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Spinal dura may have been pierced in meningitis cases

Walter F. Roche Jr., The (Nashville) Tennessean
The Exserohilum rostratum fungus is the primary cause of a number of meningitis illnesses afflicting people who got steroid injections for pain.
  • Meningitis symptoms can result from other causes
  • Steroids leave patients' immune systems more vulnerable
  • Meningitis hotline is 800-222-1222

NASHVILLE — As officials attempt to find the way tainted steroids became fatal cases of fungal meningitis, a high-profile forensic physician in New York said the person administering the epidural shot might have pierced the protective coating around the spinal canal inadvertently in at least some of the cases.

If that occurred, the fatal fungus would have had a direct path to the victim's brain, Michael Baden said.

But Baden and others say that determining whether the spinal dura was breached could be difficult in an autopsy.

"Any perforation of the dura will heal after a few days," he said. "The chances of finding that puncture are remote."

That also could explain why some of the 23 who died succumbed much more quickly than others, Baden said. Health officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have said that while some patients became ill with fungal meningitis within a week, others did not show symptoms for six weeks.

On Monday, federal officials reported 297 illnesses, including three joint infections, and 23 deaths in 16 states.

Though nearly all of the lawsuits filed by victims and their next of kin have named only the Massachusetts drug compounder, the New England Compounding Center, as a defendant, a suit filed in Virginia also named the pain clinic where the victim was treated.

Baden said the fungus could penetrate the dura even without a puncture.

'It's a horror story'

Natalie Strand, an anesthesiologist at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, said physicians use contrast dyes and a fluoroscope when they treat back pain patients with steroids to avoid puncturing the dura.

She and Baden noted that the correct administration of a spinal steroid requires placing the drug in a very small space.

Strand said the meningitis outbreak has caused concerns among some of her patients because the symptoms of meningitis, such as nausea and back pain, are common and can result from many other causes.

"It's a horror story," she said, adding that officials at USC were relieved when they determined that none of the tainted medicine was used on their patients.

"I've had a lot of patients expressing concerns," she said.

Doctors could face trouble

Cyril Wecht, a Pittsburgh pathologist, said piercing the dura "is something that should not happen."

But he added that he would not be surprised if it did happen in some of these meningitis cases and agreed that detecting whether the spinal cord's protective coating was breached would be difficult.

"After a few days the white blood cells would obfuscate and obscure the needle hole. It would be pretty hard to isolate the infectious process," he said.

Wecht also noted that treatment with steroids, such as the methylprednisolone acetate that caused the current outbreak, also leaves patients more vulnerable to infections by lessening the response of the immune system.

Fred Pritzker, a Minnesota lawyer who has filed a suit against New England Compounding, said the physicians who administered the tainted steroid "absolutely" could be held liable for their involvement.

He said they could be found at fault for the way the drug was administered and for failing to ensure that the drugs they injected came from a safe and reliable source.

Bankruptcy looms

In what is apparently the first nationwide class action, filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Dallas, lawyers for Lori Cavanaugh charged that she was treated with tainted methylprednisolone and subsequently suffered headaches, nausea, dizziness and stiffness in the neck.

Though Cavanaugh was treated in Michigan, the complaint contends that Texas is the most appropriate location to pursue all the claims stemming from the outbreak because more than 100 Texas residents were injected with the steroid at just one Texas facility.

Edward Jazlowiecki, one of Cavanaugh's lawyers, said he had no doubt New England Compounding would file for bankruptcy in the near future.

"There'll never be enough money to compensate everyone," he said. "They are going to go bankrupt. You can bet on it."

Contributing: The Associated Press

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