Staff and wire report
WASHINGTON — Federal health officials have tracked down 12,000 of the roughly 14,000 people who may have received contaminated steroid shots in the nation’s growing meningitis outbreak, warning Thursday that patients will need to keep watch for symptoms of the deadly infection for months.
“We know that we are not out of the woods yet,” Dr. J. Todd Weber of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said as the death toll reached 14.
Of the 170 people sickened in the outbreak, all but one have a rare fungal form of meningitis after receiving suspect steroid shots for back pain, the CDC said. The other case is an ankle infection discovered in Michigan; steroid shots also can be given to treat aching knees, shoulders or other joints.
Scotland County medical professionals have joined those in Robeson County in saying that no threat of fungal meningitis exists for patients who have recently received the injection at their medical facilities.
Integrated Pain Solutions and OrthoCarolina Scotland were both unaffected by a product recall from New England Compounding Center, a pharmacy in Massachusetts where the outbreak is said to have originated, according to a statement from Scotland Health Care System.
“We get our medications from a nationally recognized pharmaceutical company,” Dr. James Taylor, of Integrated Pain Solutions, said in the statement. “… I want to reassure the public that they can safely receive steroid injections at our office. None of our patients have had any problems and we don’t expect them to have any problems.”
Southeastern Regional Medical Center, Lumberton Radiological Associates and Cape Fear Pain Treatment Center all told The Robesonian this week that they were not involved in the voluntary recall of products
Fungus has been found in at least 50 vials of an injectable steroid medication made at the pharmacy, investigators said. Health authorities haven’t yet said how they think the medication was contaminated, but they have ruled out other suspects — other products used in administering the shots — and the focus continues to be on that pharmacy, the New England Compounding Center.
Compounding pharmacies traditionally supply products that aren’t commercially available, unlike the steroid at issue in the outbreak. And Dr. Madeleine Biondolillo of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said it appears the company violated state law governing those pharmacies, which aren’t supposed to do large-scale production like a drug manufacturer. Instead, they’re supposed to produce medication for patient-specific prescriptions, she said.
“This organization chose to apparently violate the licensing requirements under which they were allowed to operate,” she told reporters Thursday.
Company officials weren’t immediately available to comment Thursday but earlier this week declined comment except to say they were cooperating with the investigation.
Idaho becomes the 11th state to report at least one illness. The others are Florida, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee and Virginia.
Last month, after illnesses began coming to light, the company recalled three lots of the steroid medicine — known as preservative-free methylprednisolone acetate— that were made in May, June and August. The recall involved about 17,700 single-dose vials of the steroid sent to clinics in 23 states.
According to the website for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the three outpatient clinics in North Carolina that received a recalled shipment of the injection from New England Compounding Center are High Point Surgery of High Point; North Carolina Orthopaedic Clinic in Durham; and Surgery Center of Wilson.






