Los Angeles Times

5 new cases tied to tainted scopes

The outbreak abroad occurs despite a redesign by Olympus to address problems.

- By Melody Petersen

Doctors have tied a superbug outbreak at a foreign health facility to a medical scope that Olympus modified last year in an attempt to reduce its risk of spreading bacteria between patients.

Five patients treated with the modified device tested positive for the same potentiall­y deadly bacteria, according to a report filed with the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

One of those patients died, but the report blamed the death on the person’s preexistin­g condition rather than the infection.

American hospitals are using about 4,400 of the devices that Olympus voluntaril­y recalled last year to replace a small mechanism linked to deadly outbreaks around the world.

Several of those outbreaks happened in Southern California hospitals, including at UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center two years ago where three patients died and at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena where 16 patients were sickened. Eleven of the Huntington patients died.

The $40,000 reusable device known as a duodenosco­pe is a long snake-like tube with a tiny camera on the tip that is inserted into a patient’s throat and upper gastrointe­stinal tract. It is used to treat cancer, gallstones and other problems in the bile or pancreatic ducts.

In January 2016, Olympus said it was voluntaril­y recalling all duodenosco­pe devices identified as the TJFQ180V from American hospitals so that it could replace the mechanism. The company has also recommende­d new cleaning procedures.

The new outbreak, which happened in December, appears to have occurred in a health facility in another country.

A foreign health profession­al filed the report with the FDA. The facility’s name and location were not disclosed.

The report said that the mechanism on the device had been replaced in October.

Lawrence Muscarella, a medical safety expert in Montgomery­ville, Pa., said the outbreak raises questions about whether Olympus’ recall and replacemen­t of the mechanism was enough to keep patients safe.

“Does this new ‘fix’ work?” asked Muscarella,

who discovered the outbreak report in the FDA’s database of medical device injuries.

He said it was not clear whether the hospital had properly disinfecte­d the device using the process that Olympus now recommends.

The FDA said in January 2016 that it had approved Olympus’ new design of the device.

Deborah Kotz, an FDA spokeswoma­n, said Wednesday that the agency was “aware of these reports and continues to investigat­e adverse events associated with duodenosco­pes as appropriat­e.”

Olympus, a Japanese company with extensive operations in the U.S., said it had notified the FDA of the “reported event.”

“In the interest of patient safety, it is premature to reach a conclusion regarding the cause,” said Mark Miller, an Olympus spokesman.

The five patients in the new outbreak tested positive for a type of Klebsiella pneumoniae that has a gene that makes it resistant to all but last-resort antibiotic­s.

A series of Times stories reported that Olympus knew of the potential flaws in the scope as early as the spring of 2012, following an infection outbreak in the Netherland­s, but failed to alert American hospitals or regulators until after the UCLA outbreak in February 2015.

In 2010 Olympus engineers had changed the scope’s design to seal a narrow internal channel to keep out blood and other infectious material. The change was aimed at making the scope easier to clean.

But three independen­t investigat­ions — the first in early 2012 — found the design could allow bacteria to remain inside the scope even after it was cleaned according to Olympus’ instructio­ns.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? FIVE patients treated with the modified scope tested positive for the same potentiall­y deadly bacteria.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times FIVE patients treated with the modified scope tested positive for the same potentiall­y deadly bacteria.

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