This STD is becoming harder to treat
This STD is becoming 'smarter' and harder to treat
Story highlights
- New antibiotics are needed for treating gonorrhea
- Bacteria is evolving to resist antibiotics, WHO says
(CNN)Gonorrhea is becoming harder and in some cases impossible to treat with antibiotics, the World Health Organization said.
"The
bacteria that cause gonorrhea are particularly smart. Every time we use
a new class of antibiotics to treat the infection, the bacteria evolve
to resist them," said Teodora Wi, a human reproduction specialist at the
WHO, in a news release.
Three
superbugs -- bacteria that cannot be killed by the best available drug
-- were detected in Japan, France and Spain, according to the WHO.
"We need to be more vigilant now," Wi told reporters in a phone briefing.
Each year, about 78 million people worldwide are infected with gonorrhea,
the WHO said. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention estimates there are 820,000 new gonorrhea infections each
year.
Data
from 77 countries collected by WHO shows there is a widespread
resistance to older, cheaper antibiotics and in some countries, the
infection has became "untreatable by all known antibiotics," the
international health organization said in the news release.
Earlier this year, gonorrhea was named among 11 types of bacteria that health experts believe pose the greatest threats to human health because they are in urgent need of new antibiotics.
Marc
Sprenger, WHO's director of antimicrobial resistance, said there's an
urgent need for drugs and tests to prevent, diagnose and treat
gonorrhea.
More specifically,
Sprenger said, the health community needs new antibiotics, a long term
vaccine to prevent the infection and tests that will predict with
accuracy if an antibiotic will work on a particular infection.
Gonorrhea
has developed resistance to nearly every class of antibiotics used to
treat it such as penicillin, tetracycline and fluoroquinolones, the CDC
said.
"It's important to understand
that ever since antibiotics appeared on the scene, Neisseria
gonorrhoeae has been fairly quick in developing resistance to all the
classes of antibiotics that have been thrown at it," Manica Balasegaram,
director of the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership,
told reporters.
From 2009-2014 the
WHO says that several countries discovered a widespread resistance to
drugs used to treat gonorrhea like ciprofloxacin, azithromycin and even
last resort treatments such as extended-spectrum cephalosporins (ESCs),
the health organization said.
In
2016, the organization began advising doctors to switch to a two-drug
combination: ceftriaxone and azithromycin after more than 50 countries
reported that ESCs were no longer effective in some cases.
Why drugs stop working?
The
sexually transmitted infection is becoming resistant to the usual
recommended treatments around the world and creating new antibiotics is
"not very attractive for commercial pharmaceutical companies," the WHO
said.
Gonorrhea symptoms include a
burning sensation when urinating and unusual discharge from the penis or
vagina. Left untreated, the infection can cause serious health problems
including long-term abdominal pain and pelvic inflammatory disease,
which could lead to ectopic pregnancy and infertility.
But
most people who are infected do not have any symptoms and in some
cases, doctors mistakenly diagnose gonorrhea, health officials said.
Using
antibiotics improperly is contributing to the development of antibiotic
resistance in gonorrhea as well as other bacterial diseases, health
officials said.
In the US, the CDC recommends a two-drug regimen -- ceftriaxone and azithromycin -- for treating gonorrhea.
Last year, a cluster of infections in Hawaii did not succumb as easily to the antibiotics as infections have in the past.
"Since
2005, we have seen four isolated cases that showed resistance to both
drugs. But the Hawaii cases are the first cluster we have seen with
reduced susceptibility to both drugs," said Paul Fulton Jr., a spokesman
for the CDC.
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