Abstract Objective: To report on the investigation of a pseudo-outbreak of Mycobacterium mucogenicum and examine its clinical and operational impact. Design: Outbreak investigation, retrospective cohort study. Setting: Academic medical center in Los Angeles, California. Patients: Patients whose bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cultures grew M. mucogenicum from 2020–2024. Methods: We performed an institutional outbreak investigation of M. mucogenicum, reviewed electronic medical records of a subset of affected patients (2023–2024), and assessed the operational impact. Results: The incidence of M. mucogenicum in BAL cultures at Hospital A increased from 6. 1% (29/473) in 2020 to 18. 6% (29/156) in the first quarter of 2024. Epidemiologic investigation revealed non-sterile ice baths used to cool uncapped sterile syringes during bronchoscopy procedures as the contamination source. Next generation sequencing linked clinical isolates to M. mucogenicum recovered from a perioperative ice machine. Nearly all (157/160) clinical isolates grew from nocardia media rather than acid-fast bacilli media. Among 154 patients, including 51 (33. 1%) who were highly immunocompromised, no true infections were identified. Thirty-nine (25. 3%) patients were referred to infectious diseases for consultation, seven (4. 5%) underwent additional workup, and only one received targeted treatment. The pseudo-outbreak incurred 458 hours of microbiology technologist and infection preventionist time and cost the laboratory 88, 426. Conclusions: A four-year pseudo-outbreak of M. mucogenicum traced to contaminated ice baths used during bronchoscopy resulted in unnecessary infectious disease referrals and substantial operational and financial burden to the institution. Avoidance of non-sterile ice use in procedures prevents costly and burdensome pseudo-outbreaks of environmental mycobacteria in healthcare settings.
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Prabaker et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/698c1bdc267fb587c655dcdc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2026.10399
Kavitha Prabaker
Ran Zhuo
University of California, Los Angeles
Sanchi Malhotra
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology
University of California, San Francisco
Duke University
UCLA Health
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