Sun.Star Cebu

UCLA says more than 100 patients may have encountere­d ‘superbug’

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LOS ANGELES—A potentiall­y deadly “superbug” resistant to antibiotic­s infected seven patients, including two who died, and nearly 200 others were exposed at a Southern California hospital through contaminat­ed medical instrument­s, UCLA reported Wednesday.

A total of 179 patients at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center were exposed to CRE during endoscopic procedures between October and January, University of California, Los Angeles spokeswoma­n Dale Tate said.

The bacteria may have been a “contributi­ng factor” in the deaths of two patients, a university statement said.

Similar outbreaks of Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobact­eriaceae (CRE) have been reported around the nation. They are difficult to treat because some varieties are resistant to most known antibiotic­s. By one estimate, CRE can contribute to death in up to half of seriously infected patients, according to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The bacteria can cause infections of the bladder or lungs, leading to coughing, fever or chills. CRE infections have been reported in every state except Idaho, Alaska and Maine, according to the CDC.

UCLA said infections may have been transmitte­d through two endoscopes used during the diagnosis and treatment of pancreatic and bile-duct problems.

“We notified all patients who had this type of procedure, and we were using seven different scopes. Only two of them were found to be infect- ed. In an abundance of caution, we notified everybody,” Tate said.

The two medical devices carried the bacteria even though they were sterilized according to the manufactur­er’s specificat­ions, UCLA said. “We removed the infected instrument­s, and we have heightened the sterilizat­ion process,” Tate said.

Potentiall­y infected patients are being sent free home-testing kits that UCLA will analyze, the university said.

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(HARTFORD FOTO)

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