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Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis From Medical Waste

Authors :
A. Yvonne Boudreau
Kammy R. Johnson
Thomas A. Bell
Sarah E. Valway
Kimberly W. Field
Glenn P. Morlock
Christopher R. Braden
Angela M. Weber
Paul A. Stehr-Green
A. Craig Craig Colombel
Charles L. Woodley
Zhenhua Yang
K. Lisa Cairns
Ida M. Onorato
Source :
JAMA. 284:1683
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
American Medical Association (AMA), 2000.

Abstract

ContextWashington State has a relatively low incidence rate of tuberculosis (TB) infection. However, from May to September 1997, 3 cases of pulmonary TB were reported among medical waste treatment workers at 1 facility in Washington. There is no previous documentation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission as a result of processing medical waste.ObjectiveTo identify the source(s) of these 3 TB infections.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsInterviews of the 3 infected patient-workers and their contacts, review of patient-worker medical records and the state TB registry, and collection of all multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) isolates identified after January 1, 1995, from the facility's catchment area; DNA fingerprinting of all isolates; polymerase chain reaction and automated DNA sequencing to determine genetic mutations associated with drug resistance; and occupational safety and environmental evaluations of the facility.Main Outcome MeasuresPrevious exposures of patient-workers to TB; verification of patient-worker tuberculin skin test histories; identification of other cases of TB in the community and at the facility; drug susceptibility of patient-worker isolates; and potential for worker exposure to live M tuberculosis cultures.ResultsAll 3 patient-workers were younger than 55 years, were born in the United States, and reported no known exposures to TB. We did not identify other TB cases. The 3 patient-workers' isolates had different DNA fingerprints. One of 10 MDR-TB catchment-area isolates matched an MDR-TB patient-worker isolate by DNA fingerprint pattern. DNA sequencing demonstrated the same rare mutation in these isolates. There was no evidence of personal contact between these 2 individuals. The laboratory that initially processed the matching isolate sent contaminated waste to the treatment facility. The facility accepted contaminated medical waste where it was shredded, blown, compacted, and finally deactivated. Equipment failures, insufficient employee training, and respiratory protective equipment inadequacies were identified at the facility.ConclusionProcessing contaminated medical waste resulted in transmission of M tuberculosis to at least 1 medical waste treatment facility worker.

Details

ISSN :
00987484
Volume :
284
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........77234f34b7d5d52c1f8327df1e21d0ab
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.284.13.1683