A Historical Review of Military Medical Strategies for Fighting Infectious Diseases: From Battlefields to Global Health
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Vaccine-Preventable Infectious Diseases
2.1. Smallpox
2.2. Typhoid Fever
2.3. Tetanus
2.4. Diphtheria
2.5. Pertussis
2.6. Tuberculosis (TB)
2.7. Meningococcal Meningitis
2.8. Hepatitis A
2.9. Hepatitis B
2.10. Poliomyelitis
2.11. Measles
2.12. Mumps
2.13. Rubella
2.14. Varicella
2.15. Influenza
2.16. Adenovirus
2.17. Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
2.18. Pneumococcus
2.19. Rabies
2.20. Yellow Fever
2.21. Japanese Encephalitis (JE)
2.22. Tick-Borne Encephalitis (TBE)
2.23. Human Papillomavirus (HPV)
2.24. Cholera
2.25. Leptospirosis
2.26. Dengue
3. Non-Vaccine-Preventable Infectious Diseases
3.1. Epidemic Typhus
3.2. Scrub Typhus
3.3. Trench Fever
3.4. Leishmaniasis
3.5. Malaria
3.6. Lymphatic Filariasis
3.7. Schistosomiasis
3.8. Trypanosomiasis
3.9. Other Parasitic Diseases
3.10. Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
3.11. Hepatitis C
3.12. Hepatitis E
3.13. Chikungunya
3.14. Zika
3.15. Crimean–Congo Hemorrhagic Fever
3.16. Hantaviruses
3.17. Other Arboviral Diseases
3.18. Acute Respiratory Syndrome
3.19. Acute Diarrheal Syndrome
4. Biological Agents for Bio-Warfare/Bioterrorism Category A–B
4.1. Anthrax
4.2. Botulism
4.3. Plague
4.4. Tularemia
4.5. Filoviruses
4.6. Arenaviruses
4.7. Brucellosis
4.8. Q Fever
4.9. New World Viral Encephalitis
5. Aeromedical Evacuation of Patients with Highly Contagious, Severe Infectious Diseases
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Diseases According to Transmission Type | Estimated Global Infections | Estimated Global Deaths | Year Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Air-borne transmitted | |||
Tuberculosis | 8,700,000 | 1,400,000 | 2011 [8] |
COVID-19 | 195,044,798 | 650,702 | 2021–2022 |
Influenza | 1,000,000,000 | 300,000–500,000 | Typical epidemic year [9] |
Meningococcal Meningitis | 1,200,000 | 135,000 | [10] |
Measles | 9,700,000 | 134,200 | 2015 [11] |
Blood-borne/sexually transmitted | |||
Hepatitis B | 1,500,000 | 820,000 | 2019 [12] |
HIV infection | 1,500,000 | 680,000 | 2020 [13] |
Hepatitis C | 1,500,000 | 290,000 | 2019 [14] |
Vector-borne transmitted | |||
Malaria | 241,000,000 | 627,000 | 2020 [15] |
Yellow fever | 84,000–170,000 | 29,000–60,000 | 2013 [16] |
Japanese encephalitis | 67,900 | 13,600–20,400 | [17] |
Dengue | 390,000,000 | 12,000 | 2010 [18] 2002 [19] |
Fecally transmitted | |||
Typhoid | 11,000,000–20,000,000 | 128,000–161,000 | 2018 [20] |
Cholera | 1,300,000–4,000,000 | 21,000–143,000 | 2015 [21] |
Amoebiasis | 500,000,000 | 40,000–100,000 | 2000 [22] |
Hepatitis E | 20,000,000 | 44,000 | 2017 [23] |
Hepatitis A | 158,944,000 | 39,280 | 2019 [24] |
Water-related | |||
Leptospirosis | 1,030,000 | 58,900 | 2015 [25] |
Vaccine-Preventable Infectious Diseases | Type of Vaccine | Type of Antibody |
---|---|---|
Smallpox | Live/recombinant | Specific human |
Typhoid fever | Live/Polysaccharide Subunit/Conjugate | |
Tetanus | Subunit | Specific human |
Diphtheria | Subunit | Specific equine |
Pertussis | Inactivated whole cell/recombinant | |
Tuberculosis | Live | |
Meningococcal meningitis | Polysaccharide Subunits/Conjugate | |
Hepatitis A | Inactivated | Standard human |
Hepatitis B | Subunit | Specific human |
Poliomyelitis | Live/Inactivated | |
Measles | Live | Standard human |
Mumps | Live | |
Rubella | Live | Standard human |
Varicella | Live | Specific human |
Influenza | Subunits/Live | |
Adenovirus | Live | |
COVID-19 | RNA | Monoclonals |
Pneumococcus | Polysaccharide Subunits/Conjugate | |
Rabies | Inactivated | Specific human/equine |
Yellow fever | Live | |
Japanese encephalitis | Inactivated | |
Tick-borne encephalitis | Inactivated | |
Human papillomavirus | Recombinant | |
Cholera | Inactivated whole cell/Recombinant/Live oral | |
Leptospirosis | Inactivated whole-cell | |
Dengue | Recombinant live | |
Non-Vaccine-Preventable Infectious Diseases | ||
Epidemic typhus | The inactivated vaccine in World War II | |
Scrub typhus | ||
Trench fever | ||
Leishmaniasis | Vaccine Brazil immunotherapy/Uzbekistan live | |
Malaria | Recombinant, licensed for pediatric use | |
Lymphatic filariasis | ||
Schistosomiasis | ||
Trypanosomiasis | ||
Other parasitic diseases | ||
Human Immunodeficiency Virus | ||
Hepatitis C | ||
Hepatitis E | Recombinant vaccine licensed in China | |
Chikungunya virus | Live attenuated vaccine (IND°) | |
Zika virus | ||
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever | Inactivated vaccine licensed in Bulgaria | |
Hantaviruses | Inactivated vaccine licensed in Korea | |
West Nile and Rift Valley viruses | ||
Acute respiratory syndrome | ||
Acute diarrheal syndrome | ||
Biological Agents for Bio-Warfare/Bioterrorism Category A–B | ||
Anthrax | Inactivated | Polyclonal/Monoclonal |
Botulism | Subunit (IND°) | Equine/human |
Plague | Subunit (IND°) | |
Tularemia | Live (IND°) | |
Viral hemorrhagic fevers (filovirus/arenavirus) | Viral vectored (Ebola) | Monoclonal (Ebola) |
Brucellosis | ||
Q fever | Inactivated vaccine licensed in Australia | |
New World Viral Encephalitis | Live/Inactivated (IND°) |
Anglo-Boer War | Immunized | Unimmunized | p |
---|---|---|---|
British Army | 14,626 (4.46%) | 313,618 (95.54%) | |
Disease | 1417 (9.7%) | 48,754 (15.5%) | <0.0000001 |
Case-fatality rate | 163 (11.5%) | 6991 (14.34%) | 0.002965 |
World War I | |||
British Army | 604,420 (94%) | 38,580 (6%) | |
Disease | 570 (0.094%) | 295 (0.764%) | <0.0000001 |
Case-fatality rate | 34 (5.96%) | 89 (30.2%) | <0.0000001 |
British Army | p | US Army | p | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tetanus incidence September 1914 | 9/1000 | 0.04018 | Tetanus incidence WWI | 13.4/100,000 | 0.001305 |
Tetanus incidence December 1914 | 1.4/1000 | Tetanus incidence WWII | 0.44/100,000 | ||
Pre-serum average case-fatality rate | 85% | <0.0000001 | |||
Post-serum average case-fatality rate | 47% |
Disease | Mean Annual Incidence 1986–1997 | Mean Annual Incidence 2008–2018 | Reduction |
---|---|---|---|
Pulmonary TB | 10.4/100,000 | 0.675/100,000 | 15.4-fold |
Hepatitis A | 17.5/100,000 | 0.5/100,000 | 35-fold |
Hepatitis B | 19/100,000 | 0.44/100,000 | 43-fold |
Measles | 671/100,000 | 1.31/100,000 | 512-fold |
Mumps | 45.5/100,000 | 0.32/100,000 | 142-fold |
Rubella | 936/100,000 | 1.825/100,000 | 512-fold |
Varicella | 1300/100,000 | 7.29/100,000 | 178-fold |
Ships | Theodore Roosevelt | Diamond Princess | p |
---|---|---|---|
Crew/passengers | 4779 | 3700 | |
Infected | 1331 (27.85%) | 712 (19.24%) | <0.0000001 |
Hospitalized | 23 (1.73%) | 36 (5%) | 0.00003448 |
Deaths | 1 (0.075%) | 13 (1.83%) | 0.00001793 |
Disease | Military Relevance | Military Contribution |
---|---|---|
Smallpox | It may heavily influence the outcome of a battle/war—biological weapon category A | First variolization of an army—early vaccine uses in the military worldwide may have contributed to disease eradication |
Typhoid fever | Outbreaks in deployed troops to endemic areas and wartime—biological agent category B | Vaccine development and use—dramatic typhoid reduction, particularly in WWI |
Tetanus | Frequent contaminated wounds in the military | Passive immunization—collaboration in vaccine development |
Diphtheria | Recently observed in adults | Vaccination as a public health measure—military and civilian surveillance systems should be interconnected |
Pertussis | Recently observed in adults | Vaccination as a public health measure |
Tuberculosis | Higher prevalence in the military than in the general population up to WWI | Discovery of infectious nature. Vaccine development. Epidemiology in wartime |
Meningococcal meningitis | High morbidity and mortality in the military | Identification of immune protection—polysaccharide vaccine development |
Hepatitis A | Widespread in the military— “camp jaundice” | Demonstration of protection by human Immunoglobulin—vaccine development |
Hepatitis B | The military are exposed to sexually transmitted diseases—soldiers as a “walking blood bank” | Demonstration of protection by antibodies |
Poliomyelitis | During WWII, polio was highly incapacitating | Vaccination as a public health measure |
Measles | Highly contagious, severe disease | Vaccination as a public health measure |
Mumps | Highly contagious, incapacitating disease | Vaccination as a public health measure |
Rubella | Incapacitating disease—congenital rubella syndrome as a dramatic problem | First isolation of the virus—vaccine development |
Varicella | Highly contagious, incapacitating | Vaccine use is quite limited |
Influenza | Frequent cause of acute respiratory disease in the military | Support to first vaccine development—first isolation of “Asian” virus—identification of drifts and shifts—organization of surveillance system |
Adenovirus | Frequent cause of acute respiratory disease in the military | First isolation of the virus—vaccine development |
Coronavirus disease-2019 | The military are exposed because they are engaged in pandemic containment | The military have been crucial for organizing diagnostic and vaccination campaigns |
Pneumococcus | Responsible for severe acute respiratory disease | Discovery of microorganism—first hexavalent polysaccharide vaccine |
Rabies | Severe threat to deployed service members | Preventive vaccination |
Yellow fever | Endemic in Cuba—threat to the US military deployed there—biological agent category C | Demonstration of mosquito-transmission Disease control through vector eradication |
Japanese encephalitis | Possible threat for the military deployed to Asia | Vaccination WWII—epidemiology—field trial inactivated vaccine in Thailand |
Tick-borne encephalitis | Possible threat for the military deployed to endemic countries—biological agent category C | Vaccine has demonstrated to be safe and immunogenic |
Human papillomavirus infection | The military are exposed to sexually transmitted diseases | HPV vaccine inclusion in the military vaccination schedule may be a relevant measure of public health |
Cholera | Severe disease frequently present in wars—biological agent category B | Rehydration therapy—vaccine development |
Leptospirosis | The military may be infected in field exercise training and wartime | Chemoprophylaxis by doxycycline |
Dengue | Incapacitating threat for the military deployed to endemic areas | Vaccine development |
Disease | Military Relevance | Military Contribution |
---|---|---|
Epidemic typhus | Present in many wars—biological agent category B | USA troops received Cox’s vaccine in WWII |
Scrub typhus | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Patented recombinant rickettsia protein |
Trench fever | The name itself witnesses military relevance | First description—etiology |
Leishmaniasis | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | First description—personal protection—vector control |
Malaria | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Etiology—drugs, monoclonal antibody, and vaccine development |
Lymphatic filariasis | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Demonstration of eradicating treatment |
Schistosomiasis | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Diagnosis—treatment—environ. prevention |
Trypanosomiasis | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Etiology—treatment, mobile teams |
Other parasitic diseases | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Treatment |
HIV infection | The military is at risk of sexually transmitted diseases—soldiers as “walking blood bank” | Epidemiology—disease biology—vaccine development |
Hepatitis C | Soldiers as “walking blood bank” | Screening—monitoring pre/post-risk mission |
Hepatitis E | It is a risk for the military deployed to endemic areas | Vaccine development |
Chikungunia | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Vaccine development |
Zika | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk | Vaccine development |
Crimean–Congo | Biological agent category C | Passive immunotherapy |
Hantaviruses | The military deployed to endemic areas are at risk—biological agent category C | Vaccine development |
Acute respiratory syndrome (influenza, rhinoviruses, para-influenza viruses, respiratory syncytial virus, adenoviruses, coronaviruses, human metapneumovirus Streptococcus pyogenes, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Bordetella pertussis, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, C. pneumoniae) | It is one type of pathology of great interest for the military, especially recruited trainees, probably for environmental live conditions. It may be due to a series of etiologic agents, for a minority of which preventive vaccination is available. However, even in these cases, the vaccine-induced protection is not absolute, such as for S. pneumoniae, influenza and SARS-CoV-2, in the last two cases because of the high variability of these RNA viral agents. Finally, for adenovirus, the vaccine is only administered to the US military, although the epidemiological problem is present in the military of other countries | Support to first flu vaccine development—first isolation of “Asian” virus—identification of drifts and shifts—organization flu surveillance systems—first adenovirus identification and vaccine development—co-discovery of Streptococcus pneumoniae—testing the first hexavalent polysaccharide vaccine—COVID-19 vaccine development—US military have organized a network of worldwide laboratories for providing advanced diagnostic capabilities, as proven with MERS-CoV in Jordan in 2012 |
Acute diarrheal syndrome (cholera, Salmonella, Shigella, enterotoxigenic E. coli, C. jejuni, Norwalk virus) | This is a condition of great concern for the military. Cholera and typhoid fever are not a problem anymore. Some of these agents are considered biological threats category B | Vaccine development—WRAIR is working to develop effective vaccines for Shigella, Campylobacter, and enterotoxigenic E. coli; however, no vaccines are available yet |
Biological Agents, Category A |
|
Biological Agents, Category B |
|
Biological Agents, Category C |
|
Category A | Military Interest | Military Contribution |
---|---|---|
Smallpox | Possible biological weapon | Large vaccine use |
Anthrax | Possible biological weapon | Vaccine development—epidemiology—genotyping |
Botulism | Possible biological weapon | Vaccine development—epidemiology—genotyping |
Plague | Possible biological weapon | Vaccine development—epidemiology—genotyping |
Tularemia | Possible biological weapon | Vaccine development |
Filovirus | Possible biological weapon | Vaccine development—polyclonal human Immunoglobulin |
Arenavirus | Possible biological weapon | Pathogenesis |
Category B | ||
Brucellosis | Possible biological weapon | Etiology—vaccine development |
Q fever | Possible biological weapon | Vaccine development |
Viral Encephalitis | Possible biological weapons | Vaccines and mAbs development—fieldable diagnosis |
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Biselli, R.; Nisini, R.; Lista, F.; Autore, A.; Lastilla, M.; De Lorenzo, G.; Peragallo, M.S.; Stroffolini, T.; D’Amelio, R. A Historical Review of Military Medical Strategies for Fighting Infectious Diseases: From Battlefields to Global Health. Biomedicines 2022, 10, 2050. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10082050
Biselli R, Nisini R, Lista F, Autore A, Lastilla M, De Lorenzo G, Peragallo MS, Stroffolini T, D’Amelio R. A Historical Review of Military Medical Strategies for Fighting Infectious Diseases: From Battlefields to Global Health. Biomedicines. 2022; 10(8):2050. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10082050
Chicago/Turabian StyleBiselli, Roberto, Roberto Nisini, Florigio Lista, Alberto Autore, Marco Lastilla, Giuseppe De Lorenzo, Mario Stefano Peragallo, Tommaso Stroffolini, and Raffaele D’Amelio. 2022. "A Historical Review of Military Medical Strategies for Fighting Infectious Diseases: From Battlefields to Global Health" Biomedicines 10, no. 8: 2050. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10082050