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Is partly because there have been no new classes of antibiotics since the 1960s
Almost since the beginning of the antibiotic
era bacterial resistance has been seen as the major obstacle to
successful treatment. Hardly any group of antibiotics has been
introduced into clinical practice to which some bacterium has not
developed resistance. Quantifying the impact of this resistance has
often proved difficult, and misconceptions have often resulted from
incomplete surveillance. Now that our surveillance methods are much
better, we know that levels of antibiotic resistance are rising
inexorably Resistance was often minimised as a problem simply because
the problem was not known or recognised. At the end of the 1960s the
surgeon general of the United States stated that "we could close the
book on infectious diseases." Although those words seem naive now, at
the time they were said the emergence of resistance did not seem to
affect therapeutic options. Certainly, Staphylococcus aureus had become resistant to benzylpenicillin and was showing some resistance to methicillin, but it remained sensitive to gentamicin and thus infections could be treated.2 Most of the
bacteria responsible for community infections remained sensitive to the myriad of antibiotics available to treat them, and the surplus of
available antibiotics masked the problem of emerging resistance.
At the start of a new century, some 30 years later, things look very
different. We are facing a potential treatment crisis for some
infections, with an escalating rise in resistance that we have
difficulty in controlling.2 What has changed? At the end
of the 1960s we did not realise that we would face the next three
decades with much the same antibiotic groups as we had then. Antibiotic
discovery and development had been exponential since the 1940s, but no
new clinically useful structures were discovered after 1961, and almost
all the drugs that have been launched since the 1960s are modifications
of antibiotics that we already have. This meant that bacteria that had
"learnt" how to resist one member of a chemical drug class did not
have to learn much more to overcome its later modifications. If
bacteria were challenged with a new antibiotic class, there would be
little chance of cross resistance. Resistance had clearly been
controlled up to the 1970s by the many different chemical antibiotic
classes available.
The late 1960s were also important for the introduction of organ
transplantation. As these procedures became more successful, more
aggressive antibacterial therapy was required to protect immunosuppressed patients against infections. This situation was exacerbated with the treatment of neutropenic patients. This massive increase in antibiotic use in hospitals did promote the acquisition of resistance in some well recognised hospital pathogens, such as
methicillin resistance in staphylococci and vancomycin resistance in enterococci.
In reality, these labels are convenient markers. Methicillin resistant
S aureus is resistant to aminoglycosides, often to fluoroquinolones, and indeed to all antibiotics except the
glycopeptides, and there are reports that some strains are becoming
resistant to these.3 In fact, these multiresistant
variants of S aureus often occur as epidemic strains.
What we are apparently witnessing is the clonal spread of a few
resistant bacteria, and they are not simply the original hospital
staphylococci that have become resistant.4 They often
contain plasmids harbouring resistance genes, but these plasmids
are carriers of resistance that often have "dumped" their
resistance genes into the bacterial chromosome by transposition.
Similarly, the so called vancomycin resistant enterococci are also
multiresistant strains and they are often resistant to all antibiotics
targeted against them. The bacteria often spread clonally, although
some individual resistance genes may be imported on mobile genetic
elements.5-7
We are also facing some resistant bacterial species that were never
traditionally regarded as pathogens, such as Acinetobacter baumannii. This organism was sensitive to all antibiotics in
the 1970s,8 but now some strains can sometimes resist all
antibiotics.9 In the case of this bacterium, the
propensity to carry resistance genes seems as important as the ability
to produce defined pathogenicity factors. In patients previously
treated with antibiotics in hospital, A baumannii is a
much more prevalent cause of pneumonia than in patients receiving no
antibiotics.
10 11
Where do these multiresistant bacteria come from? We do not know
if they are subpopulations with a predisposition towards resistance. We
do know, however, that they often spread clonally and that this may
have been facilitated by hospital designs that move patients closer
together and rely on regular transfers of patients between different
points of treatment. Cross infection is clearly a major contributor to
the rise in resistance, and modern molecular typing techniques show
widespread dissemination of single bacterial strains. As our knowledge
of molecular biology increases and the bacterial genome projects
advance, we may well find that certain multidrug resistant strains are
quite distinct genetically from their sensitive counterparts. We will
then be able to show whether our multiresistant bacteria evolve from
strains commonly found in hospitals or whether the antibiotic blanket selects certain strains, which survive merely because of the propensity to carry resistance genes.
Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AG
(s.g.b.amyes{at}ed.ac.uk)
as illustrated by this week's paper on trends in England
and Wales (p 213).1 Yet it has taken a long time to
realise the extent of the problem, and there is still much that we need
to learn about the mechanisms.
| 1. |
Reacher MH, Shah A, Livermore DM, Wale MCJ, Graham C, Johnson AP, et al.
Bacteraemia and antibiotic resistance of its pathogens reported in England and Wales between 1990 and 1998: trend analysis.
BMJ
2000;
320:
213-216 |
| 2. | Amyes SGB, Thomson CJ. Antibiotic resistance in the ICU: the eve of destruction. Br J Inten Care 1995; 5: 263-271. |
| 3. |
Hiramatsu K, Hanaki H, Ino T, Yabuta K, Oguri T, Tenover FC.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus clinical strain with reduced vancomycin susceptibility.
J Antimicrob Chemother
1997;
40:
135-146 |
| 4. | Casewell MW. New threats to the control of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. J Hosp Infect 1995; 30 (suppl): 465-471. |
| 5. | Brown AR, Amyes SGB, Paton R, Plant WD, Stevenson GM, Winney RJ, et al. Epidemiology and control of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) in a renal unit. J Hosp Infect 1998; 40: 115-124[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 6. | French GL. Enterococci and vancomycin resistance. Clin Infect Dis 1998; 27: S75-S83.. |
| 7. |
Arthur M, Courvalin P.
Genetics and mechanisms of glycopeptide resistance in enterococci.
Antimicrob Agent Chemother
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37:
1563-1571 |
| 8. | Bergogne-Berezin E, Zechchovsky N, Piechaud, Vieu JF, Bordini A. Sensibilité aux antibiotiques de 240 souches de "Moraxella" oxydase-négative (Acinetobacter) isolées d'infections hôpitalières. Pathol Biol (Paris) 1971; 19: 981[Medline]. |
| 9. | Brown S, Bantar C, Young H-K, Amyes SGB. Limitation of Acinetobacter baumannii treatment by plasmid-mediated carbapenemase ARI-2. Lancet 1998; 351: 186-187[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 10. | Fagon JY, Chastre J, Domart Y, Trouillet JL, Pierre J, Darne C, et al. Nosocomial pneumonia in patients receiving continuous mechanical ventilation. Prospective analysis of 52 episodes with use of a protected specimen brush and quantitative culture techniques. Am Rev Resp Dis 1989; 139: 877-884[Medline]. |
| 11. |
Weber DJ, Raasch R, Rutala WA.
Nosocomial infections in the ICU: the growing importance of antibiotic-resistant pathogens.
Chest
1999;
115:
34S-341 |
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