Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jan 2009)

Sphingomonas paucimobilis Bloodstream Infections Associated with Contaminated Intravenous Fentanyl

  • Lisa L. Maragakis,
  • Romanee Chaiwarith,
  • Arjun Srinivasan,
  • Francesca J. Torriani,
  • Edina Avdic,
  • Andrew Lee,
  • Tracy R. Ross,
  • Karen C. Carroll,
  • Trish M. Perl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1501.081054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 12 – 18

Abstract

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Nationally distributed medications from compounding pharmacies, which typically adhere to less stringent quality-control standards than pharmaceutical manufacturers, can lead to multistate outbreaks. We investigated a cluster of 6 patients in a Maryland hospital who had Sphingomonas paucimobilis bloodstream infections in November 2007. Of the 6 case-patients, 5 (83%) had received intravenous fentanyl within 48 hours before bacteremia developed. Cultures of unopened samples of fentanyl grew S. paucimobilis; the pulsed-field gel electrophoresis pattern was indistinguishable from that of the isolates of 5 case-patients. The contaminated fentanyl lot had been prepared at a compounding pharmacy and distributed to 4 states. Subsequently, in California, S. paucimobilis bacteremia was diagnosed for 2 patients who had received intravenous fentanyl from the same compounding pharmacy. These pharmacies should adopt more stringent quality-control measures, including prerelease product testing, when compounding and distributing large quantities of sterile preparations.

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