(Reuters) — Attorneys for 2 patients infected with a drug-resistant bacterial "superbug" during medical procedures in a Los Angeles hospital, 1 of whom died, have sued the maker of the devices used in their care.
Aaron Young, an 18-year-old high school student who remains under monitoring at a hospital fighting the severe infection, and the family of Antonia Cerda sued Olympus (PINK:OCPNY), which manufactured the specialized scopes used during the outbreak at the UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center.
The suit alleged that the company’s reusable scope, also known as a duodenoscope, was unsafe because the cleaning protocols for the complex device were not updated following a recent redesign.
"Defendants continued to manufacture, sell, distribute, promote and supply the Q180V Scope as to maximize sales and profits at the expense of the health and safety of the public," according to the lawsuit.
Representatives for Olympus did not immediately return requests for comment on the lawsuits.
Both suits seek unspecified damages alleging fraud and negligence on the part of Olympus, and Cerda’s also included injury and wrongful death claims.
The plaintiffs allege that medical staff followed the company’s cleaning guidelines before using the devices, but plaintiffs’ attorney Pete Kaufman said UCLA and the University of California regents could be added as defendants after further investigation. Kaufman also said more patients would likely join the suit.
Cerda, whose case was filed yesterday, was exposed to 1 of the contaminated scopes as she underwent several procedures last October.
Young, who filed suit Feb. 23, went to the medical center in mid-2014 for a pancreatic ailment then became ill and was hospitalized a short time later, said Kevin Boyle, an attorney on his legal team. By November, he had been diagnosed with carbapenem-resistant enterobacteria, or CRE, the attorney said.
Seven patients were infected with CRE during endoscopies at the large Los Angeles teaching hospital between Oct. 3 and Jan. 28, and 2 died. Officials warned that as many as 179 people may have been exposed to the so-called superbug.
Officials have said there is no broader threat to public health, and that the hospital has called and sent letters to at-risk former patients.
All 5 of the confirmed infected patients who remain alive are under treatment, UCLA spokesman Enrique Rivero said yesterday.
The scopes, which are threaded through the mouth, throat and stomach and used in a variety of gastrointestinal procedures, can be difficult to disinfect properly, even when instructions provided by the manufacturers are followed, the FDA has said.
The federal safety watchdog has known since 2009 about the potential for the devices to transmit lethal infections, but hasn’t recommended any new safety requirements, a lapse that hospital-acquired infection experts say threatens patient safety.