The U.S. Centers forDisease Control and Prevention has sent additional investigators to
Wisconsin to find the source of a blood infection that officials described as
the largest outbreak of the bacteria now linked to at least 15 deaths.
Wisconsin health officials said on their website Wednesday that
the total number of reported cases now stands at 48. Infections were centered
in the heavily populated southeastern quarter of the state, including the
Milwaukee area and surrounding suburban counties.
Infectious
disease specialists expect more infections to be found because health care
providers and laboratories have been alerted to look for the bacterium called
Elizabethkingia. It is named for Elizabeth O. King, a CDC bacteriologist who
studied meningitis in
infants.
Health
officials initially reported the bacterium had been tied to 18 deaths, but the state Department of
Health Services revised that figure to 15 late Wednesday afternoon. Agency
officials said they couldn't confirm that one person with Elizabethkingia had
died and received duplicative and incorrect reports from various sources. They
stressed that it's not clear whether the infection caused the deaths.
A team of eight disease investigators, including three recently
dispatched from the CDC, worked with the state Department of Health Services to
interview those infected in 11 southern counties to see if a common source of
Elizabethkingia could be found.
"We want to get through all of the basic information when
memories are still fresh and they remember what they've eaten and where they've
been," said Michael Bell, the CDC's deputy director of Healthcare Quality
Promotion.
The organism is common in the environment, including water and
soil, but it rarely causes infections, Bell said Wednesday. And because the
cases tested so far come from the same genetic "fingerprint,"
investigators looked for a common source, he added.
Bell said the Wisconsin cases are the largest outbreak of
Elizabethkingia recorded in published literature.
"This is essentially ten-fold in what we expect to
see" generally, Bell said.
A variety of potential sources have been tested, including health
care products, water sources and food, but none of these have been found to be
a source of the bacteria, said Bell whose division is working with Wisconsin
health officials.
The
majority of patients infected are 65 or older with a history of at least one
underlying serious illness, according to the state health department. Those who died all tested positive for the
infection, but it's not known if Elizabethkingia caused or contributed to their
deaths.
Dr. Nasia Safdar, University of Wisconsin-Madison associate
professor of infectious disease, said she has seen sporadic cases of the
infection since she began studying diseases in 2003, but nothing like this.
"It's strange in that so many people are involved. It's a
large outbreak for this type of bacteria," she said.
Generally, each state sees about five to 10 cases of the
bacteria per year, according to the CDC. Safdar said it was likely additional
cases will be found because health care providers and labs are now more
vigilant since the outbreak was initially reported.
Not all of those infected have recently been in the hospital,
where it would typically be transmitted through a device or equipment such as a
contaminated sink used by numerous people, Safdar said.
"Usually it would be in a hospital setting where a susceptible
population would exist," she added.
In the health care setting, the bacteria has been isolated in
hospital water supplies, sinks, saline solution used for flushing procedures,
disinfectants, and medical devices, including feeding tubes, arterial catheters,
and respirators, according to the Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine.
The organism can survive in chlorine-treated municipal water
supplies, often colonizing sink basins and taps, intubation tubes, humidifiers,
incubators for newborns, ice chests and syringes, and has become a potential
reservoir for infections in the hospital environment.
State health officials were first notified of six cases between
Dec. 29, 2015, and Jan. 4, 2016, and alerted health care providers and
laboratories statewide of the presence of the bacteria.
After the initial cases were reported and state health officials
notified local partners, the number of cases began to grow steadily with one
dating back to November 2015. Symptoms include fever, shortness of breath, chills
or skin rash, health officials said.
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