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Antibiotic-resistant bacteria arrives on U.S. shores from South Asia

By | August 13, 2010, 8:13 AM PDT

In the war against germs, bacteria are gaining the biological upper hand.

A mutation that makes some bacteria resistant to nearly all antibiotics on the market has become increasingly prevalent in India and Pakistan.

Now, that bacteria has found in people in the U.K. and the U.S. who got medical care in those countries, reports the New York Times.

The gene mutation, called NDM-1 (”New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase”), is of concern because it could very well spread across the world, rendering our antibiotic ammunition useless against the bacteria that have it.

It’s hardly the first antibiotic-resistant strain to appear — MRSA, or methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, is a common one that’s known for being difficult to treat — but it’s got physicians and scientists concerned nonetheless.

A quick primer about antibiotics: penicillin was the first-high profile antibiotic, discovered by Nobel laureate Alexander Fleming in 1928. A hit, it was mass-produced in time for the Second World War.

Since then, it’s been a slow march to find new, broader, more powerful antibiotics — but as doctors began prescribing them for nearly every malady, bacteria fought back, evolving to better resist them.

In recent years, drug production is having a hard time keeping up. When MRSA reared its ugly head in 2008, doctors had few options left to treat infections.

Sarah Bosely writes in The Guardian:

There are one or two drugs doctors can then use as a last resort, but they are either toxic or do not work well. Antibiotics have always had a limited lifespan because bacteria are proficient at evolving to survive.

Within six years of penicillin’s introduction in 1944, 50% of Staphylococcus aureus were resistant.

The problem with bacteria that carry the NDM-1 gene is that they’re resistant to our current crop of “last resort” antibiotics, called carbapenems.

Furthermore, the genetic mutation has been found in E. coli and in Klebsiella pneumoniae, responsible for respiratory and urinary infections, respectively.

A study funded by pharma giant Wyeth (now of Pfizer) and the European Union tracked the spread of the mutation from India and Pakistan to Britain. It was published this week in the journal Lancet.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded the first three cases of NDM-1 resistance in June.

The big threat isn’t that the bacteria will spread between individuals. Rather, it’s that it will show up in the closed environments of hospitals.

Nevertheless, India has denied the accusation that the strain began there, calling it “unscientific” and “anti-India.”

Update: SmartPlanet science editor Boonsri Dickinson offers her take on the news.

Photo: Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria. (U.S. CDC)

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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0 Votes
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population control at its best
Bush's Home Land Security is on top of this? Billions of dollars for what?
Posted by MFox1948
13th Aug 2010
0 Votes
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The suicide of incorrect drug usage.
More bugs are coming. Repent, the end is near.
Posted by trm1945
13th Aug 2010
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RE: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria arrives on U.S. shores from South Asia
Don't worry. The human race will survive like it did in the 10k years before the antibiotics, and yea, you'll see people dying of it.
About the Klebsiella pneumoniae, it can be the real killer. Imagine a killer pneumonia that cannot be treated. Or, simply search the net for "black death", replace the therm virus with bacteria, replace the pustules with coughing, fever and you'll get a quite accurate picture.
Posted by p12p11@...
13th Aug 2010
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RE: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria arrives on U.S. shores from South Asia
Antibiotics have run their course. New methods like creating new bugs that EAT the old bugs will come along similar to what agriculture does to fight old pests. Find another bug that eats the pests. Just hope the new bugs don't turn on us.
Posted by Aboleyn
13th Aug 2010
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RE: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria arrives on U.S. shores from South Asia
Easy - ban the SOB's from the country. We do it for food and other items that are infected why not people. Have you seen that country. Didn't orignate there my butt, it's horrible.
Posted by USTechHead
13th Aug 2010
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RE: Antibiotic-resistant bacteria arrives on U.S. shores from South Asia
Look, there are several different kinds of antibiotics besides our current mold-based varieties. Before the mold-based antibiotics, doctors used metal-salt and mineral-based antibiotics, which worked quite well but put a lot of stress on the kidneys. The metal/mineral antibiotics also had the advantage of working on virus, fungus and even parasite infestations, which the mold-based don't. In a pinch, we could always go back to them.

For that matter, nano-technology is coming up with some promising "mechanical" antibiotics, too.

What medical researchers really need to do is study the *mechanisms* by which various antibiotics destroy invading microbes. Some simplly get into the invading cells and poison them. Others blanket the invading cells and block the pores in their cell-walls, thus cutting them off from food and water. Still others prevent the invading cells from breeding, so that they die of cellular old age. Others strip away the microbes' protective armor of biofilm, thus allowing white blood cells to attack them. All these mechanisms need to be studied, so we can discover ways to enhance them.

How many research companies are actually doing this?

--Leslie
Posted by Leslie Fish
15th Aug 2010
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