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Fatal superbugs: Antibiotics losing effectiveness

Last Updated : 26 May 2014, 11:05 IST
Last Updated : 26 May 2014, 11:05 IST

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The spread of superbugs – bacteria that have changed in ways that render antibiotics ineffective against them is a serious and growing threat around the world, according to the World Health Organisation’s first global report on antibiotic resistance.

Once-common treatments for everyday intestinal and urinary tract infections, for pneumonia, for infections in newborns, and for diseases like gonorrhea are no longer working in many people.

The new report on the global threat adds to a Centre for Disease Control and Prevention report last year showing that two million people in the United States are infected annually with antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and 23,000 of them die each year as a result.

Stuart Levy, chair of the board of the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston responds to some of the burning questions.

What are superbugs?

They are bacteria resistant to one or more antibiotics, and they make it difficult to treat or cure infections that once were easily treated.

The antibiotic has lost its ability to control or kill bacterial growth.

The bacteria can grow even in a sea of antibiotics because the antibiotic doesn’t touch them.

The bacteria have acquired the ability to destroy the antibiotic in order to protect themselves.

They’ve developed a gene for resistance to, say, penicillin, and that gene protects them.

A genetic mutation might enable a bacteria to produce enzymes that inactivate antibiotics.

Or (a mutation) might eliminate the target that the antibiotic is supposed to attack.

A bacteria may have developed resistance to five or six antibiotics, so in treatment, you don’t know which one to choose.

And the bacteria accumulate resistance by developing new genes. Genetics is working against us, almost like a science-fiction story.

We’re continuing to use antibiotics in a bad way.

They’re supposed to be used to combat bacteria, not viruses.

The common cold is a virus. Any time you use an antibiotic when it’s not needed, you’re pushing antibiotic resistance ahead. People are misusing them in their homes.

They may have a stockpile they’ve saved, and think taking an antibiotic will help them with a cold.

They’re not helping their cold, and they’re propagating resistance.

This is a big issue. About 80 percent of antibiotics manufactured are given to beef cattle, chickens and hogs to help them grow better and put on more weight.

They excrete them, and the antibiotics largely are not broken down. They enter the environment, the ground and the water and retain their ability to affect bacteria and promote antibiotic resistance.

The Food and Drug Administration has come out with a voluntary plan for industry to phase out antibiotic use. Stuart has been championing this for 30 years.

We combat the further growth and spread of superbugs by using antibiotics only when we need them.

And by eliminating their use in animals.

There’s a paucity of new antibiotics to take care of these multiresistant superbugs, so we’re at the mercy of the bacteria.

The journal Microbe did a report this month on wakening to the need for new antibiotics.

There are a number of new antibiotics being studied. They’re not there yet, but at least they’re in the pipeline.

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Published 26 May 2014, 11:05 IST

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