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Anatomy of a Meningitis Outbreak

Posted: November 9, 2012 at 8:44 am

The fungal meningitis outbreak that sickened 414 people this fall was unprecedented -- first, because only people who received a tainted steroid injection were at risk; and, second, because the fungus wasn't known for making people sick, let alone causing a deadly inflammatory disease that's killed 31 people so far.

Health officials on the local, state and federal levels had to work together to trace the cause of the outbreak and get the word out to at-risk patients and their doctors.

"All of that coordination -- the right hand knowing what the left was doing -- has made a big difference in how quick we could come to an understanding of what was going on," said Dr. David Reagan, the chief medical officer in Tennessee, adding that the tainted drugs were recalled eight days after Tennessee physician Dr. April Pettit contacted the state health department about a patient with a suspicious illness.

Here is a timeline of how the outbreak played out:

Early September: The first fungal meningitis patients arrived in emergency rooms around the country in early September, but it took a clinician in Tennessee, Dr. April Pettit, to realize her patient with a mysterious illness was the beginning of a public health crisis. Reagan said she found fungus in the patient's spinal fluid.

The Centers for Disease Control/AP Photo

Sept. 18: Pettit contacted the Tennessee Department of Health, including Dr. Marion Kainer, looking for similar patients. Her call set the investigation into motion, and she noted that the patient had recently received an epidural steroid injection.

Sept. 20: Two days later, the state health department called the CDC to report a fungal infection, noting that the patient had received an epidural steroid injection at the Saint Thomas Outpatient Clinic in August. Although the CDC had not heard about similar cases, it suggested Kainer visit the clinic. The same day, the clinic voluntarily closed. It has not reopened.

Sept. 21: The Tennessee Department of Health narrowed its list of possible causes to tainted steroid injectables from the New England Compounding Center (NECC) in Framingham, Mass., environmental contamination, or mishandling of equipment.

Sept. 24: Several other meningitis cases had been reported, and the Tennessee Department of Health reached out to Massachusetts's Department of health to learn more about NECC.

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Anatomy of a Meningitis Outbreak

Recommendation and review posted by G. Smith