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      The Universal Standard for Safe and Secure Work with Arthropod Vectors: The American Committee of Medical Entomology’s Arthropod Containment Guidelines

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          Abstract

          The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH) is pleased to announce the publication of revised Arthropod Containment Guidelines, 1 developed by the Society’s subgroup, the American Committee of Medical Entomology (ACME). Like the original guidelines, these are published in Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, are open access, and can be viewed and downloaded at https:// www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/vbz.2018.2431. An editorial providing some historical perspective is available at https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/vbz.2019.29001.hig. 2 These guidelines have become a universal standard for safe and secure work with arthropod vectors, and are referred to in the highly regarded handbook “Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories.” 3 They are the result of tireless effort by dedicated member experts, who painstakingly updated the previous 2003 guidelines, also authored by ACME members. In addition, they solicited comments from many outside subject matter experts. The original guidelines took over 2 years to write and served as the go-to-source for the community. In the 15 years since publication, new technologies and approaches that can be applied to research with arthropods have been developed, and an update was warranted. I have been involved with the guidelines since the idea was first discussed at an ASTMH Annual Meeting. As I am interested in history, with a specific interest in the history of our Society and the fields of arboviruses and medical entomology, this new publication provides an opportunity to briefly describe the very significant contributions of the Society to the field of vector-borne diseases. The ASTMH has a long history of expertise with pathogens transmitted by arthropod vectors. 4 William Crawford Gorgas, famous for his pioneering work in Panama to control yellow fever, was the fourth Society President. The Society recently established a new medal named after Clara Southmayd Ludlow, 5 an entomologist and first woman member of ASTMH. Another medal is named in honor of a famous researcher, Walter Reed, who demonstrated the involvement of mosquitoes in the transmission cycle of yellow fever, and the Harry Hoogstraal medal is awarded for outstanding achievements in medical entomology. Society member Max Theiler was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology for his work on the development of the vaccine for yellow fever virus that is still in use today. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene celebrated its 100th volume in January this year, having been created in 1952 when the Society’s American Journal of Tropical Medicine merged with the Journal of the American Malaria Society. A recent message to our members during Trop History Month highlighted publications from 1952 to 2016 and showed sustained interest in vector-borne diseases, specifically malaria, dengue, leishmaniasis, schistosomiasis, and Chagas disease. Publications on mosquitoes have remained steady for more than a 60-year period, at approximately 5% of all articles published. In 1961, the Society’s first subgroup, the American Committee on Arthropod-Borne Viruses (ACAV), was formed, and in 1985, the ACME was formed. Working with vector-borne pathogens has always been potentially dangerous, and in 1980, the ACAV Subcommittee on Arbovirus Laboratory Safety published an important document entitled “Laboratory safety for arboviruses and certain other viruses of vertebrates.” 6 This article included a list of viruses that had been associated with laboratory deaths and importantly provided criteria that could be used to determine the level of practice and containment necessary for safe handling of the viruses. A comprehensive list of arthropod-borne viruses was provided, with risk described on a scale of one to four that has become a basis of virus research to this day. The appendices provided descriptions of recommended competence, practice, and containment levels for arboviruses in laboratories, and importantly for this editorial, discussed procedures for safely working with infected arthropods and some design and operational considerations for insectaries. Since their formation, both ACAV and ACME continue to be dynamic subgroups within the Society, with dedicated and well-attended symposia at our annual meetings, and other activities throughout the year. Experts in these fields are members of these subgroups, together with many young members from countries around the world. As seen with the recent emergence of chikungunya and Zika viruses, involving hundreds of thousands of cases in multiple countries, we remain unprepared, and often lacking in understanding of pathogens that were described frequently in our journal decades ago. As illustrated above, and with the publication of ACME’s Arthropod Containment Guidelines, the ASTMH continues to lead from the front to bring together global expertise and help in the fight against old and new diseases, wherever and whenever they occur.

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          Arthropod Containment Guidelines, Version 3.2

          Abstract The Arthropod Containment Guidelines are a product of the work of the American Committee of Medical Entomology, a subcommittee of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. The guidelines provide a reference for research laboratories to assess risk and establish protocols for the safe handling of arthropod vectors of human and animal disease agents. The guidelines were originally published in 2004 and have been updated here to reflect the spectrum of vector taxa under investigation, and the demands of working with vector arthropods in the context of the Select Agent Rule.
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            Laboratory safety for arboviruses and certain other viruses of vertebrates. The Subcommittee on Arbovirus Laboratory Safety of the American Committee on Arthropod-Borne Viruses.

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              Clara Southmayd Ludlow: Her Thirst for Knowledge was Positively Inspirational: Honoring a Female Giant in Tropical Medicine

              Clara Southmayd Ludlow Medal recipient Ruth Nussenzweig, MD, PhD. Front (A) and back (B) of the Clara Southmayd Ludlow Medal. Since its beginnings in 1903, the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH) has been deeply committed to pursuing scientific excellence in tropical medicine, hygiene and, to use today’s term, global health. This commitment has been expressed in part through recognizing individuals who have made significant contributions to the field. In the deeply held traditions of academia, recognition is provided by awarding medals that are presented in the Awards Ceremony that opens the international Annual Meeting of the ASTMH. In the presence of colleagues and family, honored individuals ascend the stage and accept commemorative medals named for giants in tropical medicine: Bailey K. Ashford, Ben Kean, Joseph Augustin LePrince, Donald Mackay, and Walter Reed. Long absent has been a female “giant” in tropical medicine. In 2015, the ASTMH Presidents and Council sought to address this omission. A special taskforce of 15 members, chaired by then President-elect Patricia Walker, representing both elected and appointed leaders diverse in geography, expertise, and gender, offered the Council a recommendation for action, approved by the Council in 2016, that the Society create a medal named for an iconic female leader in tropical medicine. Then-President Stephen Higgs announced the creation of this new medal during the Awards Ceremony of the 2016 Annual Meeting. 1 President Patricia Walker solicited a call for nominations, resulting in 150 submissions naming 57 outstanding candidates as either potential recipients of the medal or after whom the medal should be named. The taskforce enthusiastically embraced the exacting task of selecting a female leader whose name and image would be cast into the new medal and also proposed its first recipient. At its 2017 midyear meeting, the Council unanimously accepted recommendations for the woman whose contributions will be forever recognized by this medal, and its first awardee, whose contributions are emblematic of the pioneering and inspiring spirit of the medal’s namesake. The medal is named for Clara Southmayd Ludlow, PhD. We would like to think that she had a sense of the history that she was making in 1908 as our first woman 2 and first nonphysician member. Comprehensive biographies published by Kitzmiller and Ward in 1987 3 and Carpenter in 2005 4 provide us with much information. Clara Ludlow was born in 1852 in Pennsylvania. Her mother was Anna Mary (nee Hunt) Ludlow and her father, Jacob Rapelyea Ludlow, was a medical officer in the U.S. Civil War and at the time of her birth, a well-established physician. One brother, David Hunt Ludlow, become a physician, whereas another brother, Henry Hunt Ludlow, pursued a military career that resulted in a posting to the Philippines and a rank of Colonel. Dr. Ludlow’s early passion was music. She graduated in 1879 from the New England Conservatory of Music. However, in the 1880s, her interests turned toward science. She attended Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College (MAMC) in Starkville, Mississippi, from 1897 to 1900. It was here that she began to formulate an interest in mosquitoes under the tutelage of George W. Herrick, a professor of biology. Ludlow graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from MAMC in 1900 at the age of 48, and she earned a Master of Arts in Botany from Mississippi A&M in 1901. Ludlow’s archived works reveal that after graduation she traveled to Manila, Philippines, to visit her brother Col. Henry Hunt Ludlow stationed with the U.S. Army. It was during this time in Manila that her fascination with military medicine began. Ludlow’s studies of disease-bearing mosquitoes contributed greatly to the well-being of those stationed at the U.S. Army posts around the world. In 1904, she was a lecturer on mosquitoes and disease at the Army Medical Museum in Washington, D.C. Interestingly, she corresponded with William Gorgas while he was working in the Panama Canal zone 3 (5 years later, Gorgas was to become ASTMH’s fourth president). In 1907, Ludlow was a Demonstrator of Histology and Embryology at George Washington University, and in 1908, she received her Doctor of Philosophy from that university. Her dissertation was entitled The Mosquitoes of the Philippine Islands: The Distribution of Certain Species and Their Occurrence in Relation to the Incidence of Certain Diseases. Her expertise, commitment, and strength of character are to be admired and celebrated given the significant barriers women faced socially and in the male-dominated scientific community. Given this, it is remarkable that Ludlow was appointed as an Anatomist at the Army Medical Museum, and in 1921, referred to herself as Entomologist in charge of the Entomology Department at the Museum. An article in the November 20, 1924, Sioux City Journal (Iowa) suggests that Ludlow received little support from her physician father. The article states, “Her education was obtained under inevitable difficulties presented by the roving life of an army child and the equally inevitable opposition of her father, who frequently and fervently assured her that her thirst for knowledge was positively unladylike.” In her lifetime Ludlow published 53 papers, the titles of which are listed in a previous publication. 3 She died of cancer in 1924, and as a final display of her status and contributions, she was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. The first recipient of the Clara Southmayd Ludlow Medal is Ruth S. Nussenzweig, MD, PhD, whose extraordinary contributions forever changed malaria vaccine research. At a time when it was thought that a malaria vaccine was impossible, her work (with husband/collaborator Victor Nussenzweig) showed otherwise, paving the way for today’s malaria vaccine efforts. She has been described as focused, creative, and with a powerful and indomitable personality. Among her many recognitions, she is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and in 1997, she was the first female recipient of the ASTMH Joseph Augustine LePrince Medal. For much of her career, Dr. Nussensweig was an active ASTMH member, publishing over 250 papers during a 50 year period, with 24 papers published in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. Going forward, the Society will annually solicit nominations for the Ludlow Medal, which will represent success despite obstacles to advance the field of tropical medicine. Dr. Clara Southmayd Ludlow was remarkable, talented, unafraid, and unapologetic for her work. Recipients of this medal will be individuals—male or female—who persist despite the odds, are pioneering and inspirational, and whose work contributes to understanding and advancement of the field of tropical medicine.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Am J Trop Med Hyg
                Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg
                tpmd
                tropmed
                The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
                The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
                0002-9637
                1476-1645
                May 2019
                08 April 2019
                08 April 2019
                : 100
                : 5
                : 1035-1036
                Affiliations
                [1]Biosecurity Research Institute (BRI), Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas
                Author notes
                [* ]Address correspondence to Stephen Higgs, Biosecurity Research Institute, 1041 Pat Roberts Hall, 1900 Denison Avenue, Manhattan, KS 66506-7600. E-mail: shiggs@ 123456k-state.edu

                Author’s address: Stephen Higgs, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, E-mail: shiggs@ 123456k-state.edu .

                Article
                tpmd190199
                10.4269/ajtmh.19-0199
                6493940
                30963991
                ece2a5ce-5b76-4e61-a59f-51cb05fa4e1e
                © The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 08 March 2019
                : 08 March 2019
                Page count
                Pages: 2
                Categories
                Editorial

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                Infectious disease & Microbiology

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