By Julie Steenhuysen
Reuters
The only remaining oral antibiotic used for gonorrhea failed to cure the infection in nearly 7 percent of patients treated at a clinic in Toronto, Canadian researchers said on Monday in the first published study of treatment-resistant gonorrhea in North America.
The study raised alarm among U.S. health officials, who have ordered doctors to stop prescribing the antibiotic known as cefixime because lab cultures showed gonorrhea was starting to develop resistance to the drug.
That left U.S. doctors with only one effective treatment for most cases of gonorrhea, an injectible antibiotic known as ceftriaxone.
"We've been very concerned about the threat of potentially untreatable gonorrhea in the United States," Dr. Gail Bolan, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's division for sexually transmitted diseases, said in a telephone interview
There have been a number of cases in Europe, but "this is the first time we've had such a report in the actual North American continent," she said. "We feel it's only a matter of time until resistance will occur in the United States."
Until now, signs of antibiotic resistance in North America have been detected mostly through lab tests, which have shown a steady increase in the amount of antibiotic cefixime - marketed by Lupin Ltd as Suprax - that was needed to kill gonorrhea.
"We had seen one case beforehand, but this is the first published report, and it's also the first series of cases in North America," said Dr. Vanessa Allen of Public Health Ontario in Canada, who led the study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Allen and colleagues studied nearly 300 individuals with gonorrhea between May 2010 and April 2011 who were treated with cefixime at a clinic in Toronto, looking for any patients who were still infected during a follow-up visit.
Of the initial 300, 133 returned for retesting. Of those, 13 were still infected, but only nine said they had not had sexual contact that might have reinfected them. That left a failure rate of 6.7 percent.
Allen said the study is a preliminary finding, but still important because it offers some confirmation that people treated with cefixime are not being cured.
It also points out a weakness of newer DNA-based tests commonly used to test for gonorrhea.
Previously, doctors would take fluid samples from patients and grow cultures of gonorrhea bacteria in lab dishes, which could then be used to identify drug resistance. More advanced DNA-based tests, such as nucleic acid amplification tests, cannot be used to test for antibiotic resistance.
"I do think reinvesting in culture-based methodologies is warranted," Allen said, adding that doctors should consider sending patients for retesting to make sure they have been properly treated.
If left untreated, gonorrhea can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, stillbirths, severe eye infections in babies and infertility in both men and women.
In the United States, there are approximately 300,000 reported cases of gonorrhea each year. But because infected people often have no symptoms, the actual number of cases is likely closer to 600,000, Bolan said.
So-called "superbug" drug-resistant strains of gonorrhea accounted for almost one in 10 cases of sexually transmitted disease in Europe in 2010, more than double the rate of the year before, health officials from the Stockholm-based European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said in June.
In addition to closely monitoring for resistance, Bolan said the CDC it is working with its partners at the National Institutes of Health and pharmaceutical companies to encourage the development of new antibiotics and test new combinations of existing drugs.


One more reason to keep things where they belong.
If you get an STD, you deserve it, you whore.
Glad I'm to old for that. When someone ask me "what's up" I tell them nothing but memories.
What. I don't understand. Both the other two guys got 1 thumbs up for their comment so far, but not me.
Too strong?
That is because you used the word whore. However, you told like it is.
ChestyPuller & JohnWW1--You do know that thousands of MEN are treated nationwide, every year, for gonorrhea. I hope you are classifying them under the same category of "W" as you are classifying the women with the infection.
yah both
ChestyPuller & JohnWW1-----You do know that thousands of MEN are treated yearly for gonorrhea and other sexuallly transmitted diseases . I do hope you are classifying them as "W's" also, along with the women you are obviously classifying in that fashion.
Sexual promiscuity is the cause of STD's. Chesty just used the wrong word. But, it still means the same thing.
No, John, promiscuity does not "cause" STDs. I won't waste any of my time explaining it further to you, though.
Unprotected sex, would be the main concern then promiscuity who, when, where and what has this other person had sex with! I'm happily Married in a monogamous relationship. It's truly the only way to be sure.
Now since antibiotics are losing the war against bacteria. Now it time to go to the basic before big pharmaceuticals even existed. They sure have created more diseases than they can fix. What a mess!!! But that is there business is to create sickness. We need to go back to the Elitist in the early 1700's for the answer. I know what is???? Do you know what it is???? It's a root and if it does not tingle your mouth, it is not what it should be. This is the answer to all of the super-bugs out there.
In an apparent effort to be politically correct, nearly all the news sources omit this relevant information:
[SOURCE: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23299608 ]
In particular, "phryngeal" refers to the throat and "rectal" refers to the anal region, both of which strongly suggest sodomy . . .
And once you know that over half of the cases involved sodomy, it is not so difficult to connect the dots, really . . .
Really! :-o
pharyngeal doesn't suggest anything, although obviously anal does. That leaves 1/3 anal sex of those that failed treatment. It doesn't mean 1/3 of all cases though. The other 200+ could be hetero - the data just doesn't say. All that aside, promiscuity is not uncommon in some gay communities, but i wouldn't want to generalize to all. All the gay men I've known were promiscuous, 10-100 partners/year, but again, can't generalize.
Moral boundries were set to prevent everything from hurting you.... cross the boundry, suffer the consequence. i have no concern for the sexually ill.... they brought that on them selves...it's every ones weakness to the debotchery that hurts them...my experience though not sexual taught me a lessen...... so just learn from them,,, that is the KEY.
The commenters on this thread make a lot of naive statements. Statements like "Sexual promiscuity is the cause of STD's", "I'm happily Married in a monogamous relationship. It's truly the only way to be sure.", "pharyngeal doesn't suggest anything, although obviously anal does." and "i have no concern for the sexually ill.... they brought that on them selves" suggest views that are based on opinions not facts. What if YOU consider yourself a moral person in a happily married monogamous relationship but your spouse is not? Did you then bring disease upon yourself? The only way to be 100% sure is to abstain from all sexual activity. Unless a couple is actively trying to procreate it is safest to avoid unprotected sex, even if you're older, married and/or retired. STD rates are rising among the elderly who now have Viagra prescriptions but little to no actual sexual health education.