Superbug spread through contaminated
scopes sickened dozens in Seattle
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[January 23, 2015]
By Victoria Cavaliere
SEATTLE (Reuters) - A drug-resistant
superbug infected 32 people at a Seattle hospital over a two-year
period, with the bacteria spreading through contaminated medical scopes
that had been cleaned to the manufacturer's recommendation, officials
said on Thursday.
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Eleven of the patients infected at Virginia Mason Medical Center
between 2012 and 2014 eventually died, the hospital and city health
officials said. But those patients were critically ill before being
infected and it was unclear what role, if any, the bacteria played
in their deaths.
The patients were infected with drug-resistant bacteria, including
the rare Carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae, which are
difficult to treat because they have high levels of resistance to
antibiotics, said Dr. Jeffrey Duchin, a senior official at Public
Health - Seattle & King County.
The report follows similar incidents in Pittsburgh in 2012 and
Chicago in 2014, where contaminated endoscopes infected dozens of
patients, health officials said. No fatalities were directly linked
to the infections.
In the Seattle case, public health officials said the germs
apparently spread from patient to patient by endoscopes used to
treat liver and pancreatic illnesses. Duchin said the scopes are
typically used for thousands of procedures each year in U.S.
hospitals.
The scopes at Virginia Mason Medical Center were sterilized to
existing standards before each use, public health officials and the
hospital said.
"This is a national problem," Virginia Mason Medical Center said in
a statement. "We determined that the endoscope manufacturer's, as
well as the federal government's, recommended guidelines for
processing the scopes are inadequate."
Duchin said it took investigators months to pinpoint the
contamination, and the hospital has since instituted a rigorous
decontamination process that exceeds national standards.
There are three major manufacturers of the scopes, called
duodenoscopes: Olympus Corp, Fujifilm and Pentax. Their disinfection
recommendations were approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
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The FDA said in a statement it was actively engaged with
manufacturers and other government agencies to develop solutions to
minimize patient risk.
Olympus, which supplies many of the Seattle hospital's scopes, said
in a statement it was "monitoring this issue closely."
It was unclear how many people were exposed to the superbug,
officials said. The bacteria can cause serious infections such as
pneumonia, bloodstream infections and meningitis.
Neither the hospital nor local health officials notified the public
about the outbreak because "there was not a strong rationale for
doing so," Duchin said.
(Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Mohammad Zargham and Eric Walsh)
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