6
Conclusions and Recommendations
The MIST was developed to evaluate individual chemical protective suits. The MIST procedure is designed to compare the effectiveness of chemical protective garments and assess the operational requirements for protective garments. BRHA (body region hazard analysis), which complements the MIST, is an attempt to take into account regional body sensitivities to a chemical agent that has penetrated the protective garment. Together these models attempt to provide a quantitative measure of the effectiveness of a chemical protective ensemble under realistic dynamic conditions. The MIST/BRHA must be considered as procedures for evaluating the performance of complex systems, intended not only to characterize overall performance but also to identify the weakest elements in the system.
The committee understands that the MIST protocol includes the necessary procedures for data collection for evaluating the performance of candidate protective ensembles but excludes the site-specific analysis of data needed for the complementary BRHA. Thus, protection factors for protective ensembles can only be derived from the MIST.
However, the BRHA modifies the protection factor by introducing a consideration of the surface area and relative sensitivities of different body regions. The result of the MIST/BRHA remains a protection factor, but it cannot be used to derive a physiological interpretation of the data, which requires the translation of data for simulant disposition into an absorbed dose of agent.
In response to the charge to perform a technical assessment of the MIST program, the committee developed the following specific conclusions and recommendations. The committee also developed the general conclusions and recommendations presented at the end of this chapter.
SPECIFIC CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
TASK 1. Review the test methodology for the man-in simulant program.1
Conclusion 1. The MIST is a well-designed test protocol for evaluating chemical protective ensembles. However, the committee found that the test methodology was not based on preliminary testing that would eliminate ensembles with gross defects and allow more replications of tests be done on fewer candidate protective ensembles, thereby increasing the statistical power of the results.
Recommendation 1. The Army should screen ensembles prior to a full-blown MIST by video imaging the skin of test subjects after exposure to a fluorescent tracer or other physical tests. Screening should also include variations in ambient conditions (temperature, humidity, wind, and, perhaps, rain), activities (kneeling, sitting, and crawling), and sweat-soaked and dry test challenges.
TASK 2. Review the use of biological markers (e.g., cholinesterase inhibition) to predict the signs and symptoms associated with exposure to nerve (VX) and vesicant (HD) agents.
Conclusion 2. Body region hazard analysis (BRHA) is an innovative approach that takes into account regional variations in skin sensitivity to chemical agents. Although the basic approach is sound, the committee has the following reservations:
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A direct relationship has not been established between cholinesterase depression and the percutaneous absorption of agent.
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The relationship between liquid and vapor absorption has not been determined.
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BRHA was based on the local absorption of VX and may not accurately predict the absorption of HD.
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BRHA does not account for functional impairments from mustard-induced lesions in various body regions.
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BRHA does not account for individual differences in sensitivity to chemical agents.
A direct determinant of the toxicity of a chemical agent is the permeability of the skin by that agent at a given anatomic site. Therefore, the committee concluded that rather than basing the BRHA on highly variable indirect measures (cholinesterase depression) and assumptions, a protocol should be designed to quantify the in vitro agent permeability of excised human skin samples from different body regions. These techniques are well established and well accepted and could also be used to compare simulant uptake by human skin and passive samplers. Large differences may indicate a need to redesign the samplers. The vapor uptake of agent and simulant could also be determined for human skin and passive samplers. Large differences in the behavior of agent and simulant may warrant the selection of a different simulant or adjustments in the methods used to calculate protection factors.
Recommendation 2a. The Army should measure regional variations in skin penetration for HD, VX, and simulant vapors using excised human skin harvested from various anatomic sites.
Recommendation 2b. As a supplemental validation of the systematic BRHA, a biomonitoring protocol should be developed for the MIST, analogous to the protocol used to monitor pesticide exposures to agricultural workers. If the appropriate simulant is used, the calibrations obtained from in vitro studies could be used to relate suit performance to physiological effects based on the absorbed dose.
TASK 3. Review the test methodology for employing passive and active vapor and aerosol samplers during simulant tests and assess the data collection and analysis plan.
Conclusion 3. Passive samplers are appropriate for testing for the presence of vapor. The protocol, however, may not be valid for aerosols because the disposition of chemical agents in aerosol and vapor forms can be quite different. From the information recorded in the documents given to the committee for review, the committee could not confirm the uniformity of simulant concentration within the test
chamber. Variations in concentration outside the protective ensemble could lead to errors in assessing the protective qualities of the suit.
Although passive samplers are generally regarded as less accurate than active samplers in bench trials, the differences in the results are small. The precision and accuracy of the Natick sampler is adequate for the intended purpose. The small size of the Natick sampler enables testing under the suit without incurring a number of disadvantages (outlined in Chapter 4) that would be incurred with active sampler pumps either inside or outside the suit.
A residual disadvantage of passive samplers may be a lack of sensitivity to brief variations in concentration, which would be of interest only for identifying the body positions or activities associated with leakage. Conventional active samplers would have the same disadvantage, but external samplers connected to a near-real-time monitor could provide this information.
Recommendation 3. Agent uniformity in all parts of the test chamber throughout the duration of the tests should be documented. In addition, concentrations inside the suit could be monitored with either active or passive samplers, despite logistical problems. Comparing simulant levels in the passive sampler with samples recovered from the stratum corneum of test subjects (the outermost layer of the skin, which can be removed by repeated applications of adhesive tape) would provide insights into sampler performance.
TASK 4. Determine whether the current chemical simulant methyl salicylate or an alternative simulant should be used in the MIST program.
Conclusion 4. Methyl salicylate is an appropriate simulant for the transport of chemical agent into protective ensembles. However, biological interpretations of the MIST/BRHA using methyl salicylate are not warranted.
Recommendation 4. Additional studies should be undertaken to establish absorption and transport properties of the simulant relative to the properties of the agents. In vitro studies using excised skin and mannequin studies (capable of simulating a bellows effect) can be used to accomplish this objective. With the appropriate consent, and oversight of a human use committee, excised human skin can be used
for research. Samples can be obtained from cadavers or from surgical samples (e.g., abdominal skin, facial skin, etc.) Large differences in distributions may warrant using an alternative simulant.
GENERAL CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
General Conclusion 1. The first step in chemical and biological defense strategy is early detection and warning to provide situational awareness and permit steps to be taken to avoid the exposure of personnel and equipment. The complement to detection is protection. Chemical protective ensembles, as well as collective filtration systems and shelters, are used to insulate personnel from chemical and biological agents. Modeling chemical protective ensembles is a daunting task, and the Army's efforts to develop the MIST/BRHA should be commended. Modeling and simulation technologies are invaluable tools for training for operations in a chemical and biological warfare environment. They provide material and equipment design parameters and enable field commanders to integrate and interpret real-time data. However, deriving physiological endpoints from the MIST/BRHA is a complicated process that will require cooperation among the Army's scientists, as well as significant input from academia and industry.
General Recommendation 1. The development of new test methodologies should be done separately from routine ensemble testing. Once the criteria for suit performance have been established, decision points should be entered in a flow chart to reveal where additional work is needed. As of this writing, the Army has not adopted a clear approach to establishing physiologic endpoints from protective ensemble testing. However, this is an achievable goal that should be pursued to protect soldiers.
General Conclusion 2. The Army should ensure better cooperation among various disciplines (i.e., chemistry, toxicology, engineering, human factors, etc.). For example, scientists in CBDCOM's toxicology division have not participated in any significant way in the development of ensemble test methods.
General Recommendation 2. More integration between the various groups and technical disciplines will be essential for the development of future testing methodologies. All relevant parties