http://www.sanmateocountytimes.com/Stories/0,1413,87%7E2425%7E1161882,00.html?search=filter#San Mateo County TimesAntibiotic-resistant superbug causes deadly skin boils Reports of mystery infection prompts S.F. watch on gay
men Thursday, February 06, 2003 - A bacterial infection that
overpowers most antibiotics has escaped the confines of hospitals and is showing
up in alarming numbers among the general public in California, according to
health officials.
Scattered clusters of the infection have
been reported throughout the nation.
While no cases have yet been reported
outside hospitals in Alameda County, a rise in the infections -- particularly
among gay men -- in San Francisco prompted the city's public health department
to launch a surveillance program this week, said Edwin Charlebois, an infectious
disease epidemiologist with the University of California, San Francisco.
The pathogen causes painful skin boils
and abscesses, and can lead to potentially fatal blood infections and heart
damage. The bug is spread through casual contact, although it's not as easily
acquired as highly infectious conditions like the common cold or influenza, said
Dr. Sam Stebbins, the deputy health officer for San Mateo County's public health
department.
Scattered cases of the infection that
weren't contracted in the hospital have been reported during the past few years
in San Mateo County, he said, and there was an outbreak among members of a
wrestling team. Stebbins said county health workers have been saving samples of
the bacteria from those infected to compare with samples from other regions to
analyze how the bug is spreading.
Called methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, the virulent bacterium now only responds to two
antibiotics "of last resort." It's long been a menace in hospitals, where the
packed conditions dramatically increase the risk of patients developing a
bacterial infection. Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most common
hospital-acquired infections.
What's new is that infections from the
drug-resistant superbug are showing up in adults who have never stayed in a
hospital or haven't done so recently.
"That's the major change, and the worry,"
Charlebois said. "In the first patient that I knew about here in San Francisco,
when we looked at his MRSA, it didn't look like the normal MRSA. It was highly
resistant (to antibiotics)."
In the Bay Area, doctors have been seeing
more cases in their general practices, said Dr. David Witt, an infectious
disease specialist at Kaiser Permanente's South San Francisco medical center.
"Infectious disease people have seen that
occasionally this is showing up in your normal practice," he said. Witt said he
had two children develop the infection in the past year.
In Los Angeles, 932 cases of
"community-acquired" MRSA have been reported, and 69 of those people required
hospitalization as a result, Charlebois said.
The majority of these cases are among
jail inmates, but clusters of cases have been reported among gay men in San
Francisco and Los Angeles. The exact number is unknown, as the disease isn't
reported to health officials, although San Francisco health officials hope to
get a handle on the size of the outbreak through their new surveillance program,
which asks that San Francisco physicians report any skin conditions that are
proving difficult to treat.
While the method of the bacteria's spread
is under investigation, medical authorities speculate that gay men could be
contracting the infections through sexual encounters or in shared facilities
like gyms and steam rooms.
"It's really rampant," said Dr. Bill
Owen, a primary care physician in San Francisco with a gay and HIV practice.
"'We've seen 10 or 15 cases in the last couple of months," he said.
An L.A. physician said some of the boils
and abscesses appeared suddenly, grew rapidly and were far more virulent than
previous staph infections he had seen. "This is a nasty bug," said Dr. Peter
Ruane, whose patients are also mostly gay men and those infected with HIV. "Some
of these infections take your breath away."
In San Mateo County, health officials
added MRSA to the list of diseases reported to the county by doctors, so the
disease has been carefully tracked in that county, Stebbins said.
These new outbreaks portend the spread of
the disease into the rest of the community, the health experts said.
"That's how epidemics start. They start
in small clusters," said Charlebois.
"What we're going to see, at some point,
is this is going to spread to a broader part of the population," Kaiser's Witt
said.
Witt emphasized that the current MRSA
outbreaks are the price of the widespread misuse of antibiotics.
"This is just one of the consequences of
inappropriate antibiotic use," he said. Over time, highly adaptive bacteria
evolve techniques to outwit antibiotics, which are initially extremely toxic to
the bugs. But the more frequently the drugs are used, the faster the bacteria
evolve strategies to disarm them.
For example, in the early 1950s,
penicillin was effective against staph bacteria, but by the late 1950s, it was
ineffective.
Only two powerful antibiotics, vancomycin
and linezolid, work against MRSA.
The New York Times contributed to this
report.
Contact Suzanne Bohan at [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
Witt said he opposes using linezolid to
treat the infections, as there would be no other defense against the disease if
the bug develops a resistance to vancomycin, a process that's now occurring.
"That should be our last shot," he said.
"It's a good example of the problem of treating MRSA," Witt added. "There are
only two treatments, and one of them we are loathe to use."
Witt said that misuse of the drugs is
rampant, as antibiotics are frequently incorrectly prescribed to treat colds:
Antibiotics have no effect on viruses, which are the cause of colds.
The best way to prevent an MRSA
infection, Witt said, is through improved hygiene, including frequent hand
washing.
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