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Clostridial infections in injecting drug users in the United Kingdom
are a relatively new phenomenon that came to light in 2000 when cases
of serious illness and deaths due to Clostridium novyi were recorded.
In the period December 2003 to April 2004, the Anaerobe Reference Laboratory
received twelve referrals of an extremely rare isolate, Clostridium
histolyticum,
from cases of infection in injecting drug users submitted from nine different
hospitals in England and Scotland. Molecular typing of these isolates
by two different methods of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and PCR ribotyping
revealed they are all indistinguishable, indicating a common source of
the infections, most probably a batch of heroin that was recently distributed
across the UK.
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Introduction
Since the outbreak of serious illness and
deaths due to Clostridium novyi that occurred amongst injecting drug
users (IDUs) in 2000 [1], the Anaerobe
Reference Laboratory (ARL) at the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff
has been alerted to the role of clostridial infections in this group
of patients. It is believed that, somewhere along the supply chain,
heroin is being contaminated with clostridial spores. These spores have
been
shown to survive the heroin ‘cooking up’ process that commonly
involves heating in citric acid (pH 2.1) prior to injection [2]. Only
skin or muscle ‘poppers’, those IDUs who inject subcutaneously
or into muscle tissue rather than a vein seem to be affected, as the
injectate creates a localised necrotic focus that is suitable for the
germination
of the clostridial spores. Mixed clostridial spores may be present including
C. tetani and some cases of clinical tetanus in IDUs have been reported,
but an unusual number of infections primarily due to a rarely isolated
clostridial species has recently come to our attention.
Methods and Results
The first such case was in December 2003 when a 35 year old female
IDU from Glasgow presented at hospital with a necrotic lesion at an
injection
site in her buttock. The organism isolated from this lesion was referred
to the Anaerobe Reference Laboratory for identification and was identified
according to the phenotypic criteria of Holdeman et al [3] as Clostridium
histolyticum (FIGURE 1). In the next few weeks, further indistinguishable
isolates from IDUs from other cities across England led to an alert
being issued by the Health Protection Agency Communicable Disease Surveillance
Centre in the Communicable Disease Report Weekly [4]. Later, over a
four
month period to April 2004, another eleven isolates referred to the
ARL from injection site infections or blood cultures taken from heroin
injecting
drug users across England and Scotland have been identified as C.
histolyticum.
Molecular typing methods were applied to these isolates to determine
their relatedness using unrelated strains from the National Collection
of Type
Cultures (NCTC) culture collection and one wild clinical isolate from
a crushed-hand injury for comparison. To the best of our knowledge,
no molecular typing methods have ever been applied to this organism
as it
is so rarely isolated from clinical material.
Figures 2 and 3 show the results of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis
(PFGE) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) ribotyping analysis respectively,
of DNA extracted from the twelve IDU isolates and comparator strains.
All the IDU isolates of C. histolyticum were indistinguishable
by both methods and showed different DNA profiles to the NCTC strains.
The
one wild isolate detailed above also had a distinct profile.



Discussion
Referrals of C. histolyticum from human material are so rare
that previously the ARL had received just one clinical isolate of C.
histolyticum in the preceding 20 years from an infected crushed-hand injury in
an agricultural
worker.
C. histolyticum is a member of the gas-gangrene group of clostridia
that may be isolated from soil, bone-meal and gelatin. It produces
potent exotoxins
that have proteolytic and necrotising properties causing severe localised
necrosis. However, these toxins do not elicit the systemic effects
that caused such dramatic
loss of life as seen in the C. novyi - associated outbreak in 2000.
The referrals had originated from hospitals in nine different towns or cities
around England and Scotland including Glasgow, London, Brighton, Manchester,
Middlesbrough, Banbury, Liverpool, Derby and Nottingham. The patient demography
was 2:1, females to males, and the average age was 35 years. This ratio is
at odds with the usual demography of IDUs in which males usually predominate
and infection may be related to a higher ratio of skin and muscle ‘poppers’ among
women who have difficulty injecting into a vein. The patients had mostly presented
at Accident and Emergency Units where debrided material was sent for microbiological
investigation to the on-site diagnostic bacteriology departments. Ten referrals
were isolates from such material and two were from blood cultures. In some
cases, mixed clostridia were isolated and the local laboratories then referred
these unusual isolates to the ARL for identification as is common practice.
Although the isolates are from as far apart as London and Glasgow, the results
of this typing investigation suggests a common source to these infections.
The most probable scenario is a batch of heroin that was contaminated quite
early in the production or supply chain prior to distribution within the
United Kingdom (UK). Interestingly, this outbreak appears only to be affecting
the
UK as, to date, there have been no reports of C. histolyticum infections
in IDUs in other countries. The outbreak appears to be ongoing as we have
received
several more referrals since April 2004 and this intelligence needs to be
cascaded to drug support workers in the field and also to medical staff,
particularly
in accident and emergency units. Diagnostic microbiology departments should
also be alerted to infections in IDU’s presenting with severe local
necrosis at injection sites and pay attention to any unusual clostridia isolated.
UK
drug support organisations highlighted this problem in 2000 during the C.
novyi outbreak advising users not to inject heroin into tissues if at all
possible
and this warning should be repeated. Other European countries should also
be alert in case supply routes of contaminated heroin alter.
Acknowledgements
We thank the departments of clinical diagnostic microbiology
in the relevant hospitals for referral of the isolates identified
as Clostridium
histolyticum.
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