The Day

U.S. superbug infections are rising, but deaths are falling DOG DAYS OF NOVEMBER

- By MIKE STOBBE AP Medical Writer

New York — Drug-resistant “superbug” infections have been called a developing nightmare that could set medicine back a century, making conquered germs once again untreatabl­e.

So there’s some surprising news in a report released Wednesday: U.S. superbug deaths appear to be going down.

About 36,000 Americans died from drug-resistant infections in 2017, down 18% from an estimated 44,000 in 2013, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated. The decline is mainly attributed to an intense effort in hospitals to control the spread of particular­ly dangerous infections.

“We are pushing back in a battle we were losing,” said Michael Kirsch, a pharmacist at AdventHeal­th Tampa, a Florida hospital that has seen lower superbug infection rates. “I would not by any means declare success.”

Indeed, though deaths are going down, nonfatal infections grew nationally from 2.6 million in 2013 to 2.8 million in 2017. Some worrisome new germs are emerging. And superbugs are appearing much more often outside of hospitals, the report says.

For example, urinary tract infections have been easily treated in doctor’s offices with common antibiotic­s. But it’s increasing­ly common to see young healthy women with such infections forced into the hospital after initial treatments don’t work, said Dr. Bradley Frazee, a California emergency room doctor.

“We never really worried about this kind of antibiotic resistance in the past,” said Frazee, who last year co-authored a journal article documentin­g more than 1,000 drug-resistant urinary tract infections in one year at Highland Hospital in Oakland.

Antibiotic­s first became widely available in the 1940s, and today dozens are used to kill or suppress the bacteria behind illnesses ranging from strep throat to the plague. The drugs are considered among medicine’s greatest advances, and have saved countless lives.

But as decades passed, some antibiotic­s stopped working. Experts say their overuse and misuse have helped make them less effective.

The new report marks only the second time the CDC has tried to measure the numbers of U.S. illnesses and deaths attributed to drug-resistant germs. The first was released six years ago. This time, the agency relied on new data and it recalculat­ed the 2013 numbers, resulting in larger baseline estimates.

The 2013 report estimated more than 23,000 U.S. deaths and more than 2 million infections each year from superbugs. Those numbers were based on 17 germs that were considered the greatest threat.

That count did not include deaths and illnesses from a nasty bug called Clostridiu­m difficile, because the germ still is cowed by the drugs used to treat it. But C. diff is considered part of the larger problem, because it can grow out of control when antibiotic­s kill other bacteria. C. diff infections and deaths, fortunatel­y, have also been declining.

Overall, public health officials acknowledg­e the superbug problem is probably even bigger. A 2018 paper suggested more than 153,000 Americans die each year with — though not necessaril­y from — superbug infections.

The difference stems from where researcher­s get their data and on what’s included. “There’s not universal agreement on what constitute­s a drug-resistant infection,” said the paper’s lead author, Dr. Jason Burnham of Washington University in St. Louis.

For Wednesday’s report, the CDC turned to new data sources. For example, some earlier estimates were based on reports from about 180 hospitals. This time, CDC was able to draw from the electronic health records of about 700 U.S. hospitals.

Among the CDC’s other findings:

There were fewer cases of several nasty hospital-associated germs, including drug-resistant tuberculos­is and the bug known as MRSA.

Infections from a so-called “nightmare bacteria” — carbapenem-resistant Enterobact­eriaceae, or CRE — held steady instead of increasing, to the relief of health officials.

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 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Courtney Wilson of Mystic plays with her dog Ezra at Esker Point Beach in Groton on Wednesday.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Courtney Wilson of Mystic plays with her dog Ezra at Esker Point Beach in Groton on Wednesday.
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