GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN - Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains are showing a worrisome drift in susceptibility to cephalosporins, causing experts to warn that the bacterium is only a step away from acquiring high-level resistance that would render ineffective the current first-line antimicrobials.
That development could have disastrous consequences since cephalosporins are the last remaining class of antimicrobial agents that are highly effective against N. gonorrhoeae.
 Dr. Catherine Ison
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"The challenge is to maintain gonorrhea as a treatable infection," Dr. Catherine Ison declared at the annual congress of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.
Because Neisseria gonorrhoeae is highly versatile, that task won’t be easy. The bacterium has a solid track record of acquiring and developing resistance. Since sulfonamide was introduced for the treatment of gonorrhea in the 1930s, N. gonorrhoeae has developed up different mechanisms for evading each new first-line antimicrobial agent. Penicillins, tetracyclines, quinolones, and azithromycin have all fallen by the wayside.
"We should never underestimate the gonococcus. We’ve known that. Those of us who’ve spent our lives working with it know that it always comes up with surprises," observed Dr. Ison, director of the sexually transmitted bacteria reference laboratory at the U.K. Health Protection Agency, London.
The case of ciprofloxacin is a good example of how quickly and relentlessly high-level resistance can occur—and how slow national and international infectious disease treatment guideline panels often are to respond, she remarked.
Ciprofloxacin was recommended as a highly effective first-line agent for gonorrhea beginning in about 1990. However, by 2004, when the European Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Program (Euro-GASP) was initiated, the mean resistance to ciprofloxacin among N. gonorrhoeae isolates from 17 participating countries was already at 31%. In 2006 it rose to 42%, climbing further to 53% in 2007 and 63% in 2009.
To put these resistance figures into context, the World Health Organization recommends considering switching to a different first-line agent when the prevalence of resistant organisms reaches 5% in order to maintain therapeutic success rates in excess of 95%. By the middle of the past decade resistance rates in Europe exceeded that standard by 8- to 10-fold. Yet European gonorrhea treatment guidelines finally got around to recommending replacement of ciprofloxacin by cephalosporins as first-line agents only a few months ago, Dr. Ison noted.
Resistance to the oral cephalosporin cefixime (Suprax) now stands at an average of about 5% across Europe. Monitoring by Euro-GASP, now funded by the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control, indicates five European countries—Austria, Italy, Denmark, Belgium, and Slovenia—already have rates in excess of 5%. Gonorrhea treatment failures with cefixime have been reported. The mechanism is attributed to penA mosaic. The microorganism will need to acquire additional mechanisms in order for full resistance to occur, but that’s just a matter of time, she said.
As for ceftriaxone (Rocephin), an injectable first-line cephalosporin, the Euro-GASP data for 2004-2009 show a drift in minimum inhibitory concentrations toward the more resistant end of the spectrum over time. There have been occasional reports of treatment failures. The resistance mechanism appears to differ from that for cefixime.