The use of cephalosporins for gonorrhea: the impending problem of resistance
- PMID: 19284360
- PMCID: PMC2657229
- DOI: 10.1517/14656560902731993
The use of cephalosporins for gonorrhea: the impending problem of resistance
Abstract
Gonorrhea remains an important clinical and public health problem throughout the world. Gonococcal infections have historically been diagnosed by Gram stain and culture but are increasingly diagnosed through nucleic acid tests, thereby eliminating the opportunity for antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Gonococcal infections are typically treated with single-dose therapy with an agent found to cure > 95% of cases. Unfortunately, the gonococcus has repeatedly developed resistance to antimicrobials including sulfonamides, penicillin, tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones. This has now left third-generation cephalosporins as the lone class of antimicrobials recommended as first-line therapy for gonorrhea in some regions. However, resistance to oral third-generation cephalosporins has emerged and spread in Asia, Australia and elsewhere. The mechanism of this resistance seems to be associated with a mosaic penicillin binding protein (penA) in addition to other chromosomal mutations previously found to confer resistance to beta-lactam antimicrobials (ponA, mtrR, penB, pilQ). Few good options exist or are in development for treating cephalosporin-resistant isolates, as most have had multidrug resistance. Preventing the spread of resistant isolates will depend on ambitious antimicrobial management programs, strengthening and expanding surveillance networks, and through effective sexually transmitted disease control and prevention.
References
-
- Hook EW, III, Handsfield HH. Gonococcal infections in the adult. In: Holmes KK, Sparling PF, Stamm WE, Piot P, Wasserheit JN, Corey L, et al., editors. Sexually Transmitted Diseases. 4. New York: McGraw-Hill Medical; 2008. pp. 627–45.
-
- Brandt AM. No Magic Bullet: A Social History of Venereal Disease in the United States since 1880. 2. New York: Oxford University Press; 1987.
-
- Dees JE, Colston JAC. The Use of Sulfanilamide in Gonococcic Infections. JAMA. 1937 May 29;108:1855–8.
-
- Nelson NA. The Treatment of Syphilis and Gonorrhea As of Today. The American Journal of Nursing 1944. 1944 Aug;44(8):737–41.
-
- Whittington WL, Knapp JS. Trends in resistance of Neisseria gonorrhoeae to antimicrobial agents in the United States. Sex Transm Dis. 1988 Oct-Dec;15(4):202–10. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical