Current News |
Stomach Bug Crystallizes
an Antibiotic Threat
By TARA PARKER-POPE
April 14, 2009
Source:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/14/health/14well.html?_r=1&ref=health
Earlier this year, Harold and Freda
Mitchell of Como, Miss., both came down
with a serious stomach bug. At first,
doctors did not know what was wrong, but
the gastrointestinal symptoms became so
severe that Mrs. Mitchell, 66, was
hospitalized for two weeks. Her husband,
a manufacturing supervisor, missed 20
days of work.
A local doctor who had worked in a
Veterans Affairs hospital recognized the
signs of Clostridium difficile, a
contagious and potentially deadly
bacterium. Although the illness is
difficult to track, health officials
estimate that in the United States the
bacteria cause 350,000 infections each
year in hospitals alone, with tens of
thousands more occurring in nursing
homes. While the majority of cases are
found in health care settings, 20
percent or more may occur in the
community. The illness kills an
estimated 15,000 to 20,000 people
annually.
“It’s been the worst thing I’ve ever
tried to get through in my life,” said
Mrs. Mitchell, who remains weakened by
the ordeal. “I really did think I was
going to die.”
What is so frightening about C.
difficile is that it is often spurred by
antibiotics. The drugs wipe out the
targeted illness, like a urinary tract
or upper respiratory infection, but they
also kill off large portions of the
healthy bacteria that normally live in
the digestive tract. If a person comes
into contact with C. difficile, or
already has it, the disruption to the
beneficial bacteria creates an
opportunity for the harmful bacteria to
flourish.
The public health community has been
sounding the alarm for years about the
overuse of antibiotics and the emergence
of “superbugs” — bacteria that have
developed immunity to a wide number of
antibiotics. But the C. difficile
problem shows that the threat is not
generalized or hypothetical, but
immediate and personal.
“One of the things that we counsel
consumers about is to make sure that an
antibiotic is really necessary,” said
Dr. Dale N. Gerding, an infectious
disease specialist at the Stritch School
of Medicine at Loyola University in
Chicago. “There are many good reasons
for taking an antibiotic, but an illness
like sinusitis or bronchitis winds up
being treated with antibiotics even
though it will go away by itself
anyway.”
Even appropriate use of antibiotics can
put a person at risk. Dr. Gerding said
his own adult son came down with a C.
difficile infection after taking
antibiotics for tonsillitis.
The typical treatment for C. difficile
is another course of antibiotics,
typically the drug vancomycin. But the
situation can quickly turn tragic. The
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has reported on several cases
of pregnant and postpartum women who
developed life-threatening C. difficile
infections after being treated for minor
infections. In some instances, a C.
difficile infection can be treated only
by emergency surgery to remove the
patient’s colon. Doctors say many
patients report that they continue to
suffer from regular bouts of diarrhea
even after the infection is gone. About
20 percent of patients with the
infection suffer a relapse, and C.
difficile support groups have emerged on
the Internet.
In the case of the Mitchell family, Mr.
Mitchell had been taking antibiotics for
another health problem, and the
treatment apparently led to his C.
difficile infection. Mrs. Mitchell
probably contracted the illness from her
husband. The spores from C. difficile
are hardy, and contaminated surfaces
must be scrubbed down with bleach to
eradicate the germ. Doctors say Mrs.
Mitchell’s illness is unusual because
most people are protected by their own
bacterial flora and wouldn’t be
vulnerable to C. difficile if they had
not been taking antibiotics, even after
close exposure. The risk of contracting
C. difficile outside the health care
setting remains low, at about 7 cases
per 100,000 people, studies show.
C. difficile is not a new illness, but
it appears to be spreading at an
alarming rate. The rate of C. difficile
infection among hospital patients
doubled from 2001 to 2005, according to
an April 2008 report from the C.D.C. The
rise in C. difficile cases around the
world is linked with the growing use of
all antibiotics, particularly a class of
drugs called fluoroquinolones, which
came into widespread use around 2001.
The use of acid-suppressing drugs,
including proton pump inhibitors like
Prilosec, also may be a risk factor,
although studies have been
contradictory.
In addition to becoming more common, C.
difficile is also becoming more deadly.
Several years ago, the mortality rate
from a C. difficile infection was around
1 to 2 percent. But today, various
studies estimate that the death rate is
6 percent. The reason is that a
hypervirulent strain has emerged that
emits higher levels of toxins than
earlier strains.
Many patients are far more familiar with
another superbug, methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, which
can cause a severe and potentially
deadly skin infection. MRSA started off
primarily as a hospital-based infection
but has become increasingly common in
the community.
Hospitals may become more motivated to
control C. difficile if the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services decides
to withhold reimbursement for cases of
hospital-acquired C. difficile
infections. The system already withholds
reimbursement for certain other
preventable hospital infections.
In addition to careful use of
antibiotics, patients and hospital
visitors should always be vigilant about
hand washing, and visitors should not
sit on a patient’s hospital bed or use a
patient’s restroom if it can be avoided.
Patients should always report severe
diarrhea symptoms to a doctor,
particularly if they have taken
antibiotics recently.
“Up until about 2002, this was a very
mild disorder and very few people ever
died from it,” said Dr. Perry Hookman, a
gastroenterologist and associate
professor of medicine at the Miller
School of Medicine at the University of
Miami. “But in the past few years the
bugs have become hypervirulent, more
severe and now it’s a global threat.” |
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