Mycobacterium abscessus bacteremia after receipt of intravenous infusate of cytokine-induced killer cell therapy for body beautification and health boosting

Raymond Liu, Kelvin K.W. To, Jade L.L. Teng, Garnet K.Y. Choi, Ka Yi Mok, Kin Ip Law, Eugene Y.K. Tso, Kitty S.C. Fung, Tak Chiu Wu, Alan K.L. Wu, Shing Hoi Fung, Sally C.Y. Wong, Nigel J. Trendell-Smith, Kwok Yung Yuen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. We report the first series of Mycobacterium abscessus bacteremia after cytokine-induced killer cell therapy for body beautification and health boosting. Methods. The clinical manifestations, laboratory and radiological investigations, cytokine/chemokine profiles, and outcomes were described and analyzed. Results. Four patients were admitted, and 3 patients had septic shock. Chest radiographs showed pulmonary infiltrates in all patients. Three patients developed peripheral gangrene, and 1 patient required lower limb and finger amputations. Patient 1 also developed disseminated infection including meningitis and urinary tract infection. Postmortem examination of patient 1 showed focal areas of pulmonary hemorrhage and diffuse alveolar damage, splenic infarct, adrenal necrosis, and hemorrhage, and acid-fast bacilli (AFB) were seen in the lung, liver, kidney, and adrenal gland. Patient 2 developed inguinal granulomatous lymphadenitis about 40 days after onset of lower limb gangrene. Wedge-shaped pulmonary infarcts were found in patient 3, and retinitis and subcutaneous lesions developed in patient 4. Patients in septic shock had dysregulated cytokine/chemokine profiles. Patient 4 with relatively milder presentation had increasing levels of interleukin 17 and cytokines in the interferon-γ/interleukin 12 pathway. All survivors required prolonged intravenous antibiotics. Blood cultures grew M. abscessus for all patients, and admission peripheral blood smear revealed AFB for 3 patients. Mycobacterium abscessus was also isolated from respiratory specimens (2 patients), urine (1 patient), and cerebrospinal fluid (1 patient). Time to initial blood culture positivity (patients 1, 2, and 3: ≤52 hours; patient 4: 83 hours) appeared to correlate with disease severity. Conclusions. Empirical coverage for rapidly growing mycobacteria should be considered in patients with sepsis following cosmetic procedures.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)981-991
Number of pages11
JournalClinical Infectious Diseases
Volume57
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 1 2013
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Microbiology (medical)
  • Infectious Diseases

Keywords

  • Bacteremia
  • Beauty
  • Cytokine-induced killer cell therapy
  • Mycobacterium abscessus
  • Sepsis

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