Price EP1, Seymour ML, Sarovich DS, Latham J, Wolken SR, Mason J, Vincent G, Drees KP, Beckstrom-Sternberg SM, Phillippy AM, Koren S, Okinaka RT, Chung WK, Schupp JM, Wagner DM, Vipond R, Foster JT, Bergman NH, Burans J, Pearson T, Brooks T, Keim P.
Abstract
In
December 2009, two unusual cases of anthrax were diagnosed in heroin
users in Scotland. A subsequent anthrax outbreak in heroin users emerged
throughout Scotland and expanded into England and Germany, sparking
concern of nefarious introduction of anthrax spores into the heroin
supply. To better understand the outbreak origin, we used established
genetic signatures that provided insights about strain origin. Next, we
sequenced the whole genome of a representative Bacillus anthracis strain
from a heroin user (Ba4599), developed Ba4599-specific
single-nucleotide polymorphism assays, and genotyped all available
material from other heroin users with anthrax. Of 34 case-patients with
B. anthracis-positive PCR results, all shared the Ba4599
single-nucleotide polymorphism genotype. Phylogeographic analysis
demonstrated that Ba4599 was closely related to strains from Turkey and
not to previously identified isolates from Scotland or Afghanistan, the
presumed origin of the heroin. Our results suggest accidental
contamination along the drug trafficking route through a cutting agent
or animal hides used to smuggle heroin into Europe.