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Winning Over SARS
by
Professor C W K Lam
(Warwick graduate 1970) |
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Editor's Note:
Chris (Warwick graduate 1970) is
Chairman and Chief of Service of the
Department of Chemical Pathology, and
Director of Clinical Immunology Unit,
The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Prince of Wales Hospital, Hong Kong. He
is President of the Asian Pacific
Federation of Clinical Biochemistry (APFCB)
comprising 12 member countries, and an
Executive Board Member of the
International Federation of Clinical
Chemistry & Laboratory Medicine (IFCC)
composed of 79 national associations.
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My colleagues and I in Hong Kong have just gone
through a very unusual period, the like of which
we had never experienced before in our careers.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a
highly contagious and potentially lethal
infection from a newly discovered corona RNA
virus spread by droplet transmission. There must
have been an under-reported outbreak of such
atypical pneumonia in nearby China last winter.
An emeritus professor of nephrology in China
with the infection came to Hong Kong for
treatment on 22 February without telling the
hospital of his disease. This index case
infected many other patients, medical and health
care workers, and 16 medical students in our
hospital. A single second-wave infection broke
out in our community in late March. By that time
this emerging disease had shocked the world by
having infected over 2,000 people in 27
countries.
The WHO case definition for SARS comprises (1)
fever > 38 degree C or history of such in the
past 2 days, (2) radiographic evidence of new
infiltrates consistent with pneumonia, plus (3)
chills or cough or malaise or myalgia or known
history of exposure (Note 1). Some patients may
not have all the features, while others may
present atypically. Progression may be
represented by 3 phases: (1) acute viral
infection with fever, myalgia, chills and
minimal respiratory symptoms, (2) hyperactive
immune response with clinical, radiological and
laboratory manifestations of severe acute
pneumonia and other tissue inflammation
consequent to a possible cytokine and chemokine
storm, and (3) recovery or, sometimes, pulmonary
destruction and death. Definitive diagnostic
tests have been developed, e.g. real-time
quantitative PCR, and antibody titre besides
conventional culture. Treatment has been
empirical and is still evolving. In Hong Kong an
initial potent antibiotic cover, followed by
simultaneous ribavirin (wide-spectrum anti-viral
agent) and corticosteroids, with or without
pulsed high-dose methylprednisolone, have been
used with good efficacy. For difficult cases,
convalescent serum and pentaglobulin have been
tried, and anti-cytokine therapy contemplated.
At the time of writing this commentary (16 June
2003), 1,775 citizens of our 6.9 million
population have been treated for SARS. This
should be close to the final figure, since zero
infection has frequently been recorded over the
last 3 weeks. The WHO lifted its travel advisory
warning to Hong Kong on 23 May, and should soon
delete Hong Kong from the list of SARS-affected
areas.
My mentor and former professor of immunology in
UK commented that he dreaded to imagine this
disease breaking out in less organised
societies. Being on site and having played my
small part in winning over the epidemic, I was
able to observe matters even more positively. In
ascending order of significance, it was first
very gratifying that our combined chemical
pathology and clinical immunology service proved
very useful for monitoring the disease and its
prognosis. The laboratory results have also been
used in generating research data for tomorrow's
publications and applications. Besides blood CD
markers, serum cytokines and LD isoenzymes that
were predictive of adverse outcomes, the whole
RNA of the coronavirus was quickly sequenced to
yield information for immediate understanding of
tissue tropism and infectivity to facilitate
vaccine development. The above special
investigations and research output were
additional to our routine commitments under
staff constraint. It was as if the department
has undergone an ACTH (Synacthen) stimulation
test and responded super-physiologically with an
admirable adrenal reserve!
More globally, the epidemic has united all
levels of intra and inter-hospital staff, and
educated the public. During the first month, the
Hospital Chief Executive (Medical
Superintendent) met unit heads twice daily at
noon and 20:00 h for update of new and ITU
cases, contact tracing, operational and strateg ic
reviews. All along there was Staff Forum for all
colleagues on all issues from daily to
twice-weekly frequency according to need. A
persistent reminder and overriding issue in
these meetings was stringent infection control.
Everyone has now become knowledgeable in
microbiological safety and the use of personal
protective equipment in moderate risk areas
(Figure 1) and high-risk environment adapted
from CDC guidelines. The whole community
received audiovisual lessons from the media on
domestic and personal hygiene, including the
proper 6-step procedure of washing hands for 15
seconds. The Minister of Education, who was
previously a professor of surgery, must have
been pleased when he visited kindergarten pupils
wearing surgical masks, long before any of them
would become surgeons.
Yesterday (Sunday) evening a 32-year-old
rheumatolgoist, who volunteered herself twice in
continuum for SARS-ward duty in two hospitals,
and a 33-year-old cardiologist, who himself was
a recovered SARS patient, were interviewed
separately on television. Both spoke
independently, in religious and non-religious
language, of SARS not merely as a disease but
really an opportunity for reinforcing love,
concern, and positive crisis management. Thus
this severe acute episode might have shaken up
our community, and better equipped its people
for attaining new heights. In a recent radio
program, our Dean of Medicine quoted the legend
of the flight of phoenix from fire.
Interestingly, the ancient Chinese word
inflammation, bearing the concept of
traditional Chinese medicine, actually means
acute-severe burns.
Little England Beyond Wales
I have originally planned for a short driving
holiday in Britain before attending the IFCC EB
Meeting and EUROMEDLAB in Barcelona, to be
followed by a recovery period in Paris.
Reluctantly, I had to cancel this trip for fear
of uncertain entry requirements in Europe for
visitors from SARS-affected areas. The easiest
alternative was to convert the same period (28
May to 6 June) to a driving spree in England and
Wales, UK.
With my hay fever well controlled by modern
medicine (Note 2), I was a comfortable
non-person without any responsibility. Like
natural scientist Sir Charles Darwin (Note 3), I
counted a decreased number of sea gulls on the
sandbank of Swanage, Dorset, compared to my
previous visits from 3.0 decades ago. In
Pembrokeshire, which is the western most Welsh
county (by the Irish Sea) known as Little
England Beyond Wales, I discussed with local
residents the glories of the now faded fishing
industry.

Back to England at the University of Cambridge,
I sustained forehead, nose, upper lip and left
knee injuries trying to walk through a
transparent glass door in Clare College. Wearing
another kind of protective clothing (a kitchen
apron) in New Malden, Kent, I was once again
working under the instructions of my former
chair professor Dr Magnus Hjelm, this time
poaching a 2.8 kg salmon in hyperosmolar sodium
chloride solution containing black pepper and
chives (Figure 2).
Upon returning home, several IFCC colleagues: Dr
Ellis Jacobs, Dr Myron Johnson, and Miss Lisa
Ionescu, have written to describe how wonderful
Barcelona was. In jealousy, I almost replied by
invoking the response that I read from O'Grady's
Aussie Etiket, "Shut up!" (Note 4)
Reprinted with permission from the
July-August issue of the Newsletter of the
International Federation of Clinical Chemistry &
Laboratory Medicine
Notes:
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1. |
Useful web sites for SARS. WHO:
www.who.int/csr/sars/en;
CDC:
www.cdc.gov/ncidod/sars. |
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2. |
Pollinosis was first suspected in 1819
by Dr John Bostock, a London physician,
who reported in a Royal Society lecture
his summer catarrh to new hay (Catarrhus
aestivus). Several decades later in
1872, another sneezing doctor, Dr
Charles Blackley of Manchester, flew a
kite with adhesive tapes and found
pollens at 500-metre altitude. |
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3. |
Natural scientist Sir Charles Darwin
(1809-1882) was a patient of Dr Henry
Bence Jones (1813-1873), chemical
pathologist (Bence-Jones protein) to St
George's Hospital London, as playwright
Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was a patient
of Sir Almroth Wright (1861-1947),
immunologist (opsonin and phagocytosis)
at the Inoculation Department of St
Mary's Hospital London. |
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4. |
A book entitled Aussie Etiket
(O'Grady J. Sydney : Ure Smith, 1971)
wrote about an unpolished Australian
manual laborer visiting his work mate at
the hospital (p 41). The former
innocently detailed (1) the death and
funeral of another sick colleague, (2)
that afternoon's barbecue with the best
T-bone steak, jacket spuds, salad,
Carlton draught, brown bread and butter,
and red wine, and (3) that he was soon
off for a nice big frothy glass of
icy-cold ale; and elicited the Shut-Up
response. |
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