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posted by janrinok on Monday March 12 2018, @12:08PM   Printer-friendly
from the bugs-are-smart dept.

Colistin is a last resort antibiotic used against multi-drug resistant pathogens. Now scientists have found a strain of bacterium that can evade it.

For the first time, researchers have discovered strains of a deadly, multidrug-resistant bacterium that uses a cryptic method to also evade colistin, an antibiotic used as a last-resort treatment. That's according to a study of US patients published this week by Emory University researchers in the open-access microbiology journal mBio.

The wily and dangerous bacteria involved are carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae or CRKP, which are already known to resist almost all antibiotics available, including other last-line antibiotics called carbapenems. The germs tend to lurk in clinical settings and can invade the urinary tract, bloodstream, and soft tissues. They're members of a notorious family of multidrug-resistant pathogens, called carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), which collectively have mortality rates as high as 50 percent and have spread rapidly around the globe in recent years. A 2013 report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated that there were more than 9,300 CRE infections in the US each year, leading to 600 deaths. Both the CDC and the World Health Organization have listed CRE as one of the critical drug-resistant threats to public health, in need of "urgent and aggressive action."

That's what we knew about CRKP before this week.

In the new study, the Emory researchers discovered two strains of CRKP—isolated from the urine of patients in Atlanta, Georgia—that can also resist colistin. But they do so in a poorly understood, surreptitious way. At first, they appear vulnerable to the potent antibiotic in standard clinical tests, but with more advanced testing and exposure to the drug, they reveal that they can indeed survive it. In mice, the strains caused infections that couldn't be cured by colistin and the mice died of the infections. Mice infected with typical CRKP were all saved with colistin.


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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by bob_super on Monday March 12 2018, @05:33PM (4 children)

    by bob_super (1357) on Monday March 12 2018, @05:33PM (#651438)

    Apparently the child of Arik and Ethanol-Fueled.
    Doomsday predictions can be more accurate than we thought.

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  • (Score: 2) by deimtee on Monday March 12 2018, @08:14PM (1 child)

    by deimtee (3272) on Monday March 12 2018, @08:14PM (#651500) Journal

    Wow, is there nothing CRISPR can't do?

    --
    If you cough while drinking cheap red wine it really cleans out your sinuses.
  • (Score: 2) by Rivenaleem on Tuesday March 13 2018, @11:02AM

    by Rivenaleem (3400) on Tuesday March 13 2018, @11:02AM (#651763)

    Wasn't the child of Arik and Ethanol-Fueled itself a doomsday prediction?

  • (Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Tuesday March 13 2018, @01:37PM

    by LoRdTAW (3755) on Tuesday March 13 2018, @01:37PM (#651807) Journal

    And Jmorris is the godfather.