Reports of a new “sex superbug”
threatening the U.S. aren’t true, public health officials say, even as
they reiterate worries about the rise of drug-resistant gonorrhea.
“The sky is not falling -- yet,” said Dr. Kimberly Workowski, a professor of infectious disease at Emory University in Atlanta.
Several media outlets,
including The Associated Press, last week reported that a rare strain of
gonorrhea known as HO41 had been detected in Hawaii. That would have
raised alarms nationwide, signaling the first domestic sign of a strain
that's been found to be resistant to ceftriaxone, an injectable
antibiotic that is the last-resort treatment for the sexually
transmitted infection.
But the Hawaii cases,
first discovered in May 2011, were actually a different strain, H11S8,
resistant to a different drug, the antibiotic azithromycin, state health
officials confirmed. That’s been a known problem for a while, Workowski
added. The AP later withdrew the inaccurate report.
In fact, the HO41 strain
hasn’t been detected anywhere in the world since 2009, when it was
found in a Japanese sex worker, said Dr. Robert Kirkcaldy, a medical
epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A
handful of other cases that are resistant to ceftriaxone have been
detected in other countries, but they’re different isolates, he added.
The false reports have
put public health experts in the unusual position of refuting an error
while also emphasizing that the threat of untreatable gonorrhea in the
U.S. is very real.
“We think that that
could be just a matter of a year or two,” said William Smith, executive
director of the National Coalition of STD Directors.
Nearly 322,000 cases of
gonorrhea were reported in the U.S. in 2011, making it again the second
most commonly reported notifiable infection in the nation. Sufferers
often show no signs, so the actual number of infections is likely closer
to 700,000, according to the CDC.
For decades, gonorrhea
was easy to treat with a single dose of antibiotics. But the germ is
wily and easily mutable. It developed resistance to successive classes
of drugs over the years until the cephalosporins, the current treatment,
were all that’s left.
In recent years,
though, there have been worrisome signs that the bug is starting to
outsmart those drugs, too. Last year, the CDC stopped recommending the
oral antibiotic cefixime to treat gonorrhea after surveillance showed it
was on the verge of resistance. Now, the recommended treatment is the
injectable ceftriaxone along with two other antibiotics, azithromycin or
doxycycline.
“The point was to actually preserve the last remaining drug we know is effective,” said Workowski.
The NCSD, led by Smith,
has asked Congress for $54 million in emergency appropriations to help
bolster the US public health infrastructure that monitors, diagnoses and
treats gonorrhea.
“Untreated gonorrhea is a disaster for public health and HIV prevention,” Smith said.
The best prevention
against gonorrhea is monogamous sex between uninfected partners,
Kirkcaldy said. Diligent use of condoms can also prevent infection, he
added.
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