Health News
2007-04-13
CDC says
gonorrhea is now drug-resistant
The sexually
transmitted disease gonorrhea is now among the
''superbugs" resistant to common antibiotics, leading U.S.
healt
The sexually
transmitted disease gonorrhea is now among the
''superbugs" resistant to common antibiotics, leading U.S.
health officials to recommend wider use of a different
class of drugs to avert a public-health crisis.
The resistant
form accounts for more than one in every four gonorrhea
cases among heterosexual men in Philadelphia and nearly that
many in San Francisco, according to a survey that led
to Thursday's recommendation by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Gonorrhea, which
is believed to infect more than 700,000 people in the
United States each year, can leave both men and women
infertile and puts people at higher risk of getting
the AIDS virus.
Since the early
1990s a class of drugs known as fluoroquinolones has
provided a relatively easy cure. These antibiotics, taken as
tablets, include the drug Cipro.
But a growing
number of gonorrhea cases is resistant to those drugs, and
officials at the CDC for the first time are urging doctors
to stop using fluoroquinolones and switch to
cephalosporins, a different class of antibiotics, to
treat everyone.
Those
drugs—which include the generic ceftriaxone, or brand
name Rocephin, made by Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding
AG—must be given as a shot and aren't as
readily stocked as Cipro on most doctor's shelves.
''Gonorrhea has
now joined the list of other superbugs for which
treatment options have become dangerously few,'' said Henry
Masur, president of the Infectious Diseases Society of
America. ''To make a bad problem even worse, we're
also seeing a decline in the development of new
antibiotics to treat these infections.''
The CDC made the
new recommendation after discovering that nearly 7% of
gonorrhea cases among heterosexual men in a survey of 26
U.S. cities last year were drug-resistant. In 2001
only about 0.6% of gonorrhea cases among heterosexual
men were drug-resistant.
''That leaves us
with a single class of highly effective antibiotics,''
said John Douglas Jr., director of the CDC's division of STD
prevention. Other experts called the situation
perilous.
''We are running
out of options to treat this disease,'' added Douglas,
who said there are ''no new drugs for gonorrhea in the drug
development pipeline.''
Previously, CDC
recommended against fluoroquinolones to treat
drug-resistant gonorrhea among men who have sex with men and
in certain states, including California and Hawaii,
where most of these cases were turning up.
Described by
Douglas as a ''very wily'' disease, gonorrhea has worked its
way through decades of other treatment regimens, from sulfa
drugs used in the 1930s and 1940s, to penicillin,
which was used from the 1940s until the mid 1980s.
Gonorrhea, spread
through sexual contact, is the second most commonly
reported infectious disease in the United States, trailing
only chlamydia, which the CDC says affects more than
2.1 million people yearly in the U.S.
The highest rates
of infection are among sexually active teens, young
adults, and African-Americans. Because many people don't
have obvious symptoms, they can unknowingly spread it
to others. And having it makes people more susceptible
to HIV. Gonorrhea's spread is preventable through
consistent and proper use of condoms, experts said.
In women the
infection can cause pelvic inflammatory disease. In men it
can cause epididymitis, a painful condition of the testicles
that can lead to infertility if untreated, the CDC
said.
In the survey of
gonorrhea cases among heterosexual men in 26 cities last
year, Philadelphia had the highest percentage of
drug-resistant cases with almost 27%, a dramatic
increase from only 1.2% in 2004.
San Francisco's
drug-resistant cases more than doubled between 2004 and
2006, from 10.3% to 22.5%. During the same period Miami's
cases spiked from 2.1% to 15.3% and Atlanta's climbed
from 1% to 5.7%. (AP)
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