HLTH - Staph supergerm developing resistance to superantibiotic

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http://www.boston.com/dailynews/201/region/Doctors_report_first_case_of_n:.shtml

Doctors report first case of new superantibiotic being beaten by staph supergerm

By Emma Ross, Associated Press, 7/20/2001 02:54

LONDON (AP) In a frustrating development in the battle against drug-resistant bacteria, scientists report the first entirely new type of antibiotic in 35 years has been beaten by the staph supergerm little more than a year after being introduced.

Researchers at Harvard Medical School describe in The Lancet medical journal this week how an 85 year-old man on dialysis came down with a staph infection in the lining of his intestines that was not vulnerable to the new drug, Zyvox. It is the first report of staph resistance to the medicine.

Experts said that while the finding is disappointing, it isn't surprising they have learned to expect the unpredictable from crafty bacteria and the drug still should be able to help many people.

''It's a heads up that you have to keep an eye on it,'' said Dr. Mary Jane Ferraro, director of microbiology at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who found the resistant strain. ''It was only a matter of time. Whether or not it's going to become prevalent, or whether this is going to be a rare thing, we can't predict.''

Staphylococcus aureus is considered the most successful of all bacterial germs because it produces such a wide range of infections in so many people.

It is the leading cause of infections acquired in hospitals worldwide and causes ailments ranging from boils and urinary tract infections to toxic shock syndrome and pneumonia.

Half of all staph that circulates in hospitals is resistant to meticillin, the standard drug used to treat it. Now it is developing resistance to the main reserve drug, the antibiotic vancomycin.

In a bid to slow resistance, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now advise doctors to refrain from using vancomycin unless absolutely necessary. Consequently, Zyvox is becoming more widely used in the United States.

''We may discover, within the course of the next few months that (using Zyvox so widely) is untenable, but we don't know at this stage,'' said Dr. Roger Finch, a professor of infectious diseases at Nottingham University in England who was involved in the testing of the new drug.

Zyvox is a synthetic chemical designed to fight germs at a different point in their life cycle than any other antibiotic. It stops bacteria from making protein, which in turn stops their growth, so the body's immune system can step in and finish them off.

Known chemically as linezolid, it is the first in a long-awaited class of antibiotics called oxazolidinones and has arrived just as bacteria are becoming increasingly resistant to vancomycin.

Zyvox was released in the United States in April 2000 and in Britain in January. It is not yet available in other countries. So far, 80,000 patients have received it, according to the drug's maker, Pharmacia Corp.

''It's frustrating. So much effort goes into the development of these drugs huge resources and one hoped that we would have had a number of years of successful use of this agent,'' because it was different from older antibiotics, Finch said. ''It's disturbing and it means we've got to keep looking for new approaches.''

A handful of drugs belonging to this new class are in the pipeline, experts said.

On the Net:

Microbe, http://www.microbe.org

MicrobeWorld, http://www.microbeworld.org/mlc

-- Anonymous, July 20, 2001


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