NosocomialMycobacterium fortuitumColonization from a Contaminated Ice Machine

Abstract
Between October 15 and November 18, 1985, 5 patients on a medical ward of the Albany VA Medical Center (Ward BA) became colonized with Mycobacterium fortuitum. Because other patients in Ward 8A were at risk of developing disease with M. fortuitum, microbiologic surveillance to identify colonization in sputum was begun. By February 15, 1986, 30 colonized patients had been identified in this ward but none in antoher ward with a comparable patient population, which suggests a source unique to Ward 8A. Because water has been recognized as a source of opportunistic mycobacterial pathogens, we conducted a retrospective cass-control study using a telephone survey questionnaire to examine a number of water exposures in 10 patients and 20 control subjects. Exposure to ice from the Ward 8A Ice machine, but not to potable water, was associated with colonization with M. fartuitum. Large-volume water samples from a variety of source were cultured for acid-fast bacilli. M. fartuitum was isolated only from the ice machine in Ward 8A. The ice machine was disconnected, and no additional patients became colonized. Although ice machines are infrequently implicated in nosocomial outbreaks, they represent a potential source for pathogens that survive or replicate in water.