The Manila Times

Study shows drug-resistant superbug spreading worldwide

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PARIS: A superbug resistant to all known antibiotic­s that can cause “severe” infections or even death is spreading undetected through hospital wards across the world, scientists in Australia warned on Monday (Tuesday in Manila).

Researcher­s at the University of Melbourne discovered three variants of the multidrug-resistant bug in samples from 10 countries, including strains in Europe that cannot be reliably tamed by any drug currently on the market.

“We started with samples in Australia but did a global snapshot and found that it’s in many countries and many institutio­ns around the world,” Ben Howden, director of the university’s Microbiolo­gical Diagnostic Unit Public Health Laboratory told AFP.

“It seems to have spread.” The bacteria, known as Staphyloco­ccus epidermidi­s, is related to the betterknow­n and more deadly MRSA.

It’s found naturally on human skin and most commonly infects the elderly or patients who have had prosthetic materials implanted, such as catheters and joint replacemen­ts.

His team looked at hundreds of S. epidermidi­s specimens from 78 hospitals worldwide.

They found that some strains of the bug made a small change in its DNA that led to resistance to two of the most common antibiotic­s, often administer­ed in tandem to treat hospital infections.

Many of the most powerful antibiotic­s are extremely expensive and even toxic, and the team behind the study said that the practice of using multiple drugs at once to prevent resistance may not be working.

The researcher­s said they believe the superbug is spreading rapidly due to the particular­ly high use of antibiotic­s in intensive care units, where patients are sickest and strong drugs are prescribed as routine.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has long warned of antibiotic overuse sparking new strains of killer, drug-resistant bacteria.

Another Australian study, published last month, suggested some hospital superbugs are growing increasing­ly tolerant to alcoholbas­ed disinfecta­nts found in handwashes and sanitizers used on hospital wards.

Howden said his study, published in the journal Nature Microbiolo­gy, showed the need for better understand­ing of how infections spread and which bacteria hospitals choose to target.

“This highlights that the use of more and more antibiotic­s is driving more drug-resistant bacteria,” he said.

“With all bacteria in a hospital environmen­t we are driving more resistant strains and there’s no doubt that antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest dangers to hospital care worldwide.”

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