Antibiotic-resistant bacteria may be tougher superbugs than previously thought: Not only are these bacteria harder to treat, they appear to be “fitter” in general, meaning they survive better in the host and cause more deadly infections, a new study suggests.
The findings go against the prevailing view in medicine that when bacteria acquire resistance to drugs, they become less “fit” in some way, for example, they spread less easily. Although scientists have assumed this is true, evidence supporting this view is limited, the researchers said.
In the new study, the researchers examined the effect of in , bacteria that cause lung infections.
They found that mice infected with antibiotic-resistant strains of were more likely to die (without any type of treatment) during the study period than mice infected with strains that did not have antibiotic resistance. []
The antibiotic-resistant strains were also better able to kill certain (the body’s defenses against bacteria and other pathogens).
The researchers also had similar findings for two other strains of bacteria: , which causes infections in people in hospitals, and , which causes the . For example, bacteria with certain genes for antibiotic resistance were better able to grow in the gastrointestinal tracts of rabbits than bacteria without these genes.
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The findings also “emphasize the necessity to effectively control the emergence of antibiotic-resistantpathogens as well as the development of alternative approaches to prevent and treat infections,” they wrote.
Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious-disease specialist and a senior associate at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s Center for Health Security, said the new findings were not completely surprising. That’s because mutations that allow bacteria to resist certain antibiotics can have other effects as well, including boosting the bacteria’s ability to survive. “It’s not just a simple trade-off,” between genes for antibiotic resistance and pathogen fitness, said Adalja, who was not involved in the study.
Adalja also noted that researchers have discovered bacteria in caves that are resistant to many antibiotics, even though these bacteria have never had contact with humans, or been exposed to antibiotic drugs. Bacteria likely evolved to have these resistance genes a long time ago, to defend themselves against other bacteria, or help them survive in other ways, Adalja said.
“Antibiotics resistance isn’t just something that happened after the discovery of penicillin,” Adalja said.
The findings show that there may always be some level of antibiotic resistance, even if doctors improve the way they use antibiotics. “There may be limits to what antibiotic stewardship can do,” Adalja said.
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