Daily Mail

Why depression pills could be fuelling the rise of SUPERBUGS

- By RACHEL ELLIS

Antidepres­sants could be contributi­ng to the rise in superbugs. research suggests that an ingredient in the commonly prescribed antidepres­sant fluoxetine — or prozac — causes a mutation in some bacteria, making them resistant to antibiotic­s.

Antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest threats to our health, according to the World Health Organisati­on. it occurs when the genes in bacteria change in order to resist the effects of antibiotic­s.

if these drugs fail, common infections such as pneumonia and salmonella are difficult — in some cases impossible — to treat.

antibiotic resistance already causes at least 50,000 deaths a year in europe and the U.s., and some studies suggest this could rise more than tenfold by 2050.

Measures to combat the superbug crisis have focused on reducing over-prescripti­on of antibiotic­s, because the more antibiotic­s are used, the greater the chance that bacteria will develop ways to survive them — and these robust bacteria go on to proliferat­e.

research in the BMJ earlier this year found that a fifth of antibiotic­s prescribed by Gps in england are given to patients who don’t need them. However, the new study, published in the journal environmen­t internatio­nal, suggests other drugs could also play a part.

the research looked at whether the antidepres­sant fluoxetine had any effect on the E. coli bacterium, which causes food poisoning.

Fluoxetine was chosen as it passes through the body unchanged before entering the environmen­t via urine. Up to 11 per cent of fluoxetine is thought to get into the environmen­t — where high levels are thought to induce multi- drug resistance. in the study, E. coli was exposed to four concentrat­ions of fluoxetine — 0.5, 5.0, 50 and 100mg/l — for 30 days in the laboratory.

results showed that, when exposed to 5mg/l or more, the bacterium underwent genetic changes that made it resistant to antibiotic­s such as chloramphe­nicol, amoxicilli­n and tetracycli­ne, often used to treat acne as well as respirator­y and urinary tract infections. the greater the fluoxetine dose E. coli was exposed to, the higher the rate of antibiotic resistance.

according to the researcher­s, from the University of Queensland in australia, fluoxetine causes an overproduc­tion of free radicals (unstable atoms that damage cells and dna) in the E. coli.

this led to mutations in the bacterium’s efflux pumps — these push toxins, including antibiotic­s, out of the cell. the altered pumps removed the antibiotic­s so rapidly that they had no chance to get to work.

‘this is a common mechanism for antibiotic resistance which we have known about for 30 years,’ says peter Hawkey, a professor of clinical and public health bacteriolo­gy at the University of Birmingham. But scientists are unsure of the implicatio­ns of this laboratory study.

One argument is that concentrat­ions of the drug used in the study were much higher than those found in the real world: once in the body, the concentrat­ion of the typical 20mg adult daily fluoxetine dose is about 20 times lower than the smallest dose that caused antibiotic resistance in the study (5mg/l). so it’s unclear whether this dose in humans would trigger bacterial mutation. and although fluoxetine prescripti­ons have risen (by 50 per cent between 2005 and 2015, to 6.6 million a year in england) and the drug is found in the water supply, concentrat­ion levels in the environmen­t are ‘significan­tly lower’ than those used in the study, says professor Hawkey.

‘there is a huge amount we don’t know about antibiotic resistance and the idea that non-antibiotic prescripti­on drugs may cause [it] is interestin­g,’ adds dr andrew edwards, a lecturer in molecular bacteriolo­gy at imperial College London. ‘Laboratory studies like this are useful to understand how the process might work.

‘However, this study used high concentrat­ions of fluoxetine, so it is difficult to know whether this link would persist outside the laboratory. patients should not change or stop taking their medication based on these results.’

BUT antidepres­sants are not the first chemicals — other than antibiotic­s themselves — to be linked to superbugs. a study last year in the Journal of antimicrob­ial Chemothera­py found the common disinfecta­nt triclosan may also contribute. it showed E. coli exposed to triclosan could become resistant to quinolones, antibiotic­s used to treat urinary and lower respirator­y tract infections.

‘to limit the number of drugs in the environmen­t, no medication and particular­ly no antibiotic­s should be flushed down the loo,’ says professor Hawkey. ‘ take unwanted medicines to a pharmacy for safe disposal.’

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