- Rhee, Chanu;
- Klompas, Michael;
- Tamburini, Fiona B;
- Fremin, Brayon J;
- Chea, Nora;
- Epstein, Lauren;
- Halpin, Alison Laufer;
- Guh, Alice;
- Gallen, Rachel;
- Coulliette, Angela;
- Gee, Jay;
- Hsieh, Candace;
- Desjardins, Christopher A;
- Pedamullu, Chandra Sekhar;
- DeAngelo, Daniel J;
- Manzo, Veronica E;
- Folkerth, Rebecca Dunn;
- Milner, Danny A;
- Pecora, Nicole;
- Osborne, Matthew;
- Chalifoux-Judge, Diane;
- Bhatt, Ami S;
- Yokoe, Deborah S
Background. Five neuroinvasive Bacillus cereus infections (4 fatal) occurred in hospitalized patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) during a 9-month period, prompting an investigation by infection control and public health officials. Methods. Medical records of case-patients were reviewed and a matched case-control study was performed. Infection control practices were observed. Multiple environmental, food, and medication samples common to AML patients were cultured. Multilocus sequence typing was performed for case and environmental B cereus isolates. Results. All 5 case-patients received chemotherapy and had early-onset neutropenic fevers that resolved with empiric antibiotics. Fever recurred at a median of 17 days (range, 9-20) with headaches and abrupt neurological deterioration. Case-patients had B cereus identified in central nervous system (CNS) samples by (1) polymerase chain reaction or culture or (2) bacilli seen on CNS pathology stains with high-grade B cereus bacteremia. Two case-patients also had colonic ulcers with abundant bacilli on autopsy. No infection control breaches were observed. On case-control analysis, bananas were the only significant exposure shared by all 5 case-patients (odds ratio, 9.3; P = .04). Five environmental or food isolates tested positive for B cereus, including a homogenized banana peel isolate and the shelf of a kitchen cart where bananas were stored. Multilocus sequence typing confirmed that all case and environmental strains were genetically distinct. Multilocus sequence typing-based phylogenetic analysis revealed that the organisms clustered in 2 separate clades. Conclusions. The investigation of this neuroinvasive B cereus cluster did not identify a single point source but was suggestive of a possible dietary exposure. Our experience underscores the potential virulence of B cereus in immunocompromised hosts.