FRIDAY, May 9 (HealthDay News) British research into Steno, one
the most recent "superbugs" to claim lives, reveals that the
bacterium has an incredible ability to resist antibiotics and other
drugs, according to soon-to-be-published findings.
Steno, short for
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, thrives in moist environments,
such as around taps and shower heads, and can be transmitted to
people. It is responsible for roughly 1,000 cases of Steno blood
poisoning in the U.K. annually. About 30 percent of these
infections prove fatal.
"This is the latest in an ever-increasing list of
antibiotic-resistant hospital superbugs. The degree of resistance
it shows is very worrying," study senior author Dr. Matthew Avison,
of the University of Bristol, said in a prepared statement.
"Strains are now emerging that are resistant to all available
antibiotics, and no new drugs capable of combating these
pan-resistant strains are currently in development."
Pan-resistant Steno infections are extremely hard to treat but
are rarer than similarly difficult MRSA and
Clostridium difficile infections and are exclusively
hospital-acquired.
The paper, to be published in
Genome Biology, discusses the findings when researchers
recently sequenced the Steno genome. This process, they hope, will
help them learn how this bacterium works, so they can discover how
to best combat it.
The organism, which is also found in the lungs of many adults
with cystic fibrosis, can cause pneumonia and septicemia. Steno
only enters the body through devices, such as catheters or
ventilation tubes, which are left in place for long periods of
time. It sticks to the catheter, grows into a 'biofilm,' and enters
the patient's bloodstream when the catheter is next flushed.
Steno often affects the seriously ill, whose immune systems are
already weakened. Since the new research shows Steno to be largely
resistant to antibiotics, these patients face an extremely
difficult situation.
"The genome sequence should help us to combat these properties,"
lead author Dr. Lisa Crossman, of the Wellcome Trust Sanger
Institute near Cambridge, said in a prepared statement. "For
example, if we know which proteins cause it to stick to surfaces,
we could try to develop biochemical compounds that interfere with
this interaction. If we understand its antibiotic resistance
mechanisms, we might be able to design inhibitors that block
them."
Researchers also hope that since Steno causes similar types of
infections to two more common organisms, they can find solutions by
comparing the two.
"Genome sequences for these two also exist, and so now we can
look at what they all have in common genetically that might explain
why they are so resistant to antibiotics," Avison said.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control has more about
drug-resistant bacteria.