Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2016)

Multistate US Outbreak of Rapidly Growing Mycobacterial Infections Associated with Medical Tourism to the Dominican Republic, 2013–2014

  • David Schnabel,
  • Douglas H. Esposito,
  • Joanna Gaines,
  • Alison Ridpath,
  • M. Anita Barry,
  • Katherine A. Feldman,
  • Jocelyn Mullins,
  • Rachel Burns,
  • Nina Ahmad,
  • Edith N. Nyangoma,
  • Duc T. Nguyen,
  • Joseph F. Perz,
  • Heather Moulton-Meissner,
  • Bette J. Jensen,
  • Ying Lin,
  • Leah Posivak-Khouly,
  • Nisha Jani,
  • Oliver Morgan,
  • Gary W. Brunette,
  • P. Scott Pritchard,
  • Adena H. Greenbaum,
  • Susan M. Rhee,
  • David Blythe,
  • Mark Sotir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2208.151938
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 8
pp. 1340 – 1347

Abstract

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During 2013, the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in Baltimore, MD, USA, received report of 2 Maryland residents whose surgical sites were infected with rapidly growing mycobacteria after cosmetic procedures at a clinic (clinic A) in the Dominican Republic. A multistate investigation was initiated; a probable case was defined as a surgical site infection unresponsive to therapy in a patient who had undergone cosmetic surgery in the Dominican Republic. We identified 21 case-patients in 6 states who had surgery in 1 of 5 Dominican Republic clinics; 13 (62%) had surgery at clinic A. Isolates from 12 (92%) of those patients were culture-positive for Mycobacterium abscessus complex. Of 9 clinic A case-patients with available data, all required therapeutic surgical intervention, 8 (92%) were hospitalized, and 7 (78%) required ≥3 months of antibacterial drug therapy. Healthcare providers should consider infection with rapidly growing mycobacteria in patients who have surgical site infections unresponsive to standard treatment.

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