Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2013)

Cryptococcus gattii Infections in Multiple States Outside the US Pacific Northwest

  • Julie R. Harris,
  • Shawn R. Lockhart,
  • Gail Sondermeyer,
  • Duc J. Vugia,
  • Matthew B. Crist,
  • Melissa Tobin D’Angelo,
  • Brenda Sellers,
  • Carlos Franco-Paredes,
  • Monear Makvandi,
  • Chad Smelser,
  • John Greene,
  • Danielle Stanek,
  • Kimberly Signs,
  • Randall J. Nett,
  • Tom Chiller,
  • Benjamin J. Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1910.130441
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 10
pp. 1621 – 1627

Abstract

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Clonal VGII subtypes (outbreak strains) of Cryptococcus gattii have caused an outbreak in the US Pacific Northwest since 2004. Outbreak-associated infections occur equally in male and female patients (median age 56 years) and usually cause pulmonary disease in persons with underlying medical conditions. Since 2009, a total of 25 C. gattii infections, 23 (92%) caused by non–outbreak strain C. gattii, have been reported from 8 non–Pacific Northwest states. Sixteen (64%) patients were previously healthy, and 21 (84%) were male; median age was 43 years (range 15–83 years). Ten patients who provided information reported no past-year travel to areas where C. gattii is known to be endemic. Nineteen (76%) patients had central nervous system infections; 6 (24%) died. C. gattii infection in persons without exposure to known disease-endemic areas suggests possible endemicity in the United States outside the outbreak-affected region; these infections appear to differ in clinical and demographic characteristics from outbreak-associated C. gattii. Clinicians outside the outbreak-affected areas should be aware of locally acquired C. gattii infection and its varied signs and symptoms.

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