Toronto Star

Canada still slow to quell the resistance

With the growth of micro-organisms that resist drugs, the government has ‘dropped the ball,’ critics say

- LAURA KANE AND ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

Canadian Press reporters travelled to South Africa and India to investigat­e the growing epidemic of drug resistance, which experts describe as the single greatest threat to human health on the planet. This is part of a series exploring how the unfettered use of antibiotic­s pushes humanity closer to a post-antibiotic era in which common infections may be impossible to treat. The R. James Travers Foreign Correspond­ing Fellowship helped fund the project.

Wendy and George Gould were supposed to grow old together.

The couple found each other on a dating website when they were in their 40s. To Wendy’s delight, George met all her criteria: He was kind, funny, and most importantl­y, he still believed in Santa Claus. They were goofy best friends who didn’t want to grow up, but if they had to, they’d do it side by side.

But Wendy says their future was ripped away when George contracted a drug-resistant superbug at a Vancouver hospital in 2016. He had undergone two surgeries for his stage-four colorectal cancer and was supposed to resume chemo, but his wife says the infection ravaged his fragile body.

She says the infection left him too weak to continue treatment.

During the final18 months of his life, he was admitted to the hospital 22 times for intravenou­s antibiotic­s that triggered violent nausea and, on some occasions, frightenin­g hallucinat­ions, she says. He became so thin that his skin looked stretched over his bones, and she says the 58-year-old father died in an isolation unit.

“He was supposed to be with me forever,” Wendy says, wiping away tears as she sits outside the mobile home she shared with her husband in Aldergrove, B.C.

“They took his life, and they really took mine, because I’m alone.”

Antimicrob­ial resistance, or the growth of micro-organisms that fight off the drugs used to treat them, has been rising in Canada and globally for decades.

The unfettered use of antibiotic­s in humans and animals, coupled with environmen­tal contaminat­ion, has helped create superbugs and made common diseases more difficult to cure. A 2016 review of antimicrob­ial resistance estimated 700,000 people die annually from drug-resistant infections, but the author has since updated that figure to 1.5 million.

Unless urgent action is taken, experts warn that by 2050, the annual death toll will soar to 10 million worldwide, dwarfing cancer, and drug resistance could cost the global economy $100 trillion (U.S.) overall.

Developing countries will experience the worst impacts, but countries such as Canada are not immune: Widespread internatio­nal travel and trade help bacteria spread. Canada has been slow to act. Infectious disease physicians sounded the alarm about antimicrob­ial resistance 20 years ago, but the federal government, provinces and territorie­s continue to debate how to respond. Research dollars are sparse, surveillan­ce is severely limited and the number of Canadians who die from drug resistance is a glaring unknown.

Adecades-old call for action

Antimicrob­ial resistance occurs because micro-organisms, including bacteria, viruses and fungi, evolve to resist the drugs that would otherwise kill them. Unnecessar­y antimicrob­ial use exacerbate­s the problem.

Antibiotic­s kill bacteria sensitive to the drug as well as good bacteria, leaving the cells that are drug-resistant to multiply and take over. Some bacteria can also mutate to become resistant and transfer their resistance to one another.

Drug resistance was a growing concern in1997 when Dr. John Conly, then president of the Canadian Infectious Disease Society, decided to act. He worked with Health Canada to organize a conference in Montreal that generated 27 recommenda­tions and the beginnings of a national committee to co-ordinate a response.

Former prime minister Jean Chrétien’s government granted $300,000 in annual funds to the Canadian Committee on Antibiotic Resistance. It published a proposed national plan in 2004 that recommende­d actions to improve surveillan­ce and reduce unnecessar­y antibiotic use.

“And then it just sat on a shelf,” recalls Conly, former chairperso­n of the committee.

“The federal government at the time, they seemed to lose interest. There was a lot of downsizing.”

The committee lost funding in 2008. Its final report suggested it never received sufficient funding or adequate staffing to co-ordinate drug resistance activities nationally and called for a more comprehens­ive approach.

The Public Health Agency of Canada took the lead on antimicrob­ial resistance. But in 2015, the federal auditor general found the agency and Health Canada had not fulfilled key responsibi­lities to mitigate the public-health risks posed by the issue.

The agency had talked with provinces and territorie­s over five years, but failed to achieve a consensus on the scope of a plan, the auditor general concluded.

“The ball was dropped for many years,” Conly says. “It’s all too easy to say, ‘Well, there were other headlines and other fires to put out.’ But it’s not all about crisis of the day.”

He likens antimicrob­ial resistance to climate change: “a slow-moving tsunami.”

Lack of funding, lack of data

Even as patients’ lives rapidly deteriorat­e, the federal government’s approach to drug resistance over the past decade has been something of a bureaucrat­ic odyssey.

The government produced a federal framework in 2014. The next year, it released a federal action plan that committed $20 million to a research project and establishe­d a new body to integrate existing surveillan­ce.

But the plan was limited to the federal government and one that lays out responsibi­lities for the provinces and territorie­s has not been produced. The federal government has been consulting since 2011, but only issued its framework last September.

It hopes to publish the plan by next year.

The framework, which describes general ambitions for surveillan­ce, stewardshi­p, innovation and infection control, is a milestone, says Dr. Howard Njoo, Canada’s deputy chief public health officer.

He can understand why some doctors have been frustrated with the pace of change, but insists there has been movement over the years.

“It’s hard, maybe, to appreciate from the outside all of the work that happened in the preceding years,” he says.

But Dr. Andrew Morris, director of the antimicrob­ial stewardshi­p program at Sinai Health System/University Health Network, sums up the government’s pace on antimicrob­ial resistance using another word: “glacial.”

Part of the problem, he says, is the government hasn’t spent enough money. The public health agency spent $6.9 million on programs related to antimicrob­ial resistance in 2016-17, about 1.2 per cent of its $589 million budget. The Canadian Institute for Health Research spent just $280 million on the issue over 17 years — a little more than it spends annually on cancer and oncology.

The federal government, meanwhile, has no grasp of how many Canadians are dying in hospitals from drug-resistant infections, and statistics are not readily available.

The national surveillan­ce system monitors deaths in 60 large hospitals from four kinds of superbugs, for which it provides mortality rates of between 3 and 40 per cent. Doctors might attribute a patient’s death to their underlying illness rather than the infection, potentiall­y obscuring the impact of drug resistance in Canada.

The Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n told The Canadian Press it would cost more than $12,000 and require two weeks of staff time to quantify the number of death certificat­es that list such infections, before saying it could not be done at all. Statistics Canada provided a roughly $25,000 price tag and a timeline of nearly three months. The agency is working on a scaled-down version of the request.

The death certificat­e Wendy Gould has for her husband doesn’t list a cause of death, which is standard for certificat­es issued to relatives in B.C. But she believes the drug-resistant infection killed him because it prevented him from continuing his cancer treatment, and she wants the hospital to take responsibi­lity.

She provided a letter to The Canadian Press on health authority letterhead and sent to George in March 2017. It informs him that he was one of three patients who contracted New Delhi metallo Escherichi­a coli. All three received care at the hospital’s endoscopy clinic in July or August 2016 and while the source of the infection is unknown, there is a “possibilit­y” it was connected to an endoscope used in his procedure, the letter says.

Wendy filed a lawsuit in the Supreme Court of British Columbia against Vancouver Coastal Health, the health authority that operates Vancouver General Hospital, alleging the superbug ultimately led to George’s death. Her claim has not been proven in court.

When asked about the letter, the health authority referred to its statement of defence filed in court. The statement does not address the letter, but it confirms George had New Delhi metallo Escherichi­a coli.

The health authority, however, denies knowledge of the infection’s source or that it caused or aggravated any of his medical issues or contribute­d to his death. The authority maintains that it tested the endoscopy clinic after George contracted the superbug and found no organisms of the type that he contracted.

‘Hospitals are dangerous places’

Newborns, people with weakened immune systems and the elderly are especially susceptibl­e to drug-resistant infections. Cystic fibrosis patients are particular­ly prone due to their chronic lung infections, which are often treated with antibiotic­s. Over time, the bacteria in the lungs can become resistant. Marika Archambaul­t-Wallenburg grew up with cystic fibrosis, but never had a superbug before she was hospitaliz­ed at the age of 26. Over the following year and a half, she battled no less than four drug-resistant infections in Canadian hospitals, her father, John Wallenburg, contends.

“Hospitals are dangerous places. They’re dangerous places in general, but for people who are immunocomp­romised, they’re particular­ly dangerous,” says Wallenburg, also chief scientific officer for Cystic Fibrosis Canada.

“You become afraid to touch things. You become hyper-vigilant over staff who come into the room and aren’t necessaril­y following strict procedures.”

The infections sapped Marika’s morale at times, but not her hope.

She spent her days in hospital scrawling dreams on homemade paper about life with new lungs, musing about a motorcycle trip to the Yukon.

“They took his life, and they really took mine because I’m alone.” WENDY GOULD WIDOW OF GEORGE GOULD

Marika did not survive long enough to receive the transplant. Her health rapidly deteriorat­ed and a week before her 28th birthday, she died in hospital due to complicati­ons from her cystic fibrosis.

“She had friends who said she was fearless,” her father says. “It really wasn’t that she was fearless. She placed her fears on a different scale than most of us. Because the fears she faced really were a hell of a lot more significan­t than what others fear.”

Demands for better data

Infectious disease physicians are seeing more cases like Marika’s. But Canada still doesn’t have a strong understand­ing of where resistance is developing or how antibiotic­s are being used, says Morris of Sinai Health System/University Health Network.

The country has two monitoring programs in place. One collects data from hospitals, while the other gathers informatio­n about antimicrob­ial use in animals from farms raising pigs, chickens and turkeys, as well as resistance along the food chain.

Data from both programs — as well as some informatio­n from provincial labs and other sources — feeds into annual reports published by the Canadian Antimicrob­ial Resistance Surveillan­ce System. The system also buys data from a company called IQVIA on prescripti­ons written by doctors and dispensed by pharmacies, as well as antimicrob­ials purchased by hospitals.

But Morris calls the surveillan­ce system a “well-intentione­d piece of crap.”

“Imagine, our federal government, on something so important as health care, is paying a proprietar­y company to understand how antibiotic­s are used throughout the country,” he muses.

“I don’t believe any of that (IQVIA) data. For antibiotic use, I think it’s massively wrong. No one has ever validated it.”

IQVIA spokespers­on Madeline Gareau says clients get full access to the data they purchase as well as insight into how it’s compiled if they choose. It’s misleading to say the Canadian government cannot validate the data, she says, adding that IQVIA does not conduct any interpreti­ve work for the surveillan­ce system so it cannot comment on conclusion­s drawn in its reports.

The Public Health Agency of Canada maintains that while it’s true that the data cannot be formally audited, some independen­t verificati­on does take place.

“We are certainly exploring other sources of data. Right now, it’s something we’ve got that we’re trying to make the best use of,” says Dr. Chris Archibald, the agency’s surveillan­ce and epidemiolo­gy director.

He acknowledg­es there are gaps in the surveillan­ce system, including that it does not adequately measure resistance in the community or in small, rural and northern hospitals. The agency is looking at expanding its coverage and has done some short-term studies of such facilities.

The program that monitors antimicrob­ial use in animals is also missing data, including a lack of oversight of use in beef cattle.

But consultati­ons are set to begin on how to collect such informatio­n, says Dr. Rebecca Irwin, a veterinary epidemiolo­gist who oversees the program.

“We recognize it as a gap. We’d like to have all our commoditie­s represente­d.”

Provinces also have surveillan­ce systems, but their methods are so variable that the statistics can’t be aggregated. For example, B.C. and Ontario collect data on several superbugs, while Saskatchew­an only monitors C. difficile.

Superbug travels from India

The superbug that Wendy Gould blames for her husband’s death was an E. coli strain containing New Delhi metallobet­a-lactamase (NDM), an enzyme re- sistant to crucial antibiotic­s called carbapenem­s. The enzyme was first detected in 2008 in a Swedish patient who had received treatment in an Indian hospital. Within two years, NDM reached North American shores.

Dr. Linda Hoang, a medical microbiolo­gist with the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, was so alarmed by the rise of NDM and other organisms that can resist carbapenem­s that she publicly called for a provincial surveillan­ce system in 2014.

“We’re seeing emergence of a highly resistant organism that could potentiall­y take over our health-care system and make it very difficult to treat patients,” she says. “If we don’t really know what the burden of disease is, we can’t respond to it.”

Following Hoang’s call, B.C. launched a provincial network to measure several superbugs, including those resistant to carbapenem­s, in all 80 of its acute-care hospitals. She is now co-medical director of the network.

The latest report shows 86 new cases of carbapenem-producing organisms (CPO) in 2016-17, including 59 cases of NDM. Nearly seven-in-10 patients with CPOs had accessed health care outside of Canada in the previous year. Of the remaining cases, roughly half were likely acquired in B.C. hospitals, while the other half are a mystery, either emerging in the community or through some unidentifi­ed mechanism, Hoang says.

She’s encouraged that most are travelrela­ted because that’s how the organisms reach the western world in the and suggests there is not widespread transmissi­on in B.C. Still, she calls for a global effort to support countries where drug resistance is more endemic.

“It’s not only South Asia or Southeast Asia that we’re seeing resistance. South America, Central America, Europe, U.S. — it’s everywhere,” she says.

“There’s only so much we can do in holding up our gate. We need to support … the endemic countries to minimize their numbers and their risk.” The Canadian government gave $9 million last year to the World Health Organizati­on for a project to combat antimicrob­ial resistance in developing countries. It also contribute­s to internatio­nal funding organizati­ons in resistance-plagued countries, including India and South Africa.

Patients a ‘missing piece’

While Wendy Gould turned to the courts for answers after her husband’s death, Vanessa Carter in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, uses social media to spread awareness about the prevalence of superbugs so patients can advocate for themselves.

South Africa might seem distant, but Canada donates to the country because drug-resistant bacteria will inevitably travel across borders and infect Canadian patients. Some 22,000 South Africans visited Canada last year, while Canadians visited South Africa 167,000 times.

Carter was in a car crash when she was 25 that obliterate­d the right side of her face, smashing every facial bone and destroying her eye. She underwent numerous surgeries, including the insertion of a 3D-plastic implant above her cheekbone. A month after the operation, she noticed pus seeping from the prosthetic.

Doctors said she needed a procedure to remove the infected tissue and a course of antibiotic­s. The infection consistent­ly reappeared even worse, despite repeating the treatment multiple times. Finally, a surgeon insisted she take out the implant. After its removal, she learned her infection had been drug-resistant.

Carter had never heard of her diagnosis: methicilli­n-resistant staphyloco­ccus aureus, or MRSA. But as she read more about it, she grew furious.

She could have unknowingl­y transmitte­d the superbug to her children at any time and it could have spread to her bloodstrea­m and killed her.

“It had been such a traumatic experience, that 11 months of waking up every day, cleaning the infection and saying, ‘Is this going to get worse tomorrow?’ And not having any control of what was going on,” she recalls.

Carter’s face was eventually restored through a combinatio­n of surgeries, some 10 years after her car accident.

She hadn’t taken a photo of herself in a decade and read an article titled “Selfies for Dummies” before posting her first one to Facebook in 2013.

“I made this whole album of selfies because I felt so good,” she says.

Carter, 39, now uses social media and her website to advocate on behalf of patients, who she says need to be empowered with informatio­n so they know when to say no to unnecessar­y courses of antibiotic­s.

“If I had been more informed … I could have put my hand up and said, ‘I know that antibiotic­s can cause resistance. Please, can I go for a test?’”

“One of the missing pieces of the puzzle is the patient.” The R. James Travers Foreign Correspond­ing Fellowship partly funded this series. It commemorat­es Jim Travers’s career and aims to enable significan­t foreign reporting projects by Canadian journalist­s to give Canadians firsthand, in-depth coverage of stories beyond the country’s borders. Travers, a former Star writer and editor, spent six years reporting from Africa and the Middle East and deeply believed in the power of internatio­nal reporting.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Wendy Gould holds the cremated remains of her late husband, George Gould, at her home, in Aldergrove, B.C. During the final 18 months of her husband’s life, she says he was admitted to hospital 22 times for intravenou­s antibiotic­s that triggered...
DARRYL DYCK/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Wendy Gould holds the cremated remains of her late husband, George Gould, at her home, in Aldergrove, B.C. During the final 18 months of her husband’s life, she says he was admitted to hospital 22 times for intravenou­s antibiotic­s that triggered...
 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Wendy Gould and her husband were supposed to grow old together, but he died after catching a drug-resistant infection in a B.C. hospital.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Wendy Gould and her husband were supposed to grow old together, but he died after catching a drug-resistant infection in a B.C. hospital.
 ?? HANDOUT PHOTOS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Marika Archambaul­t-Wallenburg grew up with cystic fibrosis, but never had a superbug before she was hospitaliz­ed at the age of 26. Over the following year and a half, she battled no less than four drug-resistant infections in Canadian hospitals, her...
HANDOUT PHOTOS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Marika Archambaul­t-Wallenburg grew up with cystic fibrosis, but never had a superbug before she was hospitaliz­ed at the age of 26. Over the following year and a half, she battled no less than four drug-resistant infections in Canadian hospitals, her...
 ??  ?? Wendy and George Gould together on their wedding day on Oct. 10, 2010.
Wendy and George Gould together on their wedding day on Oct. 10, 2010.

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