Common Respiratory Infection Bacteria On Verge Of Becoming Superbugs
Antibiotic resistance is poised to spread globally among bacteria
frequently implicated in respiratory and urinary infection, according to
new research.
A recent study shows that two genes that confer
resistance against a particularly strong class of antibiotics can be
shared easily among a family of bacteria responsible for a significant
portion of hospital-associated infections. Drug-resistant germs in the
same family of bacteria recently infected several patients at two Los
Angeles hospitals. The infections have been linked to medical scopes
believed to have been contaminated with bacteria that can resist
carbapenems, potent antibiotics that are supposed to be used only in
gravely ill patients or those infected by resistant bacteria.
The researchers studied a family of bacteria called Enterobacteriaceae,
which includes E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Enterobacter. Some
strains of these bacteria do not cause illness and can help keep the
body healthy. But in people with weakened immune systems, infections
with carbapenem-resistant versions of these bacteria can be deadly.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention named carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae as one of the three most urgent threats among
emerging forms of antibiotic-resistant disease. Studies have shown the
fatality rate for these infections is above 50 percent in patients with
weakened immune systems.
Bacteria
that cause many hospital-associated infections are ready to quickly
share genes that allow them to resist powerful antibiotics. Credit:
CDC/James Archer
"Carbapenems are one of our last resorts for
treating bacterial infections, what we use when nothing else works,"
said senior author Gautam Dantas, PhD, associate professor of pathology
and immunology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
"Given what we know now, I don't think it's overstating the case to say
that for certain types of infections, we may be looking at the start of
the post-antibiotic era, a time when most of the antibiotics we rely on
to treat bacterial infections are no longer effective."
Dantas and other experts recommend strictly limiting the usage of carbapenems to cases in which no other treatments can help.
Two
genes are primarily responsible for carbapenem-resistant versions of
these disease-causing bacteria. One gene, KPC, was detected in New York
in 2001 and quickly spread around most of the world, with the exception
of India, Pakistan and other South Asian countries. This gene was
present in the bacteria that recently contaminated medical equipment in a
Los Angeles hospital where two patients died.
A second
carbapenem resistance gene, NDM-1, was identified in 2006 in New Delhi,
India. It was soon detected throughout South Asia, and most patients
infected by bacteria with NDM-1 have had an epidemiological link to
South Asian countries.
Dantas and his collaborators were curious
about why the two resistance genes seemed to be geographically
exclusive. For the study, they compared the genomes of
carbapenem-resistant bacteria isolated in the United States with those
of carbapenem-resistant bacteria isolated in Pakistan.
Based on
the apparent geographic exclusivity of the two resistance genes, the
scientists expected to find that bacteria from the two regions were
genetically different. Such differences could explain why the two
resistance genes weren't intermingling. But the researchers' results
showed otherwise. The bacteria's high genetic similarity suggests that
the antibiotic resistance genes could be shared easily between bacteria
from the two geographic regions.
The researchers also sequenced a
special portion of bacterial genetic material called plasmids. Most of a
bacteria's DNA is found in its chromosome, but bacteria also have many
extra, smaller and circular bits of DNA known as plasmids that easily
can pass from one bacterial strain to another. A plasmid is like a
bacterial gene delivery truck; it is the primary way antibiotic
resistance genes spread between bacteria.
The researchers
identified a few key instances in which the plasmids carrying NDM-1 or
KPC were nearly identical, meaning they easily could facilitate the
spread of antibiotic resistance between disease-causing bacteria found
in the United States and South Asia. Recent evidence suggests that this
intermingling already may be happening in parts of China.
"Our
findings also suggest it's going to get easier for strains of these
bacteria that are not yet resistant to pick up a gene that lets them
survive carbapenem treatment," Dantas said. "Typically, that's not going
to be a problem for most of us, but as drug-resistant forms of
Enterobacteriaceae become more widespread, the odds will increase that
we'll pass one of these superbugs on to a friend with a weakened immune
system who can really be hurt by them."
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