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WSWS : News
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& Health
Drug-resistant germs: a global crisis
By Kaye Tucker
25 June 1998
In April this year, the Boston Globe reported the death
of a 70-year-old man in Port Chester, New York after he became
infected with the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus. The potent antibiotic
vancomycin, considered the most powerful and reliable drug available,
proved unable to counter the bacteria.
He was the first patient to die of the infection. In three
previous cases in which vancomycin-resistant strains were identified,
the microbe remained susceptible to other drugs. But in the fourth
instance, the patient was dead 12 hours after treatment began.
Dr Stuart Levy, president of the American Society for Microbiology
and president of the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics,
warned that the death highlighted "concerns raised by many
that a high level, fully vancomycin-resistant organism will emerge
before the end of this century."
Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of hospital-acquired
infections. Strains already exist around the world which are resistant
to all antibiotics except vancomycin. Now the bacteria have moved
one step closer to becoming unstoppable killers, impervious to
the use of all known drugs.
The microbe is found in the nose and throat and on the hair
and skin of 50 percent of healthy individuals. It can also be
found in air, dust, sewage and surfaces of food processing equipment.
If allowed to grow it produces a toxin which is not destroyed
by cooking or canning processes and which causes nausea, vomiting,
abdominal cramping, diarrhea and fever.
Vancomycin-resistant S. aureus is only part of a broader health
crisis. At least three other bacterial species, all potentially
life threatening, are now resistant to more than 100 different
drugs:
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis is one of the major infectious
human diseases. Commonly transmitted by coughing, the bacteria
enter via the mouth, are inhaled into the lungs and set up a
primary tubercle. The tubercle can spread to the lymph nodes
and then into the bloodstream, setting up millions of tiny tubercles
throughout the body. The incidence of tuberculosis or TB, always
prevalent in underdeveloped countries, is on the rise again in
industrialised nations. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis was
first reported in New York City and Florida.
- Enterococcus faecalis is associated with intra-abdominal
and pelvic infections and can cause endocarditis, an inflammation
of the lining of the heart cavity.
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa causes infections of the respiratory
tract.
What is an antibiotic?
An antibiotic is a substance produced by or derived from a
microorganism that inhibits or destroys bacterial growth, giving
a person's immune system a chance to overcome the bacteria that
remain. The drugs work by entering the microbes and interfering
with the production of new bacterial cells.
Antibiotic is derived from the word antibiosis, which was first
used in the 1880s to describe the destruction of one living thing
by another. Antibiosis exists throughout the world of living things--bacteria,
for example, attack other organisms in order to obtain nourishment
and to reproduce, as do moulds, which exist as parasites on other
species.
Attempts to use substances derived from one organism to inhibit
or kill others began at least 2,500 years ago. The Chinese became
aware of the curative properties of the mouldy curd of soybeans
and used this substance to treat boils, carbuncles, and similar
infections.
The first suggestion that the antagonism between two different
bacterial species might be important in treating disease was made
by Louis Pasteur and Jules-Francois Jourbert in 1877. They discovered
that the bacteria responsible for anthrax grew rapidly if inoculated
into urine free from micro-organisms, but died if common-air bacteria
were present.
But it was not until 1928 that the antibiotic era began with
the discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming. Fleming observed
that a growth culture of the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus had
disappeared in an area in which a green mould was growing. As
the mould producing organism was a species of penicillium, Fleming
named the derived drug penicillin.
Initial attempts to treat human infections with penicillin
were largely unsuccessful as the substance was unstable. By 1941
the limitations had been overcome and the drug was used to treat
serious infections. The results were dramatic. Patients who received
penicillin made rapid and complete recoveries.
Since 1948 many antibiotics have been discovered that inhibit
or kill bacteria, opening up a period sometimes referred to as
the golden age of chemotherapy. With a few exceptions, antibiotics
are the only drugs that can cure diseases by eliminating the immediate
cause--micro-organisms. Antibiotics have saved countless lives
and dramatically reduced the duration of diseases.
In the 1930s, the death rate for pneumonia patients ranged
from 20 percent to 85 percent in the United States, but by the
1960s had fallen to about 5 percent. Fatalities from epidemic
spinal meningitis, which once killed 20 percent to 90 percent
of untreated victims, have been reduced to around 2 percent.
The statistics for typhoid fever, syphilis, gonorrhea and many
other communicable diseases are similar. Antibiotics have also
proven useful in preventing some infectious diseases, such as
rheumatic fever, in susceptible people.
Drug-resistant strains
By 1977 pharmaceutical manufacturers began to think infectious
diseases were conquered and cut back severely on searching for
new antibiotics. If a drug failed, another one would be used and
usually it worked. But over the last 20 years, this false optimism
has been undermined by the emergence of multi-drug resistant germs.
How microbes become drug-resistant or insensitive to an antibiotic
depends upon two factors--the prevalence of resistance genes in
the bacteria and the extent of antibiotic use.
Resistance genes in bacteria combat the affects of antibiotics
in a variety of complex ways. Some produce enzymes which degrade
antibiotics by chemically modifying them. Others alter or replace
molecules on the bacteria which the antibiotic uses to bind to
its target. Still others manufacture "pumps" to export
antibiotics before they find their targets.
Bacteria can acquire resistance genes by different means. The
gene can occur through mutations which are then passed on to the
next generations. Or bacteria can acquire resistance genes directly
from other bacterial cells in their vicinity.
Antibiotics promote the survival and propagation of resistant
strains. An antibiotic will kill off highly susceptible cells.
But other cells may survive if they have some resistance genes
or begin to acquire them from other bacteria. As a result, cells
with drug-resistant genes go on to reproduce.
The likelihood of drug-resistant strains emerging is particularly
enhanced if the antibiotic dose is too low or if the course of
treatment is too short to overwhelm the bacteria which are causing
the disease.
Another process also takes place. Antibiotics not only attack
disease-causing bacteria but impact on benign bacteria which are
innocent bystanders. The drugs encourage the growth of drug-resistant
bystander bacteria, increasing the reservoir of resistance traits
which may then be passed on to more dangerous species.
Enterococcus faecalis was once a benign intestinal bacteria.
But the widespread use of the drug Cephalosporin, to which E.
faecalis had a natural resistance, has led to its widespread proliferation.
In addition, the bacteria has developed a reservoir of vancomycin-resistance
traits posing the danger that these may be passed on to multidrug-resistant
bacteria such as S. aureus, making them incurable.
The formerly innocuous microbes Acinetobacter and Xanthomonas,
virtually unheard of five years ago, have developed multidrug-resistance
through the bystander effect and are causing fatal blood-borne
infections in hospitalised patients.
The spread of drug-resistant strains
Antibiotic resistance that emerges in one place can often spread
rapidly and over great distances as the bacteria spread to the
surroundings and to new hosts. Technological and economic changes
have accelerated the process. International travel and the increasingly
global character of food handling, processing and sales have led
to the spread of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, cholera and malaria,
as well as drug-resistant bacteria.
The dangers of a global epidemic of drug-resistant diseases
are increased by the growth of poverty, overcrowding, the lack
of adequate sanitation and the deterioration of public health
systems worldwide.
Health officials internationally point to over-prescription
of antibiotics as the main cause of drug-resistant germs. While
there is evidence to show that over-prescription, and in some
instances the incorrect prescription of antibiotics, has played
a major role in the development of drug-resistant germs, the question
is why.
One answer lies in the fact that 40 years ago medical textbooks
advised physicians to treat viral diseases with antibiotics in
order to prevent secondary bacterial infections. A virus is not
a bacterium nor an independently-living organism. Antibiotics
do not harm or kill viruses. That is why treatment for influenza,
a viral infection, is aimed at easing the symptoms rather than
to killing the "flu" virus.
Patient pressure on doctors has been identified as a significant
factor in the overprescription of antibiotics. Research has shown
that in the United States alone, over one third of all prescriptions
are unnecessary. But this "patient pressure" for some
kind of relief from illnesses like the "flu" is itself
bound up with social questions--the growing pressures to go to
work rather than take the needed time to recuperate at home.
But pressures are also exerted on doctors by the major drug
companies. Billions of dollars are made through the worldwide
sale of antibiotics which are pushed through extensive promotional
and advertising campaigns. In many underdeveloped countries a
doctor's prescription is not required and antibiotics can be bought
over the counter at any pharmacy.
If official attitudes are changing to antibiotic use, it is
not just because of concerns over the emergence of drug-resistant
strains. Governments everywhere are cutting funding for public
health care and hospitals. Antibiotics have been targeted for
cutbacks in particular because they represent a high single-cost
item.
Antibiotics in agriculture
The overuse of antibiotics is not limited to medicine. Scientists
have long suspected that the use of drugs in agriculture has contributed
to the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria. Now there is strong
evidence.
Since antibiotics first became available their use has soared.
In the United States alone, annual production has risen from nearly
a million kilograms in 1954 to about 25 million kilograms today.
Only about half is used by human beings.
The same drugs prescribed for humans are widely used in animal
husbandry and agriculture. More than 40 percent of the antibiotics
manufactured in the US are given to animals, not in the main to
fight infections but to promote growth. Animals are given low
doses of the drugs over weeks or months in their feed--a perfect
recipe for developing resistant bacteria.
Treating animals is also a means of reducing feed costs. Antibiotics,
by killing bacteria in the stomach of animals, slows-down the
digestive processes, thereby reducing the amount of food intake
an animal requires.
A salmonella strain impervious to five antibiotics, known as
DT104, is rampant in Britain. In the United States scientists
say the same strain has sickened thousands of Americans and nearly
killed a Vermont dairy farmer. The US Centre for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) estimates that DT104 infects between 68,000
and 340,000 Americans annually.
The drug-resistant strain has developed as a result of the
use of fluoroquinolones, powerful antibiotics that had been reserved
for severely ill people. But in 1995, the US Federal Department
of Agriculture (FDA) approved two types of fluoroquinolones for
use in poultry. The drugs are put into chicks' drinking water
to prevent a flock-destroying disease.
Exposure to the fluoroquinolones caused the bacteria, campylobacter,
the leading human food poisoner, to mutate rapidly. Of 76 chicken
products tested in Minneapolis-St Paul grocery stores last year,
79 percent were contaminated with campylobacter. In 20 percent
of the samples, the bacteria were fluoroquinolone-resistant.
The drug-resistant strain was found in 13 percent of human
cases involving campylobacter tested in the US last year. According
to CDC researcher Dr Frederick Angulo, such cases were unknown
prior to 1995.
Avoparcin, an antibiotic closely related to vancomycin, was
banned in Europe last year, after being used to increase animal
growth. Since the ban, preliminary evidence suggest vancomycin-resistant
germs in poultry have reduced.
Despite the availability of these research results, the drug
company Bayer has asked the FDA to allow the expanded use of fluoroquinolones
into cattle.
Scientists are also concerned about the use of antibiotic sprays
in agriculture such as the application of aerosols to fruit trees
as a means of controlling or preventing bacterial infections.
While high concentrations kill all the bacteria on the trees at
the time of spraying, lingering residues can encourage the growth
of resistant bacteria that later colonise the fruit during processing
and shipping. Residue from the aerosols can be carried considerable
distances in a much-diluted form. While it is too weak to kill
off infections, it is still capable of killing off sensitive bacteria
and in this way strengthening resistant strains.
The level of resistant bacteria that people acquire from food
is significant. Research done by the National Institute for Agricultural
Research in Toulouse, France showed that when human volunteers
went on a diet consisting only of bacteria-free foods, the number
of resistant bacteria in their faeces decreased 1000-fold. Scientists
suspect that we deliver resistant strains of microbes to our intestinal
tract whenever we eat raw or undercooked items. Most of these
bacteria are not harmful, but danger arises if food is contaminated
by a disease-causing strains.
Reversing bacterial resistance to antibiotics requires further
knowledge and the development of other medical strategies. Treatments
that enhance a person's own immune system to combat bacterial
infection without the need of antibiotics are yet to be fully
investigated.
In the past, bacteria were regarded as bad and to be wiped
out. Now, scientists recognise that bacteria are a natural and
necessary part of life. Some in fact protect us from disease.
Only those bacteria that give rise to disease should be eliminated.
Curing bacterial disease has to be combined with preserving microbial
communities so that bacteria susceptible to antibiotics will always
be present to outcompete resistant strains.
The overuse of antibiotics both in farming and in the general
population is bound up with serious social and political questions.
It is driven by the profit requirements of agribusinesses and
drug companies. As in other spheres of life, a fundamental solution
requires the total reorganisation of society to free science,
farming and health care from the dictates of corporate profit.
See Also:
Reports document worldwide epidemic
The worst year in history for tuberculosis
[20 June 1998]
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