WASHINGTON — Cryptococcus gattii, a meningitis-causing fungus previously confined to tropical and subtropical climates outside of the United States, has caused severe illness in at least 19 individuals—of whom 4 died—in the Pacific Northwest United States since 2006.
The infections were not predominately associated with immunocompromised individuals, unlike past, non-gattii cases of Cryptococcus infection in North America.
“Twelve of 19 individuals had a delay in diagnosis greater than a week,” Dr. Sarah West said at the jointly held annual Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy and the annual meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. The delay was “in part probably because this was not on physicians' radars, and also because this is not something that our labs are routinely testing,” she said, speaking of a need for physicians, especially in that area, to be more aware of the infection.
The outbreak was previously reported on Vancouver Island in 1999, when more than 200 cases were identified. Although a C. gattii relative—Cryptococcus neoformans—is fairly well known in North America, C. gattii was “not previously described as causing significant disease in North America,” Dr. West said.
The variation is most often seen in Australia and in similarly tropical climates. It is not known why the fungus has spread to this new area, but climate change has been suggested as a factor.
Dr. West and her collaborators first had their interest piqued by a published 2006 case of a man from Puget Sound region of Washington state, who had pulmonary cryptococcoma and who was infected with C. gattii. “He had never traveled to Vancouver Island,” she said, though the C. gattii isolate was genetically identical to the Vancouver strain.
Since then, Dr. West has been querying physicians in Oregon and Washington, checking referrals to local tertiary-care hospitals, and relying on “word of mouth” to put together a retrospective study of 19 culture-confirmed C. gattii cases in the region from 2004 to the present. (Most microbiology labs do not routinely differentiate between C. neoformans and C. gattii in cultures, so the cases were culture confirmed in Dr. West's lab.)
“The bulk of cases were in 2007 and 2008,” she said. “At least three had traveled to British Columbia mainland, but none had documented travel to Vancouver Island.
“When we compared the Cryptococcus data from Oregon with our C. gattii cases, we saw some differences in the underlying conditions,” she said. Whereas about 78% of the non-gattii Cryptococcus cases in Oregon were associated with HIV, cancer, organ transplants, or some other immunosuppressing condition, “just under 40% of the gattii cases were associated with these diagnoses, and none of the patients with gattii were HIV positive.”
Their presenting symptoms were nonspecific, which probably led to delay in diagnosis, added Dr. West, of the Oregon Health and Science University, Portland. As on Vancouver Island, about 75% of cases were associated with pulmonary disease, including two cases of asymptomatic pulmonary nodules. The remaining 25% were associated with central nervous system disease alone. Overall, about 20% of patients had both CNS disease and pulmonary disease.
“Most of the patients with CNS disease had meningoencephalitis, often associated with severe and symptomatic increase in cranial pressure, and many required semipermanent drain placement,” Dr. West said.
Poor outcomes were seen in the 15 survivors, including long-term sequelae such as chronic headaches, vision and hearing loss, and recurrent hospital stays.
An audience member from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the agency has formed a six-state public health working group for C. gattii and has identified cases in Montana and Idaho.
Enzon Pharmaceuticals Inc. supported Dr. West's study. She did not disclose conflicts of interest related to the study.