Cape Argus

Alarming new superbug gene found in people, pigs

-

A NEW gene that makes bacteria highly resistant to a last-resort class of antibiotic­s has been found in people and pigs in China – including in samples of bacteria with epidemic potential, researcher­s have said.

The discovery was described as “alarming” by scientists, who called for urgent restrictio­ns on the use of polymyxins – a class of antibiotic­s that includes the drug colistin and is widely used in livestock farming.

“All use of polymyxins must be minimised as soon as possible and all unnecessar­y use stopped,” said Laura Piddock, a professor of microbiolo­gy at Britain’s Birmingham University who was asked to comment on the finding.

Researcher­s led by Hua Liu from the South China Agricultur­al University, who published their work in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal, found the gene, called mcr-1, on plasmids – mobile DNA that can be easily copied and transferre­d between different bacteria. This suggests “an alarming potential” for it to spread and diversify between bacterial population­s, they said.

The team has evidence of the gene being transferre­d between common bacteria such as E.coli, which causes urinary tract and many other types of infection, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, which causes pneumonia and other infections.

This suggests “the progressio­n from extensive drug resistance to pandrug resistance is inevitable”, they said.

“(And) although currently confined to China, mcr-1 is likely to emulate other resistance genes… and spread worldwide.”

The discovery of the spreading mcr-1 resistance gene echoes news from 2010 of another so-called “superbug” gene, NDM-1, which emerged in India and rapidly spread around the world.

Piddock and others said global surveillan­ce for mcr-1 resistance is now essential to try to prevent the spread of polymyxin-resistant bacteria.

China is one of the world’s largest users and producers of colistin for agricultur­e and veterinary use.

Worldwide demand for the antibiotic in agricultur­e is set to reach 12 000 tonnes per year by the end of the year, rising to 16 500 tonnes by 2021, states a 2015 report by the QYResearch Medical Research Centre.

In Europe, 80 percent of polymixin sales – mainly colistin – are in Spain, Germany and Italy, according to the European Medicines Agency’s Surveillan­ce of Veterinary Antimicrob­ial Consumptio­n report.

For the China study, researcher­s collected bacteria samples from pigs at slaughter across four provinces, and from pork and chicken sold in 30 open markets and 27 supermarke­ts in Guangzhou between 2011 and 2014. They also analysed bacteria from patients with infections at two hospitals in Guangdong and Zhejiang.

They found a high prevalence of the mcr-1 gene in E.coli samples from animals and raw meat. The proportion of positive samples increased annually, they said, and mcr-1 was found in 16 E.coli and K.pneumoniae samples from 1 322 patients in hospital.

David Paterson and Patrick Harris from Australia’s University of Queensland, writing a commentary in the same journal, said the links between agricultur­al use of colistin, colistin resistance in slaughtere­d animals, colistin resistance in food, and colistin resistance in humans were now complete.

They said one solution “to uncoupling these connection­s is limitation or cessation of colistin use in agricultur­e. Failure to do so will create a public health problem of major dimensions”. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? SERIOUS THREAT: Researcher­s collected bacteria samples from pigs.
PICTURE: REUTERS SERIOUS THREAT: Researcher­s collected bacteria samples from pigs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa