By

Ryan Jaslow /

CBS News/ October 11, 2012, 6:17 PM

Steroid injections tied to meningitis outbreak may cause joint infection

Patients may have received contaminated steroid injections from the New England Compounding Center for treatments in their ankles, knees and other joints, and may present signs of infection, health officials announced Thursday.

Officials had previously said most of those at risk received epidural steroid injections to relieve back pain. On a Thursday conference call with reporters, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said it was alerted to one case of a person who may have developed a fungal infection after receiving a steroid injection in his or her ankle. While the case hasn't been confirmed to be caused by a fungus, the person received the same steroid injection as the confirmed fungal meningitis cases and is showing symptoms consistent with a fungal infection.

The CDC said there are 170 reported infections tied to an 11-state meningitis outbreak, including 14 people who died.

In total, up to 14,000 people may have received the contaminated injections, said health officials; previous estimates suggested that number was closer to 13,000 patients. The CDC reported it has successfully tracked down nearly 12,000 of these patients -- about 90 percent -- to inform them of their risk.

25 Photos

Deadly meningitis outbreak in U.S.

The ongoing outbreak is tied to contaminated methylprednisolone acetate steroid injections made by specialty pharmacy New England Compounding Center. After contaminants were discovered in an unopened vial during a late September inspection at the Framingham, Mass., facility, three lots of single-dose vials of the steroid that were sent to 76 facilities in 23 U.S. states -- in total 17,676 vials -- were recalled.

States that received injections include: California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Texas and West Virginia. However, because the company is licensed in all 50 states, there is a possibility products may have shipped elsewhere.

Play Video

CDC: 13,000 may have been exposed to meningitis

On Thursday Dr. J. Todd Weber, incident manager of the multi-state meningitis outbreak at the CDC, told reporters that there were169 confirmed cases of fungal meningitis and one infection involving the ankle injection. The person showed symptoms consistent of a fungal joint infection, such as pain, redness and swelling; however, laboratory tests still need to confirm the fungus that caused this particular infection. Steroids can also be used to relieve pain in ankles, knees and other joints.

New details have also emerged about the particular type of fungus involved in the meningitis outbreak. As of Oct. 10, the CDC's fungal disease laboratory has confirmed the presence of the Exserohilum fungus in 10 people with meningitis and the fungus Aspergillus in one person with meningitis -- the latter being the first case linked to the outbreak that occurred in Tennessee. Up to three other cases tied to Exserohilum fungus have been confirmed in non-CDC labs, Weber added.

Interestingly, Weber noted, Exserohilum bacteria have not historically been known to cause fungal meningitis.

"This is new territory for public health and the clinical community," Weber warned.

Dr. Deborah M. Autor, deputy commissioner for global regulatory operations and policy at the Food and Drug Administration, said Thursday during the press conference that more than 50 unopened vials have been found to be contaminated at facilities across the country in addition to the center based in Framingham, Mass. Tests are ongoing to verify the type of fungus found in those vials. Autor said the agency ruled out contamination of epidural trays made by other companies which held the vials. Previously, officials had noted one contaminated vial was found during an inspection at the New England Compounding Center.

Another company, Ameridose, which shares ownership with the NECC, voluntarily shut down operations Oct. 10 to assist in the investigation.

More cases of the infections are expected in coming weeks. Dr. Ben Park, medical officer of the CDC's Mycotic Diseases Branch, told reporters Thursday that the median time between the steroid injection and onset of symptoms is two weeks. However, the longest delay was found to be 42 days, with Park emphasizing the CDC does not yet know what the longest time gap will be.

Weber told reporters that patients who received these injections will need to be vigilant for months afterwards to see if they've developed an infection.

"We know we are not out of the woods yet," he warned.

Play Video

Meningitis outbreak kills 12, spreads to 10 states

Given the types of fungus involved, Weber said patients with confirmed cases should receive two strong antifungal drugs, but recommendations that may change as more information develops. Even if a patient shows symptoms tied to the outbreak but tests negative for fungus, they should still be treated for fungal meningitis, he said. Weber also noted the earlier doctors intervene the greater likelihood a patient survives.

Criticism has engulfed the New England Compounding Center and the government's regulation -- or lack thereof -- of such facilities. Compounding companies, which mix doses of medications to achieve different potencies, do not fall under the same FDA regulation as companies that manufacture drugs.

Dr. Madeleine Biondolillo, director of the health care safety and quality at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, told reporters Thursday that the company violated Mass. state law that requires compounding companies to only mix drugs after receiving a patient's specific prescription, and were instead mass-producing compounded drugs. She noted her department does not oversee volume of medications the company distributed, and that interstate distribution from these companies needs to be regulated at a federal level.

During the press conference, health officials called for new regulations to ensure an outbreak of this magnitude does not happen again.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • Ryan Jaslow On Google+ »

    Ryan Jaslow is CBSNews.com's health editor.

12 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
saasy4mom says:
I nearly died also. Some of the facilities are concealing the number of victims. It's a coverup. I went to the emergency room and was told my diagnosis is "Fatigue"
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Healthcareinfection says:
http://www.healthcareinfection.com/fungal-infections-linked-to-steroid-injections/?preview=true&preview_id=898&preview_nonce=4f003e1688

Healthcareinfection.com
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Healthcareinfection says:
The provider of these tainted injection vials could be found negligent, in addition question need to be asked by patients and their families about the healthcare providers who prescribed, and administrated the steroid injections.

http://www.healthcareinfection.com/fungal-infections-linked-to-steroid-injections/?preview=true&preview_id=898&preview_nonce=4f003e1688
reply
elderartist replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
there is help go to www.fungalmeningitis.com they have resources for those who need help and those interested in finging out how it happened.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
saasy4mom says:
I have been sick from those injections since June 18, 2012. I told my doctor I had headached and elevated blood pressure from the injections and was blown off. Now Hartford County Surgical Center in Maryland which is affiliated with my pain clinic has used the tainted injections.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
says:
My grandpa went in for a steroid shot on July 11 and died one week later on the 18th. Is there anybody in SD with a similar story? I know the SD CDC says that SD is not affected but isn't this just a little coincidental?
reply
elderartist replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Dear Cobal,

I am so sorry for your loss. Considering the newest stories where more drugs have been found to be tainted I would check back with the CDC to make sure none of those drugs were involved in your Grandfathers death. This has been a good resource for me www.fungalmeningitis.com this attorney is very knowledgeable about this case and has set up a victims site. She will respond to your questions.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
says:
My grandpa went in for a steroid shot on July 11 and died one week later on the 18th. Is there anybody in SD with a similar story? I know the SD CDC says that SD is not affected but isn't this just a little coincidental?
reply
tobyaaron replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
my mother went in for a steroid injection on oct.10 in nashville,tn. she quickly started worsening and passed away oct.16
linkicon reporticon emailicon
says:
My grandpa went in for a steroid shot on July 11 and died one week later on the 18th. Is there anybody in SD with a similar story? I know the SD CDC says that SD is not affected but isn't this just a little coincidental?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
cbsnewsinformative says:
who's going to jail for making this drug illegally
and killing 14 people
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Jonseen says:
This is such a nightmare and a horrible tragedy. Steroid injections are very common; I know several people who had them in the past month. This could hit close to home, almost anywhere and anyone.

I really wonder how such a thing could happen; was it careless or deliberate.

I'm very sorry for all the families involved.
reply
See all 12 Comments