A major public health crisis is emerging, in the form of a
sexually-transmitted disease that doesn't respond to antibiotics, World
Health Organization officials said Wednesday.
Gonorrhea is one of
the most common sexually-transmitted infections. It is spread through
oral, vaginal and anal sex. About 106 million people worldwide become
infected every year.
Couple having sex in bath tab |
"Once this organism develops full resistance
to this last antibiotic that we have, we have nothing else to offer to
these patients," says Dr. Manjula Lusti-Narasimhan, scientist at the
Department of Reproductive Health and Research at WHO.
The
organization has just released a global action plan encouraging greater
awareness and advocacy, research, increased prevention efforts and
monitoring of gonorrhea treatment failure. The same sorts of prevention
messages apply for gonorrhea as for HIV/AIDS: Practice safe sex -
correct and consistent use of condoms - and limit the number of sexual
partners.
Australia, France, Japan, Norway, Sweden and the United
Kingdom are among the countries reporting cases of gonorrhea that does
not respond to cephalosporin antibiotics, which is the last treatment
option against gonorrhea. These are developed countries with good health
care systems, meaning countries less well off may be even more at risk
for a crisis.
"If the resistence is there, what we think is that
we're sitting at a tip of an iceberg," Lusti-Narasimhan said. "For
places in many other parts of the world where there are much less both
human and financial resources, it's very difficult to know the extent of
the data."
The consequences of an untreated infection are harsh.
In both men and women, it can cause infertility. Up to half of babies
born from mothers with gonorrhea have severe eye infections, which could
lead to blindness. Women who are pregnant may have spontaneous
abortions or ectopic pregnancies. If the bacteria gets to other parts of
the body, joint pain, swelling and stiffness are possible.
The
WHO does not know the extent of the spread of drug-resistant gonorrhea
yet. The infections don't seem to be as resistant in the United States
as in some of the other countries, but there is increased
susceptibility, Lusti-Narasimhan said. More surveillance is needed
globally to fully assess how widespread these resistant infections are.
Bacteria
may become resistant to antibiotics as a result of overuse or improper
use of antimicrobial agents as well as poor-quality versions of these
drugs. Strains of gonorrhea in particular appear to have a particularly
good ability to become resistant.
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