@article{4549, author = {Jonathan Duffy and Julie Harris and Lalitha Gade and Lynne Sehulster and Emily Newhouse and Heather O'Connell and Judith Noble-Wang and Carol Rao and Arunmozhi Balajee and Tom Chiller}, title = {Mucormycosis outbreak associated with hospital linens.}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Mucormycosis is an invasive fungal infection with a high fatality rate. We investigated an outbreak of mucormycosis in a pediatric hospital to determine routes of pathogen transmission from the environment and prevent additional infections.

METHODS: A case was defined as a hospital-onset illness consistent with mucormycosis, confirmed by culture or histopathology. Case-patient medical records were reviewed for clinical course and exposure to items and locations within the hospital. Environmental samples were collected from air and surfaces. Fungal isolates collected from case-patients and the environmental samples were identified using DNA sequencing.

RESULTS: Five case-patients had hospital-associated cutaneous mucormycosis over an 11-month period; all subsequently died. Three case-patients had conditions known to be associated with susceptibility to mucormycosis, while 2 had cardiac conditions with persistent acidosis. The cases occurred on several different wards throughout the hospital, and hospital linens were the only exposure identified as common to the case-patients. Rhizopus species were recovered from 26 (42%) of 62 environmental samples from clean linens and associated areas and from 1 (4%) of 25 samples from nonlinen-related items. Case-patients were infected with Rhizopus delemar, which was also isolated from cultures of clean linens and clean linen delivery bins from the off-site laundry facility.

CONCLUSIONS: Hospital linens were identified as a vehicle that carried R. delemar into contact with susceptible patients. Fungal species identification using DNA-based methods is useful for corroborating epidemiologic links in hospital outbreak investigations. Hospital linens should be laundered, packaged, shipped and stored in a manner that minimizes exposure to environmental contaminants.

}, year = {2014}, journal = {The Pediatric infectious disease journal}, volume = {33}, pages = {472-6}, month = {05/2014}, issn = {1532-0987}, doi = {10.1097/INF.0000000000000261}, language = {eng}, }