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Antibiotic
Resistance on the Rise
Excerpt
By Serena Gordon,
HealthScoutNews
By July 2004, nearly two-thirds of the
common strains of the bacteria that cause infections ranging from
middle ear problems to meningitis may be resistant to both penicillin
and erythromycin in some parts of the United States.
At least that's what Harvard University
researchers believe.
In a study published in the March
10 issue of Nature Medicine, the scientists used a mathematical
model to predict how certain antibiotic-resistant strains of Streptococcus
pneumoniae would develop.
Overall, they found that 41 percent
of S. pneumoniae would be resistant to penicillin and erythromycin
if no changes occur in the way antibiotics are used in the eight
sites studied across the United States. Much of the problem is
due to inappropriate use of antibiotics for sicknesses that don't
respond to the drugs, such as the common cold and other viral
infections.
S. pneumoniae are responsible
for most ear infections, sinus infections, pneumonia, meningitis
and blood infections. These bacteria are not, however, responsible
for strep throat.
"The patterns of antibiotic
use and misuse in this country have led to increasing resistance
and these data suggest that the more use and misuse there is,
the more resistance you'll have in your local area," says
study author Marc Lipsitch, an assistant professor of epidemiology
at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Lipsitch and his colleagues studied
eight different types of S. pneumoniae. Within each type,
there were hundreds to thousands of different strains of bacteria.
The types the researchers chose to study are those most commonly
resistant to antibiotics. And many of the bacteria are contained
in the vaccine for S. pneumoniae.
The bacteria samples came from
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention disease surveillance
sites. States included in the samples were California, Connecticut,
Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, Oregon and Tennessee.
One of the first things the researchers
noticed was a wide variation in the amount of resistance between
the sites. For example, in one sample 14.9 percent of the strains
in New York were resistant to penicillin. In Minnesota, that number
jumped to 30.9 percent. In Georgia, it was 53.7 percent, and in
Tennessee nearly 80 percent of the strains were resistant to penicillin.
Lipsitch says the researchers found
that differences in antibiotic use were likely to blame for the
geographic variations.
Next, they tried to predict how
rapidly these strains would mutate into antibiotic-resistant strains.
Lipsitch says the researchers tried to take into account the trends
that have occurred in resistance when they developed their predictions.
If no changes occur in the way
people take antibiotics and more people don't take advantage of
the effective, but expensive vaccine, about 41 percent of the
strains studied at all of the sites will be resistant to penicillin
and erythromycin by the summer of 2004. In Georgia, the researchers
suspect that 65 percent of the strains included in the vaccine
will be dually resistant. In Minnesota, that number will be around
67 percent. That means that resistance will have increased in
those two states by 28 percent and 16.5 percent, respectively.
Does this mean we're doomed to
a future of antibiotic-resistant superbugs? Maybe not, says Dr.
Philip Tierno, head of microbiology and immunology at New York
University Medical Center and author of The Secret Life of
Germs. Tierno likens this study to the classic Charles Dickens'
tale, A Christmas Carol.
"It's a vision of what the
future could be," says Tierno, who says there's still time
to change.
"Don't petition your doctor
for unnecessary antibiotics," he suggests, adding that of
the 90 million antibiotic prescriptions written each year, about
60 million aren't necessary.
However, Tierno says resistance
will always be a problem because bacteria are constantly adapting.
Humans have to be smarter, he says, which is why we need to continue
developing new drugs and using vaccines whenever they're available.
More information
To learn more about antibiotic
resistance, visit the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration or the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Reference
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