sep- tember 5, 2007). WHO. 2007b. Cumulative number of confirmed human cases of avian influenza A/(H5N1) reported to WHO. http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/country/cases_table_ 2007_07_11/en/index.html (accessed September 5, 2007).

120 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS List of Contacts DoD-GEIS NAMRU-3 Assessment: Egypt Adam Armstrong, Head Enteric Diseases Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 CAPT Bruce Boynton, Commanding Officer, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 David Hoel, Vector Biology research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Edward Kilbane, Head Disease Surveillance Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Moustafa Mansour, Director of Research Sciences, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Marshall Monteville, Head Viral and Zoonotic Diseases Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Guillermo Pimentel, Disease Surveillance Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Maha Talaat, Disease Surveillance Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Jeff Tjaden, Viral and Zoonotic Diseases Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Sam Yingst, Viral and Zoonotic Diseases Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Matt Weiner, Enteric Diseases Research Program, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3 Nasr EL-Sayed, First Under Secretary for Preventive and Endemic Affairs, Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Holly Fluty-Dempsey, Chief Population and Health Division, United States Agency for International Development Akmal Elerian, Population and Health Division, United States Agency for International Development Tara Milani, Population and Health Division, United States Agency for International Development

NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT 3 EGYPT 121 Schedule of Events DoD-GEIS NAMRU-3 Assessment Cairo, Egypt Participants: Mary J. R. Gilchrist James Tibenderana J. Alice Nixon March 4-10, 2007 Sunday, March 4, 2007 0900-1000 Greeting and command brief Dr. Moustafa Mansour Lt. Stegall 1030-1030 Tour of NAMRU-3 Dr. Moustafa Mansour 1130-1130 Briefing on Enteric Diseases Research Program Cdr. Adam Armstrong 1230-1230 Lunch 1400-1400 Briefing on Disease Surveillance Program Capt. Edward Kilbane 1600-1600 Briefing on Viral and Zoonotic Diseases Research Program Lt. Cdr. Marshall Monteville 1600-1630 Return to hotel Monday, March 5, 2007 0700-0730 Depart NAMRU-3 0730-1430 Visit to Damietta, Port Said, and Manzallah Lake field sites for migratory bird sampling 1430-1700 Travel to Alexandria Tuesday, March 6, 2007 1200-1200 Visit to Alexandria Fever Hospital 1400-1400 Visit to field sites in Alexandria 1730-1730 Return to Cairo Wednesday, March 7, 2007 0900-1000 Overview of field visits 1000-1500 Field visits to MoH, WHO (EMRO), USAID, DCM 1500- Return to hotel

122 REVIEW OF THE DOD-GEIS INFLUENZA PROGRAMS Thursday, March 8, 2007 0830-0900 Briefing with program heads 0900-1000 Overview of Vector Biology Research Program Lt. Cdr. David Hoel 1000-1100 Out-briefing and open discussion 1600- Return to hotel Friday, March 9, 2007 0900- Optional tour Saturday, March 10, 2007 0900- Departure

Next: 6 U.S. Army Medical Research Unit Kenya Avian and Pandemic Influenza Activities »
Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response Get This Book
×
Buy Paperback | $69.00 Buy Ebook | $54.99
MyNAP members save 10% online.
Login or Register to save!
Download Free PDF

The influenza pandemics of 1918, 1957, and 1968 offer a warning to the world about the potential dangers of the influenza virus. In 2006, after a series of cases and clusters of the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian virus made clear the threat of a possible pandemic, the U.S. Congress allocated $39 million to the Department of Defense Global Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System (DoD-GEIS) to increase and improve its worldwide influenza surveillance network through upgrades to its domestic and overseas laboratories' capabilities.

An Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee was subsequently formed to evaluate the effectiveness of these laboratory-based programs in relation to the supplemental funding, and the report that follows details the committee's findings. The committee that prepared this report, the Committee for the Assessment of DoD-GEIS Influenza Surveillance and Response Programs, was convened at the request of DoD-GEIS management to evaluate the execution of the fiscal year 2006 supplemental funding for avian influenza/ pandemic influenza (AI/PI) surveillance and response. The committee was tasked with evaluating the DoD-GEIS AI/PI surveillance program for the worth of each funded project's contribution to a comprehensive AI/PI surveillance program; the adequacy of the program in view of the evolving epidemiologic factors; responsiveness to the intent of Congress as expressed in Sec. 748, H.R.1815, Pandemic Avian Flu Preparedness; consistency with the DoD and national plans; and coordination of efforts with CDC, WHO, and local governments.
Review of the DoD-GEIS Influenza Programs: Strengthening Global Surveillance and Response reviews the development of conclusions and recommendations with long-term, program-level relevance as well as conclusions and recommendations regarding the improvement of specific DoD-GEIS projects.
  1. ×

    Welcome to OpenBook!

    You're looking at OpenBook, NAP.edu's online reading room since 1999. Based on feedback from you, our users, we've made some improvements that make it easier than ever to read thousands of publications on our website.

    Do you want to take a quick tour of the OpenBook's features?

    No Thanks Take a Tour »
  2. ×

    Show this book's table of contents, where you can jump to any chapter by name.

    « Back Next »
  3. ×

    ...or use these buttons to go back to the previous chapter or skip to the next one.

    « Back Next »
  4. ×

    Jump up to the previous page or down to the next one. Also, you can type in a page number and press Enter to go directly to that page in the book.

    « Back Next »
  5. ×

    To search the entire text of this book, type in your search term here and press Enter.

    « Back Next »
  6. ×

    Share a link to this book page on your preferred social network or via email.

    « Back Next »
  7. ×

    View our suggested citation for this chapter.

    « Back Next »
  8. ×

    Ready to take your reading offline? Click here to buy this book in print or download it as a free PDF, if available.

    « Back Next »
Stay Connected!