During the spring of 2018, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), states and local public health agencies responded to a multistate… Click to show full abstract
During the spring of 2018, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), states and local public health agencies responded to a multistate outbreak of gastrointestinal illnesses caused by multiple Salmonella serovars and associated with consumption of kratom, a product harvested from a tropical tree native to Southeast Asia. The outbreak included 199 case-patients reported by 41 U.S. states, with illness onset dates ranging from January 11, 2017 to May 8, 2018, leading to 54 hospitalizations, and no deaths. Case-patients reported purchasing kratom products from physical and online retail points of service (POS). Products distributed to 16 POS where 24 case-patients from 17 states purchased kratom were selected for traceback investigation. Traceback revealed that the kratom was imported from several countries, the most common being Indonesia. Local and state officials collected product samples from case-patients and retail POS. The FDA collected 76 product samples from POS and distributors, of which 42 (55%) tested positive for Salmonella . The positive samples exhibited a wide range of pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns and whole genome sequence (WGS) genetic heterogeneity, and a total 25 of 42 (60%) yielded at least one isolate indistinguishable from one or more outbreak-related clinical isolates. While it does not exclude a possibility of a single contamination source, the extent of genetic diversity exhibited by the Salmonella isolates recovered from product samples and a lack of traceback convergence, suggested that kratom was widely contaminated across multiple sites from which it was grown, harvested, and packaged. As a result of the contamination, kratom products were recalled by numerous firms (both voluntarily and mandatory). Epidemiologic, traceback, and laboratory evidence supported the conclusion that kratom products were associated with illnesses.
               
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