Source: The Baltimore Sun, Tue 4 Jan 2005 [edited]
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/health/bal-te.hepatitis04jan04,1,361241.story?coll=bal-home-headlines
As thousands of other patients do every
year, a patient walked into a Glen Burnie cardiology clinic last
October [2004] for a routine cardiac stress test. But what happened
over the next 2 months wasn't so routine: The 79-year-old retired
ironworker developed a hepatitis C infection that ultimately took
his life on Christmas Day [25 Dec 2004]. -- is drawing new
attention to an unusual medical mystery under investigation by the
Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.
Officials have traced the patient's infection to a single vial of
technetium-99m, a radioactive isotope injected into the bloodstream
during stress tests and other routine diagnostic procedures.
Read More
HCV
Infections From a Contaminated Radiopharmaceutical Used in
Myocardial Perfusion Studies
JAMA.
Oct 25, 2006;296:2005-2011.
“…..Sixteen cases were identified; all underwent myocardial
perfusion studies on October 15. Cases had perfusion studies
performed at 3 unaffiliated clinics. The median age of cases was 63
years and 14 (88%) were male. Fifteen cases were symptomatic,
including 11 who had jaundice….
….The findings from this and other recent investigations demonstrate
that bloodborne pathogens can be transmitted in any setting where
blood exposures occur and aseptic technique is compromised. Health
care-related exposures should be considered in the evaluation of
patients with acute HCV infection, and clinicians should report
these cases to facilitate prompt identification and control of
potential outbreaks. This outbreak was detected only after
symptomatic patients were reported to a local health department that
conducts enhanced HCV surveillance and routinely investigates acute
cases. Their investigation of the initial cases identified a common
exposure to outpatient cardiology procedures on the same date. The
resulting expanded investigation revealed that 16 patients who
underwent myocardial perfusion studies at 3 separate clinics
acquired HCV infection after receiving Tc 99m sestamibi injections
drawn from a single pharmacy preparation vial. Blood from a patient
with chronic HCV and HIV infections was the source of HCV
transmission, probably through contamination of supplies (syringes
or a multidose saline vial) during the preparation of In 111-labeled
WBCs on October 14….”
ABSTRACT
Context
Nuclear pharmacies prepare radiopharmaceutical products for use in
common diagnostic procedures, including myocardial perfusion
studies. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission has not been reported
previously in the setting of nuclear imaging studies.
Objective To investigate an outbreak of acute HCV infection
identified among patients who underwent myocardial perfusion studies
on October 15, 2004, using an injected radiopharmaceutical.
Design, Setting, and Patients Outbreak investigation
including molecular epidemiology and pharmacy site investigation at
outpatient cardiology clinics and a nuclear pharmacy in Maryland.
Ninety patients who received injections drawn from select
radiopharmaceutical vials prepared on October 14-15, 2004, at a
single nuclear pharmacy were offered testing for bloodborne
pathogens. Pharmacy procedures were reviewed and HCV quasi species
analysis was performed.
Main Outcome Measures Hepatitis C virus infection and
quasispecies sequence similarity.
Results
Sixteen patients with acute HCV infection were identified from 3
separate clinics. All patients received radiopharmaceutical
injections drawn from a single pharmacy vial (vial 1). None of the
59 tested patients who received doses from 6 other vials had acute
HCV infection.
Blood from a potential source patient with HCV and human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection was processed for a
radiolabeled white blood cell study in the pharmacy 12 hours before
vial 1 was prepared. The HCV quasispecies sequences from this
potential source patient were nearly identical to those from cases
(97.8%-98.5% similarity).
No acute HIV infections were identified.
Pharmacy practices that could have led to blood
cross-contamination included reuse of needles and syringes
during dilutions and use of common flow hoods for some steps in the
preparation of sterile and blood-derived products.
Conclusions Sixteen persons acquired HCV infection from a
blood-contaminated radiopharmaceutical. The source and practices
that could have facilitated breaks in aseptic technique were
identified at the pharmacy. Nuclear pharmacies that handle
biological products should follow appropriate aseptic technique to
prevent contamination of sterile radiopharmaceuticals.
INTRODUCTION
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the most common chronic
bloodborne infection in the United States, with an estimated
antibody prevalence of 1.6%.1 Transmission of HCV primarily occurs
through percutaneous blood exposure; injection drug use is the most
common risk factor.1 Health care-associated transmission of HCV is
thought to be unusual in developed countries but outbreaks primarily
attributed to contaminated medications or equipment and breaches in
aseptic technique have been reported recently in health care
settings in the United States, Europe, and Japan.2-12 Transmission
of HCV in the setting of nuclear imaging studies has not been
reported previously.
In 2005, an estimated 19.7 million nuclear medicine procedures were
performed in the United States; more than half of these were
myocardial perfusion studies.13 Myocardial perfusion studies involve
the intravenous injection of a radionuclide (eg, thallium 201 or
technetium 99m-labeled sestamibi [Tc 99m sestamibi]), which is
detected by nuclear imaging. These radiopharmaceutical products are
often prepared in commercial nuclear pharmacies and distributed to
hospitals or outpatient clinics for administration.14 Although
biological materials are not used in the preparation of
radionuclides for myocardial perfusion studies, nuclear pharmacies
may process blood for radiolabeled blood cell studies.
In November 2004, 2 older adults with no recognized risk factors for
HCV infection were diagnosed with acute HCV infection and reported
to a local health department in Maryland. Both patients had symptom
onset in early November 2004 and had undergone myocardial perfusion
studies at an outpatient cardiology clinic on October 15, 2004. The
radiopharmaceutical used was Tc 99m sestamibi, which was prepared by
a nuclear pharmacy that also prepared radiopharmaceuticals for other
health care facilities in the state. Additional cases of acute HCV
infection were subsequently identified among patients who underwent
perfusion studies at different clinic sites and who had received Tc
99m sestamibi prepared by the same pharmacy on October 15. The
Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene conducted an
investigation to determine the mode and extent of HCV transmission.
METHODS
Epidemiological Investigation
All patients who underwent a myocardial perfusion study on
October 15 and received Tc 99m sestamibi from the same multidose
pharmacy preparation vial as the initial cases (vial 1) were tested
for evidence of HCV, hepatitis B virus (HBV), and human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Using an estimate of the
maximum number of doses that could have been prepared from the same
multidose saline container used to dilute vial 1, HCV, HBV, and HIV
testing were recommended for any patient who received Tc 99m
sestamibi from the vial prepared before (vial 0), or any of the 5
vials prepared immediately after vial 1 (vials 2-6). A case was
defined as evidence of HCV infection (presence of HCV RNA with
either symptoms of acute viral hepatitis or elevated serum
aminotransferase levels) in a person who underwent a myocardial
perfusion study on October 14-15, 2004.
To determine whether other cases of HCV infection might have
resulted from exposures to radiopharmaceuticals prepared by other
pharmacies or on different dates, enhanced surveillance for acute
HCV cases was conducted. Local health departments in Maryland and
infection-control practitioners were contacted to request immediate
reporting of all suspected cases and other state health departments
were notified through outbreak alerts. Cases reported to the
Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene were investigated
for recent exposure to nuclear imaging studies. Medical records were
reviewed to obtain clinical and laboratory information for potential
case and source patients. Demographic information was collected from
standard case report forms. Predefined categories were used to
collect race/ethnicity information on the surveillance case report
forms.
A summary of this public health investigation was submitted to the
Science Office in the Office of Workforce and Career Development,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for research/nonresearch
determination. The Office of Workforce and Career Development
Science Office determined that the activities involved in the
investigation constituted an urgent public health response and did
not require submission of a protocol to the institutional review
board.
Nuclear Pharmacy Investigation
A site investigation of the nuclear pharmacy was conducted,
including a review of all pharmaceuticals prepared and biologics
handled on October 14-15, 2004. The Tc 99m sestamibi and white blood
cell (WBC) radiolabeling procedures were observed. Pharmacy
employees were screened for anti-HCV, and if positive, were tested
for HCV RNA. Employees involved in Tc 99m sestamibi preparation on
October 15 or WBC labeling on October 14 were interviewed about
their work practices and training.
Review of Radiopharmaceutical Preparation
From our observations, we determined that for each pharmacy
preparation of Tc 99m sestamibi, Tc 99m was drawn into a needle and
syringe and added to a prefilled manufacturer's vial of sestamibi
powder. Each vial of combined sestamibi and Tc 99m was then heated
at 100°C for 10 minutes. Saline drawn from multidose bags or vials
was added to dilute the mixture before and after heating. Mixing and
dilution were performed by a pharmacist in a laminar flow
workstation in a centrally located room of the pharmacy (main room).
Following heating, dilution, and assay of each preparation vial of
Tc 99m sestamibi solution, individual patient doses (approximately
7-16 per vial) were drawn into syringes by pharmacy technicians in
the main room. These prefilled syringes were packaged and delivered
to health care facilities for administration.
The WBC radiolabeling procedure was performed by a pharmacist in a
designated blood room, adjacent to the main room. For this
procedure, whole blood was received and placed in a flow hood to be
separated into components. The procedure involved several centrifuge
tubes, multiple syringes, and frequent washes of the separated cells
using saline from a multidose vial. The procedure also required the
pharmacist to leave the blood room carrying the blood-derived
preparation to use a hood in the main room where Tc 99m sestamibi
and other sterile radiopharmaceuticals were prepared.
Laboratory and Source Investigation
Patient and pharmacy employee serum samples were tested for
anti-HCV (Ortho HCV, version 3.0 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay,
Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, Raritan, NJ). Serum samples from
patients and potential source patients (including 3 archived
specimens that had been stored at -80°C) were tested for the
presence of HCV RNA by qualitative polymerase chain reaction (Amplicor
HCV test, version 2.0, Roche Molecular Systems, Branchburg, NJ).
Genotypes of HCV were determined using previously described
methods.15 Potential source patients with undetectable HCV RNA or an
HCV genotype that did not match that of the cases were ruled out,
leaving 1 suspected source patient.
Patient serum samples were also tested for hepatitis B surface
antigen (HBsAg) (ETI-MAK-2, DiaSorin srl, Saluggia, Italy), total
antibodies to the hepatitis B core antigen (Bio-Rad Laboratories,
Redmond, Wash), and antibodies to HIV (anti-HIV) (Vironostika HIV-1
Microelisa System, bioMerieux Inc, Durham, NC; and HIV-1/HIV-2 Plus
O, Bio-Rad Laboratories). Serum samples that tested positive for
HBsAg and total antibodies to the hepatitis B core antigen were
tested for IgM antibodies to the hepatitis B core antigen (ETI-CORE-IGMK,
DiaSorin, Stillwater, Minn) and antibodies to hepatitis B e antigen
(ETI-AB-EBK Plus, DiaSorin). Results of serological or RNA tests
performed by licensed clinical laboratories were accepted in place
of our testing. Follow-up testing for HBsAg was recommended at 4 and
6 months, and for anti-HIV at 4, 6, and 12 months, postexposure for
all cases.
The HCV hypervariable region (HVR1) quasi species were isolated and
analyzed for cases, the suspected source patient, and a reference
group obtained from the Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III).16 The NHANES III reference group
included 5 randomly selected participants with HCV genotype 1a
infection whose sequences in the HCV NS5b protein-coding region
showed a 95% or higher sequence similarity to that of the suspected
source. The HVR1 quasi species were isolated and amplified by
limiting dilution polymerase chain reaction and sequenced as
described previously.15 Pairwise analysis was used to calculate the
distribution of nucleotide variation by using Pileup and
Evolutionary Distance programs in the Accelrys GCG Package (Genetic
Computer Group, version 10.3, Accelrys Inc, San Diego, Calif).
Sequence analysis by different methods indicated similar clustering
of sequences. The final neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree was
constructed by using Kimura's 2-parameter model (DNADIST, NEIGHBOR,
and DRAWTREE programs of the PHYLIP package, version 3.63, Seattle,
Wash),17 and bootstrap analysis was performed to evaluate the
reliability of the phylogenetic tree.18
RESULTS
Epidemiological Investigation
Sixteen cases were identified; all underwent myocardial
perfusion studies on October 15. Cases had perfusion studies
performed at 3 unaffiliated clinics (Table 1). The median age of
cases was 63 years and 14 (88%) were male. Fifteen cases were
symptomatic, including 11 who had jaundice. The median (range) time
from exposure to first symptom onset was 24 (15-41) days. One case
experienced liver failure and died 10 weeks postexposure; the
primary cause of death was sepsis. A second case died from a
cerebrovascular event 9 months postexposure. All 16 cases had
received injections of Tc 99m sestamibi drawn from vial 1 and were
the only patients to have received doses from this vial (Table 2).
A total of 90 patients received injections drawn from vials 0
through 6. Of 74 patients who received injections drawn from vial 0
or vials 2 through 6, 2 were previously known to have chronic HCV
infection. Of the remaining 72 patients, 59 (82%) agreed to be
tested for anti-HCV and all were negative; 46 (78%) of 59 patients
were additionally tested for HCV RNA and all were negative. The
attack rate for new HIV (n = 54) or HBV (n = 53) infections was 0%
among patients tested who received injections drawn from vial 0 or
vials 2 through 6.
Of the 16 cases, 12 had sufficient HCV RNA for genotyping and were
identified as HCV genotype 1a. One case tested positive for total
antibodies to hepatitis B core antigen, HBsAg, and antibodies to
hepatitis B e antigen, but was negative for IgM antibodies to the
hepatitis B core antigen and had radiographic findings suggestive of
chronic HBV infection. The remaining 15 cases had no serological
markers of HBV infection, and all 16 cases were anti-HIV negative.
Follow-up test results were available for 13 of 15 cases who
survived for at least 6 months and 10 of 14 cases who survived for
at least 12 months postexposure. At 4 to 6 months postexposure, the
13 cases tested negative for markers of HBV and HIV infection. At 12
months, the 10 cases tested negative for anti-HIV.
Pharmacy Investigation
Pharmacy records indicated that 33 vials (approximately 300
doses) of Tc 99m sestamibi were prepared on October 15 (Figure 1).
Vial 0 was the last Tc 99m sestamibi vial prepared on October 14;
vial 1 was the first vial prepared on October 15. The first 6 vials
on October 15 were batched and prepared together, with no more than
5 minutes separating their start times (Table 2).
According to pharmacy records, the only preparation involving blood
products on October 14-15 was a WBC-radiolabeling procedure
performed on October 14, approximately 12 hours before vial 1 was
prepared. A syringe containing 50 mL of whole blood was processed to
isolate WBCs and to label them with indium (In) 111 for a WBC scan.
The pharmacist who performed WBC radiolabeling on October 14 was not
involved in the Tc 99m sestamibi preparation on October 15.
Of 28 employees who were working at this pharmacy in October, 27
were located and agreed to be screened for HCV infection. One
employee was anti-HCV positive but HCV RNA negative. This employee
had been tested previously and was thought to have resolved
infection on the basis of past negative HCV RNA test results. The
remaining 26 employees were anti-HCV negative, including the
pharmacists who prepared the labeled WBCs and vial 1, as well as the
technicians who drew the individual doses on October 15. The
employee who could not be contacted had stopped working at the
pharmacy on October 8.
Upon inspection of the pharmacy, unwrapped syringes with needles
attached were noted in radiopharmaceutical preparation areas,
including workstations. Recapping of needles was observed during
procedures, and was reported as a routine practice by pharmacy
workers. During observed procedures, syringes containing radioactive
material were discarded immediately following use, but syringes used
to add saline were commonly left in workstations and used for
several preparations. Employees reported having received training in
radiation safety and aseptic technique. Proficiency in aseptic
technique was regularly assessed by growth media challenge tests (a
sterile preparation of culture media performed and subsequently
observed for microbial growth). Although the pharmacy maintained
documentation of reported needlestick injuries, several employees
claimed that sharps injuries were not always reported to the
pharmacy's management.
Laboratory and Source Investigation
The patient whose blood had been processed on October 14 (WBC
patient) was a nursing home resident with a history of HCV, HBV, and
HIV infections, who had been hospitalized for altered mental status
and urosepsis. The patient was reinjected with the radiolabeled WBCs
prepared by the nuclear pharmacy but was discharged before the
imaging scan was performed and died approximately 1 week later.
Frozen serum specimens that had been collected from this patient in
1996, 1999, and July 2003 were retrieved. Testing determined that
all specimens were HCV RNA positive, genotype 1a.
This patient had previously received antiretroviral therapy for HIV
infection but had not been treated for HCV infection. Laboratory
studies revealed an HIV-1 RNA concentration of 15 104 copies/mL in
August 2004, and an HCV RNA concentration of 1.2 x 106 copies/mL in
May 2000. In November 2002, the patient tested negative for HBsAg.
Nine of 16 cases had sufficient HCV RNA for quasi species analysis.
Quasi species analyses for HVR1 were performed on specimens from
these 9 cases and the WBC patient, and compared with 5 NHANES III
participants with genotype 1a infection (Figure 2). Cases had 2 to
15 distinct HVR1 sequences that were 98.5% to 100% identical to each
other. Eleven distinct HVR1 sequences were characterized from the
WBC patient specimen collected in 2003. Similarity among the HVR1
sequences in the WBC patient specimen collected in 2003 and the
sequences of the 9 cases ranged from 97.8% to 98.5%. The similarity
among HVR1 sequences from the WBC patient specimens collected in
1996, 1999, and 2003 was 95.5% to 99.3%. The relatedness of HVR1
sequences from the specimens of cases and the WBC patient compared
with the NHANES III specimens ranged from 79.7% to 89.9%. The
sequences from the cases and the WBC patient clustered as a group
distinct from those of the NHANES III specimens.
COMMENT
The findings from this and other recent investigations
demonstrate that bloodborne pathogens can be transmitted in any
setting where blood exposures occur and aseptic technique is
compromised. Health care-related exposures should be considered in
the evaluation of patients with acute HCV infection, and clinicians
should report these cases to facilitate prompt identification and
control of potential outbreaks. This outbreak was detected only
after symptomatic patients were reported to a local health
department that conducts enhanced HCV surveillance and routinely
investigates acute cases. Their investigation of the initial cases
identified a common exposure to outpatient cardiology procedures on
the same date. The resulting expanded investigation revealed that 16
patients who underwent myocardial perfusion studies at 3 separate
clinics acquired HCV infection after receiving Tc 99m sestamibi
injections drawn from a single pharmacy preparation vial. Blood from
a patient with chronic HCV and HIV infections was the source of HCV
transmission, probably through contamination of supplies (syringes
or a multidose saline vial) during the preparation of In 111-labeled
WBCs on October 14. Although a cost analysis was beyond the scope of
this investigation, the costs associated with this outbreak were
likely substantial, including those to patients with symptomatic
illness that required hospitalization, as well as those incurred by
the medical care and public health systems involved. Transmission of
HCV from a contaminated radiopharmaceutical has not been described
previously.
Multiple lines of evidence support the proposed mode of HCV
transmission. Simultaneous transmission to 16 patients occurred in 3
unaffiliated clinics. The attack rate was 100% among patients who
received Tc 99m sestamibi from the implicated pharmacy vial and 0%
among patients who received doses from the other vials. No pharmacy
employee was viremic for HCV. This pharmacy performed no other
procedures involving blood products. Furthermore, quasi species
analysis demonstrated that the HVR1 variability among the source
patient and the cases was less than the variability observed over
time within the source patient, as measured at time points spanning
7 years.
Transmission of HCV in health care settings has been linked to
failure to adhere to aseptic technique, including reuse of syringes
and needles and contamination of multidose medication vials.2-5,8,
12 Although the specific break in aseptic technique that led to
transmission was not identified, a number of observations support
the hypothesis that a syringe or multidose saline vial contaminated
during the WBC radiolabeling procedure could have been used
inadvertently in the Tc 99m sestamibi preparation. First, overlap
occurred between areas of the pharmacy where blood components were
processed and areas where the Tc 99m sestamibi was prepared. Second,
practices that could lead to difficulty distinguishing between used
and unused syringes were identified, including unwrapping syringes
well in advance of their use, and recapping needles without
immediate disposal. Moreover, reuse of syringes was not prohibited.
Third, multidose saline vials were frequently used and commonly
shared between sterile preparations, and thus could have been a
contaminated reservoir.
The exact duration of HCV viability in the environment is unknown.
In chimpanzee infectivity studies, HCV in dried plasma at room
temperature remained infectious for 16 hours or longer.19 The
timeline that can be constructed from the pharmacy's records
provides additional information regarding HCV viability. Because
blood was drawn from the WBC patient approximately 15 hours before
preparation of the contaminated Tc 99m sestamibi vial, and cases
received injections between 6 and 8 hours later, our findings
suggest that HCV at room temperature can remain infectious to humans
for at least 21 to 23 hours.
Although the source patient was coinfected with HIV, no evidence
existed of HIV transmission. Several factors might explain the
absence of HIV transmission in a setting in which HCV transmission
was highly efficient. Human immunodeficiency virus is likely less
stable than HCV in a room temperature environment19-20; and the
source patient had received antiretroviral treatment in the past,
which might have attenuated HIV transmissibility (a consideration
supported by the relatively low viral load in August 2004). Although
delayed HIV seroconversion among HCV-infected patients has been
reported,21-22 no cases had evidence of HIV infection at up to 1
year postexposure.
Nuclear pharmacies are a specialized form of compounding pharmacy
regulated by state pharmacy boards and the US Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or its state designee. Approximately 370 nuclear
pharmacies operate in the United States; most are centralized
suppliers, whereas others are hospital-based.14, 23 Outbreaks of
bloodstream infections and meningitis24-29 have been attributed to
microbial contamination of injected products prepared in compounding
pharmacies, raising concerns regarding the adequacy of compounding
pharmacy standards, training, and oversight.30-36 According to
industry observers, comprehensive courses on sterile compounding are
not offered at most colleges of pharmacy and many pharmacists have
little training in aseptic manipulation skills.31-34 Recent surveys
of hospital compounding pharmacies have indicated that compliance
with quality-assurance guidelines published by the American Society
of Health-System Pharmacists remains unacceptably low.37
The US Pharmacopeia was recently revised to address pharmaceutical
compounding of sterile preparations, including radiopharmaceuticals,
and new content has been proposed to address the issue of
blood-derived products in nuclear pharmacies.38-39 However, no
specific information on risk for bloodborne pathogen contamination
of compounded pharmaceuticals is provided in the Nuclear Pharmacy
Compounding Guidelines from the American Pharmaceutical Association,
nor in the model rules for nuclear/radiologic pharmacy from the
National Association of Boards of Pharmacy.40-41 Furthermore, few
explicit strategies aimed at bloodborne pathogen risk reduction are
presented in these guidelines or in the US Pharmacopeia.38, 40-41
The paucity of guidance on blood manipulation within pharmacies was
reflected in this outbreak investigation, which found that training
on aseptic technique at the nuclear pharmacy was directed at
prevention of microbial contamination and growth, and protocols to
address bloodborne pathogen risks appeared limited to worker safety
issues rather than the risk of blood contamination of compounded
radiopharmaceuticals.
All compounding pharmacies should comply with US Pharmacopeia
standards and establish policies to ensure sterile equipment and
environments, standardized compounding procedures, and training of
employees on aseptic technique. Nuclear pharmacies that handle blood
products should additionally recognize the risks for blood
contamination of radiopharmaceuticals and implement appropriate
precautionary measures to prevent such contamination. The safety of
parenteral medications and diagnostic pharmaceuticals depends on
careful application of aseptic techniques across the entire spectrum
of their preparation and administration. The findings from this
investigation, as well as other reported outbreaks, underscore a
need for heightened awareness and renewed vigilance.
Priti R. Patel, MD,
MPH; A. Kirsten Larson, MPH; Amanda D. Castel, MD, MPH; Lilia M.
Ganova-Raeva, MS, PhD; Robert A. Myers, PhD; Brenda J. Roup, PhD,
RN, CIC; Katherine P. Farrell, MD, MPH; Leslie Edwards, MHS, BSN,
RN; Omana Nainan, PhD; John P. Krick, PhD; David Blythe, MD, MPH;
Anthony E. Fiore, MD, MPH; Jeffrey C. Roche, MD, MPH
Office of Workforce and Career Development (Drs Patel and Castel)
and Division of Viral Hepatitis, National Center for Infectious
Diseases (Drs Ganova-Raeva, Nainan, and Fiore), Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga; Maryland Department of Health
and Mental Hygiene, Baltimore (Drs Patel, Castel, Myers, Roup, Krick,
Blythe, and Roche and Mss Larson and Edwards); and Anne Arundel
County Department of Health, Annapolis, Md (Dr Farrell).
Dr Nainan died September 3, 2005. During her career, she made
substantial contributions to the understanding of molecular
epidemiology of hepatitis viruses.
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