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MYSTERIOUS FOE PREYS ON WAR'S WOUNDED -- A
strange,
drug-resistant bacterium was infecting troops.
Few had
heard of it, and no one was sure of its origin.

Dr. Kyle Petersen, an infectious
disease specialist with the U.S. Navy, examines a colony of
Acinetobacter baumannii at the National Naval Medical Center.
Petersen was one of the first in 2003 to sound the alarm on an
outbreak involving this unusual bacterium that was making the
rounds among troops wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan. Years later,
hundreds of patients in American military hospitals have become
infected. (photo: Dennis Drenner / For The Times) |
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Mysterious foe preys on war's wounded
A strange, drug-resistant bacterium was
infecting troops. Few had heard of it, and no one was sure of its
origin.
By Jia-Rui Chong
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
The young Army medic would not stop bleeding.
He had been put on a powerful regimen of antibiotics by doctors aboard
the hospital ship Comfort in the Persian Gulf. But something was wrong.
He was in shock and bleeding from small pricks where nurses had placed
intravenous lines. Red, swollen tissue from an active bacterial
infection was expanding around his abdominal wound. His immune system
was in overdrive.
How odd, thought Dr. Kyle Petersen, an infectious disease specialist. He
knew of one injured Iraqi man with similar symptoms and a few days later
encountered an Iraqi teenager with gunshot wounds in the same condition.
Within a few days, blood tests confirmed that the medic and the two
wounded Iraqis were all infected with an unusual bacterium,
Acinetobacter baumannii.
This particular strain had a deadly twist. It was resistant to a dozen
antibiotics. The medic survived, but by the time Petersen connected the
dots, the two Iraqi patients were dead.
It was April 2003, early in the Iraq war -- and 4 1/2 years later,
scientists are still struggling to understand the medical mystery.
The three cases aboard the Comfort were the first of a stubborn outbreak
that has spread to at least five other American military hospitals,
including Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington and the Army's
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany.
Hundreds of patients -- the military says it has not tabulated how many
-- have been infected with the bacterium in their bloodstream,
cerebrospinal fluid, bones or lungs. Many of them were troops wounded in
Iraq or Afghanistan; others have been civilians infected after stays in
military hospitals.
At least 27 people have died in military hospitals with Acinetobacter
infections since 2003, although doctors are uncertain how many of the
deaths were caused by the bacteria.
The rise in infections has been dramatic. In 2001 and 2002,
Acinetobacter infections made up about 2% of admissions at the
specialized burn unit at Brooke Army Medical Center in Texas. In 2003,
the rate jumped to 6%, and then to 12% by 2005. Other military hospitals
have reported similar increases.
In the early days of the war, there were so many infections in an
intensive care unit on the Comfort that a nurse posted a sign:
"Acinetobacter Alley." In two months, the bacterium was found in 44 of
the 211 patients wounded in battle.
It was getting out of control. Petersen pleaded for help on an
infectious disease mailing list.
"Can anyone familiar with [the] soil biology of Iraq or the
drug-prescribing practices of the pre-regime medical system explain the
severe drug resistance pattern we are seeing among our trauma victims?"
A persistent slacker
It was no surprise that Petersen knew little
about Acinetobacter -- which has long been seen as the slacker of the
bacterial world.
It's called Acinetobacter, from the Latin word for "motionless," because
the bacterium lacks flagella or cilia to move.
"Organisms that are relatively wimpy pathogens . . . are not high on
people's list," said Fred Tenover, a microbiologist at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
The bacterium is persistent, however, and requires few nutrients. It
lives naturally in soil and can survive for days on dry surfaces, such
as doorknobs or hospital equipment.
Acinetobacter usually threatens only the weakest of the weak, those
whose immune systems are compromised because of old age, trauma or
disease. Even then, garden-variety Acinetobacter is easily controlled
with common antibiotics.
But the situation started to change about two decades ago.
Acinetobacter followed an evolutionary path trod by numerous other
bacteria since World War II, when antibiotics were introduced widely.
Bacteria not killed by an antibiotic would pass on their resistance to
later generations.
The process was quickened by the often profligate use of the drugs,
which allowed more bacteria to develop resistance.
Today a host of diseases, such as tuberculosis and gonorrhea, have
highly antibiotic-resistant strains.
"If we use antibiotics to kill off everything else, what is left
standing is very, very drug resistant," said CDC epidemiologist Arjun
Srinivasan. "Acinetobacter is one of those left standing."
Tenover first noticed a strain of Acinetobacter with some drug
resistance in the mid-1980s while working at a veterans hospital in
Seattle. Several years later, he met with Ghassan Matar, a visiting
Lebanese scientist at the CDC, whose samples of Acinetobacter baumannii
from patients in a Beirut hospital raised another red flag.
The infections were a legacy of years of fighting. Positive tests for
Acinetobacter more than tripled at the hospital from 1983 to 1984 and
stayed high for years after. The samples Matar brought were already
resistant to two important classes of antibiotics.
In the following years, civilian hospitals in the U.S. and around the
world reported sporadic outbreaks of drug-resistant Acinetobacter.
"You have an organism of relatively low virulence that became more
important because you've run out of drugs to treat it with," Tenover
said.
The question that Petersen struggled with was how this bug had found its
way into modern military hospitals.
Doctors could beat back an infection with the strongest antibiotics, and
hospitals could try to scrub away the bacteria. But those weren't
solutions.
They had to find the source of the contamination.
The plea is heardResponses to Petersen's plea on the mailing list poured
in to the Comfort.
A Canadian soil scientist who worked in Iraq in the 1970s described high
rates of antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus bacteria in dirt samples.
The scientist surmised they were caused by the erratic distribution of
antibiotics in Iraq.A shipment of drugs would arrive and doctors would
use them until they ran out. Then they would prescribe whatever other
antibiotic was sent next, the scientist said.
A microbiologist wrote to Petersen about Australian patients injured in
the 2002 nightclub bombings in Bali, Indonesia, who returned home with
astronomically high levels of very drug-resistant bacteria, including
Acinetobacter.
"It gave me an idea that maybe it was something related to the process
of aeromedical evacuation or the injury process," said Petersen, now 39.
After Comfort reported its first Acinetobacter cases, infections sprang
up in military hospitals in the Middle East, Germany and the U.S. The
facilities took the cases seriously.
The night Marine Maj. K.C. Schuring arrived at Andrews Air Force Base in
Maryland, a doctor told him point-blank that if his fever didn't subside
within three days, his left leg would probably have to be amputated.
Schuring, barely conscious and lying on a gurney, heard the doctor tell
him that the infection could spread: "This can kill you."
He was taken to the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., and
immediately isolated. He heard the word Acinetobacter for the first
time.
Schuring, who had been shot in both legs in Iraq, could take bad news,
but this worried him.
"I was happy they could treat it, though they said they couldn't
necessarily cure it," he said.
Whenever he left the room, he wore a yellow gown to alert others of his
infection. Everyone who visited him donned yellow gowns and gloves.
He felt "like a freak," he said.
Digging up dirt
In 2003, Dr. Clint Murray, then a 33-year-old
Army major at a frontline aid station in Iraq, began to dig for answers.
He started at the beginning.
Though some wounded soldiers were sent to aid stations such as Murray's,
most were airlifted directly to more advanced facilities like the Combat
Support Hospital in Baghdad.
Murray, an infectious disease specialist, asked a critical care doctor
there to take samples from soldiers wounded by guns, improvised
explosive devices, mortars or other weapons. As doctors scrambled to
stabilize patients, the wounds were swabbed to collect bacteria. Most of
the samples were taken within 20 to 40 minutes of the soldiers'
injuries.
But out of the samples taken from 49 patients, the doctors found no
Acinetobacter, though there were plenty of other bacteria, such as
Staphylococcus.
That still left the possibility that dirt and dust from beyond the
battlefield had blown into a wound.
Murray joined a group, including Petersen and Srinivasan, that focused
on dirt around field hospitals in Iraq and Kuwait -- the next step in
the medical evacuation chain that started at frontline aid stations and
ended at hospitals in the U.S.
The group gathered 18 dirt samples around seven field hospitals, and
also looked at 31 archived soil samples from around the combat zone.
Only one of the soil samples -- taken from outside a field hospital mess
hall -- turned up positive. The group compared it with strains collected
from casualties at the field hospital in Baghdad and larger hospitals
including Landstuhl in Germany, and found they were not related.
Dirt, it seemed, was not the culprit.
In late 2004, Murray returned to Brooke Army Medical Center. He wondered
whether soldiers were carrying the bacterium on their skin and infecting
themselves when wounded. He set to work on a study swabbing the nostrils
of 293 soldiers at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas, who had never been to Iraq or
Afghanistan.
None of the soldiers tested positive for Acinetobacter, Murray and
colleagues reported in the journal Infection Control and Hospital
Epidemiology in 2006.
They seemed to be running up against a wall.
As the search continued, military doctors struggled to find an effective
strategy to combat the bug. The treatment could be difficult.
Schuring said doctors experimented with different drugs. Schuring's
situation was complicated by his allergy to penicillin.
At one point, he was taking four antibiotics. The infection had already
taken away his appetite and made him queasy. It took doctors about two
weeks to narrow down his treatment to a relatively new intravenous
antibiotic, tigecycline.
Doctors operated on him nearly every other day to clean out dead tissue
in his legs.
When the infection began to settle down, doctors installed a 21-inch
stainless steel plate along his left thigh. The surgery made Schuring
dizzy, but the doctors didn't want to give him a blood transfusion for
fear of inciting a new infection.
The treatment, Schuring said, was like going "through hell."
Suspicion shifts
Evidence was building that the cause of the
infections was something in the military trauma system.
The hospital-based transmission made sense since the bacterium had
already taken up residence in civilian hospitals.
Though preliminary typing found no link between the U.S. civilian
strains and the military casualty strains, the conditions in military
hospitals were just right for the bacterium, said Srinivasan, the CDC
epidemiologist.
In the hectic environment of field hospitals, it was also difficult to
impose strict infection-control measures, such as thorough cleaning of
hands and equipment after each patient, Murray said.
The field hospitals had become the center of a perfect storm of trauma
-- battle- hardened bugs preying on the weakest patients at their most
vulnerable moments.
"Soldiers now survive injuries they wouldn't have survived before,"
Srinivasan said.. "That challenge creates soldiers who are sick, who are
living in healthcare facilities for a long time and are more susceptible
to hospital-associated infections."
It took about three years for Murray and his colleagues to look through
the entire chain of trauma, from the battlefields to the field hospitals
to the tertiary care center in Landstuhl and finally to the military
hospitals in the U.S.
The results of their labor, published this May in the journal Clinical
Infectious Diseases, showed that all seven field hospitals tested in
Iraq and Kuwait had Acinetobacter in patient care areas.
"We can't be 100% sure, but the data supports that patients are probably
getting exposed to Acinetobacter in field hospitals in Iraq," Murray
said.
How the bacteria became entrenched in the field hospitals is still
unknown. But in many ways, it is irrelevant. It is there, and, as
civilian hospitals have also found, it is not going away easily.
The military strain of the bacterium has caused at least one civilian
death. Acinetobacter was growing in the lungs and bloodstream of a
35-year-old man whose immune system was suppressed because he had a
kidney transplant at Walter Reed in 2005. There were no signs of
infection until the man came down with acute shortness of breath one
evening and died soon after.
For the most part, doctors have figured out the most effective drugs
against the bacterium -- an antibiotic called imipenem and an older
class of drugs known as polymyxins. The drugs have made the infections
fairly manageable. Through stricter controls, such as monitored
hand-washing, infection rates have shown signs of dropping in some
hospitals.
Petersen, who worked at National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda after
the Comfort's mission ended, treated just one or two Acinetobacter
infections in July, down from the highs of 15 to 20 a month in 2004 and
2005. This year, there have been only a few cases each month, according
to hospital figures.
But Murray now wonders whether Acinetobacter was really the culprit
after all.
He and others looked at patients with the worst outcomes at Brooke's
burn unit and found that Acinetobacter was associated with larger burns
but was not causing more deaths by itself.
A study of 35 returning soldiers with the most extreme kinds of shin
bone fractures found that Acinetobacter was the most common bacterium
around fracture sites when the patients arrived, but it was easy to
clear.
Those who later suffered serious complications, including amputations,
tended to be infected with other serious bacteria, such as
Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Acinetobacter, it turns out, may only be a marker of vulnerability. "It
is not the worst bug," Murray said.
'One step at a time'
The battle between bacteria and humans never
ends.
Recently, scientists have noted signs that Acinetobacter strains are
growing resistant to polymyxins and imipenem, said Tenover, the CDC
microbiologist.
There are, however, small victories for humans.
Just before Christmas, after a month of treatment, Schuring returned to
his home in Farmington Hills, Mich.
Schuring's wife, Lynn, was nervous about this strange bug her husband
had brought back from the war.
What if they kissed? What if her husband put down a drink and one of
their young children took a sip? Would her parents, who are in their
70s, be at risk if they visited?
Doctors assured her that this bug was no danger to the strong. So far,
no one in the family has gotten sick.
But Schuring's doctor warned them that they must keep an eye out for any
sign of the bacteria, which could lie dormant for years.
Schuring, now a 38-year-old lieutenant colonel, has continued to improve
and hobbles around on his own two legs. He has one last surgery at
Bethesda in January and then, perhaps, he will run marathons again.
"You know, this is a long process for these guys and their families,"
Lynn Schuring said. "I think we just take it one step at a time. . . .
"Everything we've been through has taught me to take it one step at a
time."
jia-rui.chong@latimes.com
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Larry Scott --