Antibiotic2013 PDF
Antibiotic2013 PDF
Antibiotic2013 PDF
When first-line and then second-line antibiotic treatment options are limited by resistance
or are unavailable, healthcare providers are forced to use antibiotics that may be more toxic
to the patient and frequently more expensive and less effective. Even when alternative
treatments exist, research has shown that patients with resistant infections are often
much more likely to die, and survivors have significantly longer hospital stays, delayed
recuperation, and long-term disability. Efforts to prevent such threats build on the
foundation of proven public health strategies: immunization, infection control, protecting
the food supply, antibiotic stewardship, and reducing person-to-person spread through
screening, treatment and education.
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ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE THREATS IN
THE UNITED STATES, 2013
Executive Summary
Antibiotic Resistance Threats in the United States, 2013 is a snapshot of the complex problem
of antibiotic resistance today and the potentially catastrophic consequences of inaction.
The overriding purpose of this report is to increase awareness of the threat that antibiotic
resistance poses and to encourage immediate action to address the threat. This document
can serve as a reference for anyone looking for information about antibiotic resistance. It is
specifically designed to be accessible to many audiences. For more technical information,
references and links are provided.
This report covers bacteria causing severe human infections and the antibiotics used to
treat those infections. In addition, Candida, a fungus that commonly causes serious illness,
especially among hospital patients, is included because it, too, is showing increasing
resistance to the drugs used for treatment. When discussing the pathogens included in this
report, Candida will be included when referencing “bacteria” for simplicity. Also, infections
caused by the bacteria Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) are also included in this report.
Although C. difficile infections are not yet significantly resistant to the drugs used to treat
them, most are directly related to antibiotic use and thousands of Americans are affected
each year.
Drug resistance related to viruses such as HIV and influenza is not included, nor is drug
resistance among parasites such as those that cause malaria. These are important
problems but are beyond the scope of this report. The report consists of multiple one or
two page summaries of cross-cutting and bacteria- specific antibiotic resistance topics.
The first section provides context and an overview of antibiotic resistance in the United
States. In addition to giving a national assessment of the most dangerous antibiotic
resistance threats, it summarizes what is known about the burden of illness, level of
concern, and antibiotics left to defend against these infections. This first section also
includes some basic background information, such as fact sheets about antibiotic safety
and the harmful impact that resistance can have on high-risk groups, including those with
chronic illnesses such as cancer.
CDC estimates that in the United States, more than two million people are sickened every
year with antibiotic-resistant infections, with at least 23,000 dying as a result. The estimates
are based on conservative assumptions and are likely minimum estimates. They are the best
approximations that can be derived from currently available data.
Regarding level of concern, CDC has — for the first time — prioritized bacteria in this report
into one of three categories: urgent, serious, and concerning.
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Urgent Threats
■■ Clostridium difficile
■■ Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE)
■■ Drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Serious Threats
■■ Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter
■■ Drug-resistant Campylobacter
■■ Fluconazole-resistant Candida (a fungus)
■■ Extended spectrum β-lactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLs)
■■ Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE)
■■ Multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa
■■ Drug-resistant Non-typhoidal Salmonella
■■ Drug-resistant Salmonella Typhi
■■ Drug-resistant Shigella
■■ Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
■■ Drug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
■■ Drug-resistant tuberculosis
Concerning Threats
■■ Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA)
■■ Erythromycin-resistant Group A Streptococcus
■■ Clindamycin-resistant Group B Streptococcus
The second section describes what can be done to combat this growing threat, including
information on current CDC initiatives. Four core actions that fight the spread of antibiotic
resistance are presented and explained, including 1) preventing infections from occurring
and preventing resistant bacteria from spreading, 2) tracking resistant bacteria, 3)
improving the use of antibiotics, and 4) promoting the development of new antibiotics and
new diagnostic tests for resistant bacteria.
The third section provides summaries of each of the bacteria in this report. These
summaries can aid in discussions about each bacteria, how to manage infections, and
implications for public health. They also highlight the similarities and differences among
the many different types of infections.
This section also includes information about what groups such as states, communities,
doctors, nurses, patients, and CDC can do to combat antibiotic resistance. Preventing
the spread of antibiotic resistance can only be achieved with widespread engagement,
especially among leaders in clinical medicine, healthcare leadership, agriculture, and public
health. Although some people are at greater risk than others, no one can completely avoid
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the risk of antibiotic-resistant infections. Only through concerted commitment and action
will the nation ever be able to succeed in reducing this threat.
Any comments and suggestions that would improve the usefulness of future publications
are appreciated and should be sent to Director, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion,
National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, Mailstop A-07, Atlanta, Georgia, 30333. E-mail can also
be used: [email protected].
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CAMPYLOBACTER
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THE THREAT OF
ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE
Introduction
Antibiotic resistance is a worldwide problem. New forms of antibiotic resistance can
cross international boundaries and spread between continents with ease. Many forms of
resistance spread with remarkable speed. World health leaders have described antibiotic-
resistant microorganisms as “nightmare bacteria” that “pose a catastrophic threat” to people
in every country in the world.
Each year in the United States, at least 2 million people acquire serious infections with
bacteria that are resistant to one or more of the antibiotics designed to treat those
infections. At least 23,000 people die each year as a direct result of these antibiotic-resistant
infections. Many more die from other conditions that were complicated by an antibiotic-
resistant infection.
In addition, almost 250,000 people each year require hospital care for Clostridium difficile
(C. difficile) infections. In most of these infections, the use of antibiotics was a major
contributing factor leading to the illness. At least 14,000 people die each year in the United
States from C. difficile infections. Many of these infections could have been prevented.
The use of antibiotics is the single most important factor leading to antibiotic resistance
around the world. Antibiotics are among the most commonly prescribed drugs used
in human medicine. However, up to 50% of all the antibiotics prescribed for people are
not needed or are not optimally effective as prescribed. Antibiotics are also commonly
used in food animals to prevent, control, and treat disease, and to promote the growth
of food-producing animals. The use of antibiotics for promoting growth is not necessary,
and the practice should be phased out. Recent guidance from the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) describes a pathway toward this goal.2 It is difficult to directly
compare the amount of drugs used in food animals with the amount used in humans, but
there is evidence that more antibiotics are used in food production.
11
The other major factor in the growth of antibiotic resistance is spread of the resistant strains
of bacteria from person to person, or from the non-human sources in the environment,
including food.
There are four core actions that will help fight these deadly infections:
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NATIONAL
SUMMARY DATA
Estimated minimum number of illnesses and
deaths caused by antibiotic resistance*:
23,000 deaths
14,000 deaths
CS239559
How Antibiotic Resistance Happens
1. 2. 3. 4.
Lots of germs. Antibiotics kill The drug-resistant Some bacteria give
A few are drug resistant. bacteria causing the illness, bacteria are now allowed to their drug-resistance to
as well as good bacteria grow and take over. other bacteria, causing
protecting the body from more problems.
infection.
Resistant bacteria
Drug-resistant bacteria spread to other
in the animal feces can patients from
Patients surfaces within the
remain on crops and be go home.
eaten. These bacteria healthcare facility.
Vegetable Farm
can remain in the
human gut.
Simply using antibiotics creates resistance. These drugs should only be used to treat infections.
CS239559
Minimum Estimates of Morbidity and Mortality from Antibiotic-Resistant Infections*
Carbapenem- Healthcare-associated Infections Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 9,300 610
resistant (HAIs) caused by Klebsiella and E. coli homes)
Enterobacteriaceae with onset in hospitalized patients
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
(CRE)
after discharge
Infections caused by Enterobacteriaceae other than Klebsiella and
E. coli (e.g., Enterobacter spp.)
Multidrug-resistant HAIs with onset in hospitalized Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 7,300 500
Acinetobacter patients homes)
(three or more drug
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
classes)
after discharge
Drug-resistant HAIs with onset in hospitalized Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 3,400 220
Candida patients homes)
(fluconazole)
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
after discharge
Extended-spectrum HAIs caused by Klebsiella and E. coli Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 26,000 1,700
β-lactamase with onset in hospitalized patients homes)
producing
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
Enterobacteriaceae
after discharge
(ESBLs)
Infections caused by Enterobacteriaceae other than Klebsiella and
E. coli (e.g., Enterobacter spp.)
15
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Antibiotic- Estimated Estimated
Resistant Infections Included Annual Number Annual Number
Microorganism in Case/Death Estimates Infections Not Included of Cases of Deaths
Vancomycin- HAIs with onset in hospitalized Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 20,000 1,300
resistant patients homes)
Enterococcus (VRE)
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
after discharge
Multidrug-resistant HAIs with onset in hospitalized Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 6,700 440
Pseudomonas patients homes)
aeruginosa (three or
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
more drug classes)
after discharge
Methicillin-resistant Invasive infections Both healthcare and community-associated non-invasive infections 80,000 11,000
Staphylococcus such as wound and skin and soft tissue infections
aureus (MRSA)
Erythromycin- Invasive infections Non-invasive infections including common upper-respiratory 1,300 160
resistant Group A infections like strep throat
Streptococcus
Clindamycin- Invasive infections Non-invasive infections and asymptomatic intrapartum colonization 7,600 440
resistant Group B requiring prophylaxis
Streptococcus
Clostridium difficile Healthcare-associated infections in Infections occurring outside of acute care hospitals (e.g., nursing 250,000 14,000
Infections acute care hospitals or in patients homes, community)
requiring hospitalization
Infections acquired in acute care hospitals but not diagnosed until
after discharge
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Limitations of Estimating the Burden
of Disease Associated with Antibiotic-
Resistant Bacteria
This report uses several methods, described in the technical appendix, to estimate the
number of cases of disease caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria and fungi and the
number of deaths resulting from those cases of disease. The data presented in this report
are approximations, and totals, as provided in the national summary tables, can provide
only a rough estimate of the true burden of illness. Greater precision is not possible at this
time for a number of reasons:
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■■ For several pathogens, complete data from all types of infections are not
available since tracking is limited to the more severe types of infections. For some
pathogens, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), only cases
due to invasive disease are counted. For other pathogens, where resistance is
predominately limited to healthcare settings, only disease occurring in acute care
hospitals, or requiring hospitalization, are counted.
The actual number of infections and the actual number of deaths, therefore, are certainly
higher than the numbers provided in this report.
This report does not provide a specific estimate for the financial cost of antibiotic-resistant
infections. Although a variety of studies have attempted to estimate costs in limited
settings, such as a single hospital or group of hospitals, the methods used are quite
variable. Similarly, careful work has been done to estimate costs for specific pathogens,
such as Streptococcus pneumoniae and MRSA. However, no consensus methodology
currently exists for making such monetary estimates for many of the other pathogens listed
in this report. For this reason, this report references non-CDC estimates in the introduction,
but does not attempt to estimate the overall financial burden of antibiotic resistance to the
United States.
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Assessment of Domestic Antibiotic
Resistance Threats
CDC conducted an assessment of antibiotic resistance threats, categorizing the threat
level of each bacteria as urgent, serious, or concerning. The assessment was done in
consultation with non-governmental experts in antibiotic resistance who serve on the
Antimicrobial Resistance Working Group of the CDC Office of Infectious Diseases Board
of Scientific Counselors (http://www.cdc.gov/oid/BSC.html). CDC also received input and
recommendations from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA). Threats were assessed according to seven factors associated with
resistant infections:
■■ clinical impact
■■ economic impact
■■ incidence
■■ 10-year projection of incidence
■■ transmissibility
■■ availability of effective antibiotics
■■ barriers to prevention
The assessment was focused on domestic impact, but the threat of importing international
antibiotic-resistant pathogens was taken into account in the 10-year incidence projection.
Because antibiotic resistance is a rapidly evolving problem, this assessment will be revised at
least every five years. Examples of findings that could result in a change in threat status are:
■■ Multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR and XDR
TB) infections are an increasing threat outside of the United States. In the United
States, infections are uncommon because a robust prevention and control
program is in place. If infection rates of MDR and XDR TB increase within the U.S.,
this antibiotic-resistant threat will change from serious to urgent, because it is
transmissible through respiratory secretions, and because treatment options are
very limited.
■■ MRSA infections can be very serious and the number of infections is among
the highest of all antibiotic-resistant threats. However, the number of serious
infections is decreasing and there are multiple effective antibiotics for treating
infections. If MRSA infection rates increase or MRSA strains become more resistant
to other antibiotic agents, then MRSA may change from a serious to an urgent
threat.
■■ Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) can cause serious and sometimes
life-threatening infections. Antibiotic resistance significantly affects the ability to
manage these infections. A new version of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
(PCV13), introduced in 2010, protects against infections with the most resistant
pneumococcus strains and rates of resistant infections are declining. The extent to
which this trend will continue is unknown, but a significant and sustainable drop in
resistant infection rates could result in this threat being recategorized
as concerning.
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In general, threats assigned to the urgent and serious categories require more monitoring
and prevention activities, whereas the threats in the concerning category require less.
Regardless of category, threat-specific CDC activities are tailored to meet the epidemiology
of the infectious agent and to address any gaps in the ability to detect resistance and to
protect against infections.
HAZARD LEVEL These are significant antibiotic-resistant threats. For varying reasons (e.g.,
SERIOUS low or declining domestic incidence or reasonable availability of therapeutic
agents), they are not considered urgent, but these threats will worsen
and may become urgent without ongoing public health monitoring and
prevention activities.
HAZARD LEVEL These are bacteria for which the threat of antibiotic resistance is low, and/
CONCERNING or there are multiple therapeutic options for resistant infections. These
bacterial pathogens cause severe illness. Threats in this category require
monitoring and in some cases rapid incident or outbreak response.
Although C. difficile is not currently significantly resistant to antibiotics used to treat it, it was included in the threat assessment
because of its unique relationship with resistance issues, antibiotic use, and its high morbidity and mortality.
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Running Out of Drugs to Treat Serious
Gram-Negative Infections
Among all of the bacterial resistance problems, gram-negative pathogens are particularly
worrisome, because they are becoming resistant to nearly all drugs that would be
considered for treatment. This is true as well, but not to the same extent, for some of
the gram-positive infections (e.g., Staphylococcus and Enterococcus). The most serious
gram-negative infections are healthcare-associated, and the most common pathogens
are Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter. Treating infections
of either pan-resistant or nearly pan-resistant gram-negative microorganisms is an
increasingly common challenge in many hospitals. The table below describes the drug
classes used to treat these infections and a description of important drug resistance and
other limitations. The classes are in order of most likely to be used to less likely to be used.
β-lactam subclass:
β-lactamase These drugs are still active against gram- These drugs are important for treatment
inhibitor negative bacteria that have β-lactamases of serious gram- negative infections
combinations with limited activity for destroying but resistance is increasing. Bacteria
β-lactam antibiotics. that are resistant to extended-spectrum
cephalosporins and carbapenems are
usually resistant to these drugs as well.
New β-lactamase inhibitor combination
drugs in development have the
potential to overcome some, but not
all, of resistance from the most potent
β-lactamases such as those found in
CRE.
Extended-spectrum These drugs have been a cornerstone Resistant gram-negative infections first
Cephalosporins for treatment of serious gram-negative emerged in healthcare settings but now
infections for the past 20 years. are also spreading in the community.
When resistance occurs, a carbapenem
is the only remaining β-lactam agent.
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Drug Class Important Characteristics Resistance and Other Limitations
Fluoroquinolones These are broad-spectrum antibiotics Resistant bacteria develop quickly with
that are often given orally, making them increased use in a patient population.
convenient to use in both inpatients and Increased use is also associated with
outpatients. an increase in infections caused by
fluoroquinolone-resistant, hyper-
virulent strains of Clostridium difficile.
Aminoglycosides These drugs are often used in Despite growing resistance problems,
combination with β-lactam drugs for these drugs continue to be an
the treatment of serious gram-negative important therapeutic option. However,
infections. clinicians rarely use these drugs alone
because of concerns with resistance and
side effects.
Tetracyclines & Tetracyclines are not a first-line Tigecycline is a drug that does not
Glycyclines treatment option for serious gram distribute evenly in the body, so it is
negative infections; however, with often used in combination with other
increasing resistance to other drug drugs depending upon the site of
classes, tetracyclines are considered infection. Resistance to tigecycline
as a treatment option. Glycyclines (i.e., has emerged but it is still relatively
tigecycline) are often considered for uncommon.
treatment of multidrug-resistant gram-
negative infections.
Polymyxins These drugs are an older class that fell Because these are generic drugs, there
out of favor because of toxicity concerns. are limited contemporary data on
Now they are often used as a “last resort” proper dosing. In addition, resistance
agent for treatment of multidrug- is emerging, but there are limited data
resistant gram-negative infections. guiding the accurate detection of
resistance in hospital labs. As a result,
use of these drugs present significant
challenges for clinicians. In the absence
of a drug sponsor, FDA and NIH are
funding studies to fill these critical
information gaps.
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People at Especially High Risk
As antibiotic resistance grows, the antibiotics used to treat infections do not work as well
or at all. The loss of effective antibiotic treatments will not only cripple the ability to fight
routine infectious diseases but will also undermine treatment of infectious complications
in patients with other diseases. Many of the advances in medical treatment—joint
replacements, organ transplants, cancer therapy, and treatment of chronic diseases such as
diabetes, asthma, rheumatoid arthritis—are dependent on the ability to fight infections with
antibiotics. If that ability is lost, the ability to safely offer people many life-saving and life-
improving modern medical advantages will be lost with it. For example:
CANCER CHEMOTHERAPY
People receiving chemotherapy are often at risk for developing an infection when
their white blood cell count is low. For these patients, any infection can quickly
become serious and effective antibiotics are critical for protecting the patient
from severe complications or death.
COMPLEX SURGERY
Patients who receive cardiac bypass, joint replacements, and other complex surgeries
are at risk of a surgical site infection (SSI). These infections can make recovery from
surgery more difficult because they can cause additional illness, stress, cost, and
even death. For some, but not all surgeries, antibiotics are given before surgery to
help prevent infections.
RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS
Inflammatory arthritis affects the immune system, which controls how well the
body fights off infections. People with certain types of arthritis have a higher risk
of getting infections. Also, many medications given to treat inflammatory arthritis
can weaken the immune system. Effective antibiotics help ensure that arthritis
patients can continue to receive treatment.
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Antibiotic Safety
1 OUT OF 5
MOST COMMON CAUSE OF
EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT VISITS
FOR ADVERSE DRUG EVENTS
IN CHILDREN UNDER
EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT VISITS 18 YEARS OF AGE.
FOR ADVERSE DRUG EVENTS
■■ Antibiotics are powerful drugs that are generally safe and very helpful in fighting
disease, but there are times when antibiotics can actually be harmful.
■■ Antibiotics can have side effects, including allergic reactions and a potentially
deadly diarrhea caused by the bacteria Clostridium difficile (C. difficile). Antibiotics
can also interfere with the action of other drugs a patient may be taking for
another condition. These unintended reactions to antibiotics are called adverse
drug events.
■■ When someone takes an antibiotic that they do not need, they are needlessly
exposed to the side effects of the drug and do not get any benefit from it.
■■ Moreover, taking an antibiotic when it is not needed can lead to the development
of antibiotic resistance. When resistance develops, antibiotics may not be able to
stop future infections. Every time someone takes an antibiotic they don’t need,
they increase their risk of developing a resistant infection in the future.
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Types of Adverse Drug Events Related to
Antibiotics
Allergic Reactions
Every year, there are more than 140,000 emergency department visits for
reactions to antibiotics. Almost four out of five (79%) emergency department
visits for antibiotic-related adverse drug events are due to an allergic reaction.
These reactions can range from mild rashes and itching to serious blistering skin
reactions swelling of the face and throat, and breathing problems. Minimizing
unnecessary antibiotic use is the best way to reduce the risk of adverse drug
events from antibiotics. Patients should tell their doctors about any past drug
reactions or allergies.
C. difficile
C. difficile causes diarrhea linked to at least 14,000 American deaths each year.
When a person takes antibiotics, good bacteria that protect against infection are
destroyed for several months. During this time, patients can get sick from C. difficile
picked up from contaminated surfaces or spread from a healthcare provider’s
hands. Those most at risk are people, especially older adults, who take antibiotics
and also get medical care. Take antibiotics exactly and only as prescribed.
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GAPS IN KNOWLEDGE
OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE
LIMITED NATIONAL, STATE, AND FEDERAL CAPACITY TO DETECT
AND RESPOND TO URGENT AND EMERGING ANTIBIOTIC
RESISTANCE THREATS
Even for critical pathogens of concern like carbapenem-
resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) and Neisseria gonorrhoeae,
we do not have a complete picture of the domestic incidence,
prevalence, mortality, and cost of resistance.
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Developing Resistance
Timeline of Key Antibiotic Resistance Events
ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE ANTIBIOTIC
INDENTIFIED INTRODUCED
penicillin-R Staphylococcus 1940
Dates are based upon early reports
of resistance in the literature. In the 1943 penicillin
case of pan drug-resistant (PDR)-
Acinetobacter and Pseudomonas,
the date is based upon reports
of healthcare transmission or
outbreaks. Note: penicillin was in 1950 tetracycline
limited use prior to widespread
population usage in 1943. 1953 erythromycin
1972 vancomycin
1985
imipenem and
ceftazidime
ceftazidime-R Enterobacteriaceae 1987
vancomycin-R Enterococcus 1988
1996
levofloxacin-R pneumococcus 1996 levofloxacin
imipenem-R Enterobacteriaceae 1998
XDR tuberculosis 2000 2000 linezolid
linezolid-R Staphylococcus 2001
vancomycin-R Staphylococcus 2002
2003 daptomycin
PDR-Acinetobacter and Pseudomonas 2004/5
28
29
CANDIDA
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FIGHTING BACK AGAINST
ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE
Four Core Actions to Prevent
Antibiotic Resistance
1 PREVENTING INFECTIONS,
PREVENTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Avoiding infections in the first place reduces the amount of
antibiotics that have to be used and reduces the likelihood that
resistance will develop during therapy. There are many ways that
drug-resistant infections can be prevented: immunization, safe
food preparation, handwashing, and using antibiotics as directed
and only when necessary. In addition, preventing infections also
prevents the spread of resistant bacteria.
2 TRACKING
CDC gathers data on antibiotic-resistant infections, causes of
infections and whether there are particular reasons (risk factors)
that caused some people to get a resistant infection. With that
information, experts can develop specific strategies to prevent
those infections and prevent the resistant bacteria from spreading.
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1. PREVENTING INFECTIONS, FOUR CORE ACTIONS
PREVENTING THE SPREAD OF PREVENTING INFECTIONS,
PREVENTING SPREAD.
RESISTANCE TRACKING RESISTANCE
PATTERNS.
Preventing infections from developing reduces IMPROVING USE OF
the amount of antibiotics used. This reduction in ANTIBIOTICS.
antibiotic use, in turn, slows the pace of antibiotic DEVELOPING NEW ANTIBIOTICS
resistance. Preventing infections also prevents the AND DIAGNOSTIC TESTS.
spread of resistant bacteria. Antibiotic-resistant infections can
be prevented in many ways. This section focuses on CDC’s
works to prevent antibiotic-resistant infections in healthcare settings, in the community,
and in food.
Tracking
CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) is used by healthcare facilities to
electronically report infections, antibiotic use, and resistance. Data currently submitted by
hospitals to NHSN allow facilities, states, and regions the ability to track and benchmark
antibiotic resistance in bacteria responsible for many healthcare-associated infections. As
more hospitals submit data to the new NHSN Antibiotic Use and Resistance Module, they
will be able to track and benchmark antibiotic resistance in all bacteria, as well as track
antibiotic usage. This information will allow facilities to target areas of concern, to make
needed improvements and to track the success of their efforts. In addition, NHSN allows
CDC to perform and report national assessments of antibiotic resistance.
CDC’s specialized, national reference laboratory tests bacteria samples from around the
country to detect new and emerging resistance patterns that affect patient health. This
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reference testing also provides an early warning of new resistance that has the potential to
spread across the nation and that requires public health action.
33
CDC’s Work to Prevent Antibiotic Resistance in the Community
Antibiotic-resistant infections outside of the hospital setting were rare until recently.
Today, resistant infections that can be transmitted in the community include tuberculosis
and respiratory infections caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae, skin infections caused by
methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and sexually transmitted infections such as
gonorrhea.
CDC works to prevent antibiotic resistance in the community by providing systems to track
infections and changes in resistance; improving prescribing at national, regional, and local
levels; and limiting or interrupting the spread of infections. These activities are similar to
the strategies used in medical settings, but the approach can differ because the population
(potentially everyone) is large and the settings are different. Here are some examples of the
strategies CDC uses to prevent antibiotic resistance in communities:
34
Limiting and Interrupting the Spread of Antibiotic-Resistant Infections in
the Community
Preventing the spread of infection in the community is a significant challenge, and
many prevention interventions are used, depending on the type of infection and the route
of transmission.
Here are some examples of CDC’s activities to limit and interrupt the spread of antibiotic-
resistant community infections:
■■ Contact Tracing: A prevention strategy that has proven successful is tracking cases
(individuals who are infected) and tracing contacts (people who have had contact
with a case that puts them at risk for infection as well). This process is used to
ensure that all persons requiring an intervention such as treatment, prophylaxis,
or temporary isolation from the general public are identified and managed
appropriately. This approach is resource intensive, but it has successfully limited
transmission of infections including tuberculosis, gonorrhea, and meningococcus.
■■ Vaccination: There are few vaccines for antibiotic-resistant bacteria, but the S.
pneumoniae vaccine has proven that an effective vaccine can reduce antibiotic
resistance rates. The vaccine targets certain types of the bacteria, even if it is a
resistant type, and reduces the overall number of infections, including those that
are caused by resistant strains. The first version of the vaccine was introduced in
2000 and reduced the frequency of antibiotic-resistant infections, but it did not
protect against a particular strain of S. pneumoniae called serotype 19A. This strain
became increasingly resistant to antibiotics and caused more infections because
the vaccine did not offer protection. A new version of the vaccine, approved
for use in 2010, protects against serotype 19A. As a result, the rate of resistant
pneumococcal infections is decreasing.
■■ Treatment Guidelines: The spread of antibiotic resistance can be prevented if
infections are effectively treated before the pathogen is spread to others. For some
infections, laboratory tests for guiding treatment are not easily available or the
turn-around time is slow or incomplete. This is the case for treating gonorrhea
and tuberculosis. For these infections, healthcare providers rely on treatment
guidelines for proper management of infections. CDC monitors resistance trends
in Neisseria gonorrhoeae (the cause of gonorrhea) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis
(the cause of tuberculosis) and publishes treatment guidelines to limit the
progression of these diseases and the spread of bacteria.
■■ Promotion of Safe Sex: Increases in the spread of drug-resistant Neisseria
gonorrhoeae poses unique challenges. To prevent transmission of this infection,
CDC works to promote safer sexual behaviors such as abstinence, mutual
monogamy, and correct and consistent condom use.
35
Preventing Infections: CDC’s Work to Prevent Antibiotic Resistance in Food
Each year, millions of people in the United States become sick from foodborne and other
enteric (gastrointestinal) infections. While many of these infections are mild and do not
require treatment, antibiotics can be lifesaving in severe infections. Antibiotic resistance
compromises our ability to treat these infections and is a serious threat to public health.
Preventing resistant enteric infections requires a multifaceted approach and partnerships
because bacteria that cause some infections, such as salmonellosis and campylobacteriosis,
have animal reservoirs, while other bacteria, such as those that cause shigellosis and
typhoid fever, have human reservoirs. To prevent antibiotic-resistant foodborne infections,
CDC works closely with state and local health departments; with the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), which regulates antibiotics, many foods, animal feed, and other
products; and with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which regulates meat,
poultry, and egg products.
■■ Monitor trends in antibiotic resistance among enteric bacteria from humans, retail
meats, and food-producing animals.
■■ Disseminate information on antibiotic resistance to promote interventions that
reduce antibiotic resistance among foodborne bacteria.
■■ Conduct research to better understand the emergence, persistence, and spread of
antibiotic resistance.
■■ Provide data that assist the FDA in making decisions about approving safe and
effective antibiotic drugs for animals.
The CDC reference laboratory conducts antibiotic susceptibility testing on isolates from
sporadic cases and outbreaks of illness. The lab also confirms and studies bacteria that
have new antibiotic resistance patterns. NARMS provides information about patterns of
emerging resistance among enteric pathogens to stakeholders, including federal regulatory
agencies, policymakers, consumer advocacy groups, industry, and the public, to guide
public health prevention and policy efforts that protect people from resistant infections. For
more information about NARMS: www.cdc.gov/narms.
36
Resistant bacteria can contaminate the foods that come from those animals, and people
who consume these foods can develop antibiotic-resistant infections. Antibiotics must
be used judiciously in humans and animals because both uses contribute to not only the
emergence, but also the persistence and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Scientists around the world have provided strong evidence that antibiotic use in food-
producing animals can harm public health through the following sequence of events:
Because of the link between antibiotic use in food-producing animals and the occurrence
of antibiotic-resistant infections in humans, antibiotics should be used in food-producing
animals only under veterinary oversight and only to manage and treat infectious diseases,
not to promote growth. CDC encourages and supports efforts to minimize inappropriate
use of antibiotics in humans and animals, including FDA’s strategy to promote the
judicious use of antibiotics that are important in treating humans (http://www.fda.gov/
AnimalVeterinary/SafetyHealth/AntimicrobialResistance/JudiciousUseofAntimicrobials/
default.htm). CDC supports FDA’s plan to implement draft guidance in 2013 that
will operationalize this strategy (http://www.fda.gov/downloads/AnimalVeterinary/
GuidanceComplianceEnforcement/GuidanceforIndustry/UCM299624.pdf ). CDC has also
contributed to a training curriculum for veterinarians on prudent antibiotic use in animals.
CDC’s efforts to improve antibiotic prescribing in humans are described in other sections of
this report.
Preventing Infections
Efforts to prevent foodborne and other enteric infections help to reduce both antibiotic-
resistant infections and antibiotic-susceptible infections (those that can be treated
effectively with antibiotics). CDC activities that help prevent these infections include:
37
■■ Strengthening the capacity of state and local health departments to detect,
respond to, and report foodborne infections.
■■ Developing better diagnostic tools to rapidly and accurately find sources of
contamination.
■■ Providing recommendations for travelers on safe food and clean water.
38
2. TRACKING RESISTANCE FOUR CORE ACTIONS
PATTERNS PREVENTING INFECTIONS,
PREVENTING SPREAD.
CDC gathers data on antibiotic-resistant infections,
TRACKING RESISTANCE
causes of infections, and whether there are PATTERNS.
particular reasons (risk factors) that caused some IMPROVING USE OF
people to get a resistant infection . With that ANTIBIOTICS.
information, experts develop specific strategies to prevent DEVELOPING NEW ANTIBIOTICS
AND DIAGNOSTIC TESTS.
those infections and prevent the resistant bacteria from
spreading .
39
Tracking Networks Data Collected Resistant Bacteria/Fungus3
3
ABCs also includes surveillance for Neisseria meningitidis and Haemophilus influenzae. NARMS also includes surveillance for
E. coli O157 and Vibrio (non-V. cholerae).
40
3. ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP: FOUR CORE ACTIONS
IMPROVING PRESCRIBING PREVENTING INFECTIONS,
PREVENTING SPREAD.
AND USE TRACKING RESISTANCE
PATTERNS.
Antibiotics were first used to treat serious infections IMPROVING USE OF
in the 1940s. Since then, antibiotics have saved ANTIBIOTICS.
millions of lives and transformed modern medicine. DEVELOPING NEW ANTIBIOTICS
During the last 70 years, however, bacteria have AND DIAGNOSTIC TESTS.
shown the ability to become resistant to every antibiotic that
has been developed. And the more antibiotics are used, the
more quickly bacteria develop resistance (see the Antibiotic Resistance Timeline in this report).
Anytime antibiotics are used, this puts biological pressure on bacteria that promotes the
development of resistance. When antibiotics are needed to prevent or treat disease, they
should always be used. But research has shown that as much as 50% of the time, antibiotics
are prescribed when they are not needed or they are misused (for example, a patient is given
the wrong dose). This not only fails to help patients; it might cause harm. Like every other
drug, antibiotics have side effects and can also interact or interfere with the effects of other
medicines. This inappropriate use of antibiotics unnecessarily promotes antibiotic resistance.
Antibiotics are a limited resource. The more that antibiotics are used today, the less likely
they will still be effective in the future. Therefore, doctors and other health professionals
around the world are increasingly adopting the principles of responsible antibiotic use,
often called antibiotic stewardship. Stewardship is a commitment to always use antibiotics
only when they are necessary to treat, and in some cases prevent, disease; to choose
the right antibiotics; and to administer them in the right way in every case. Effective
stewardship ensures that every patient gets the maximum benefit from the antibiotics,
avoids unnecessary harm from allergic reactions and side effects, and helps preserve the
life-saving potential of these drugs for the future. Efforts to improve the responsible use
of antibiotics have not only demonstrated these benefits but have also been shown to
improve outcomes and save healthcare facilities money in pharmacy costs.
41
Antibiotic Prescriptions per 1000 Persons of All Ages According to State, 2010
The frequency with which doctors prescribe antibiotics varies greatly from state to
state. The reasons for this variation are being studied and might suggest areas where
improvements in antibiotic prescribing (fewer unnecessary prescriptions) would be
most helpful.
42
ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP
IN YOUR FACILITY WILL
DECREASE INCREASE
■ ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE ■ GOOD PATIENT
OUTCOMES
■ C. DIFFICILE INFECTIONS
■ COSTS
IMPROVE
ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP HELPS
PATIENT CARE AND SHORTEN
HOSPTIAL STAYS, THUS BENEFITING
PATIENTS AS WELL AS HOSPITALS
43
4. DEVELOPING NEW ANTIBIOTICS FOUR CORE ACTIONS
AND DIAGNOSTIC TESTS PREVENTING INFECTIONS,
PREVENTING SPREAD.
Because antibiotic resistance occurs as part of a TRACKING RESISTANCE
natural evolution process, it can be significantly PATTERNS.
slowed but not stopped. Therefore, new antibiotics IMPROVING USE OF
ANTIBIOTICS.
will always be needed to keep up with resistant
DEVELOPING NEW
bacteria as well as new diagnostic tests to track the ANTIBIOTICS AND DIAGNOSTIC
development of resistance. TESTS.
*Intervals from 1980–2009 are 5-year intervals; 2010–2012 is a 3-year interval. Drugs are limited to systemic agents.
Data courtesy of FDA’ s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER).
44
Examples of Recently Approved Drugs
Quinupristin/ 1999 Staphylococcus This is a combination of two drugs that can be used to
Dalfoprisitin treat gram-positive infections. Because side effects are
Streptococcus
common, this drug is usually not a first choice for therapy.
Resistance in target pathogens has been described, but the
percentage in the United States is still low.
Daptomycin 2003 Staphylococcus Daptomycin is often used for treatment of serious gram-
positive infections. Resistance is emerging in all of the
Streptococcus
targeted pathogens, but the resistance rates are currently
Enterococcus low.
Tigecycline 2005 Enterobacteriaceae Tigecycline is often one of the only active agents for
carbapenem-resistant gram-negative infections, and
Staphylococcus
resistance is emerging. However, even in the absence of
Streptococcus resistance, the effectiveness of this agent for treatment of
Enterococcus the most serious infections is a concern.
45
Year Key Targeted
Drug Name Approved Pathogens Drug’s Use and Resistance Trends
46
47
CARBAPENEM-RESISTANT
ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
48 (CRE)
CURRENT ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE
THREATS IN THE UNITED STATES,
BY MICROORGANISM
This section includes summaries for each microorganism,
grouped by threat level: URGENT, SERIOUS, and CONCERNING.
49
THREAT LEVEL These bacteria are immediate public
health threats that require urgent and
URGENT aggressive action.
MICROORGANISMS WITH
A THREAT LEVEL OF URGENT
Clostridium difficile
Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae
Drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae
50
CLOSTRIDIUM
DIFFICILE
250,000
INFECTIONS PER YEAR
14,000
DEATHS
THREAT LEVEL
URGENT
This bacteria is an immediate public health threat
$1,000,000,000
IN EXCESS MEDICAL COSTS PER YEAR
that requires urgent and aggressive action.
Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) causes life-threatening diarrhea. PUBLIC HEALTH THREAT
These infections mostly occur in people who have had both ■■ 250,000 infections per year requiring hospitalization or affecting already
recent medical care and antibiotics. Often, C. difficile infections hospitalized patients.
occur in hospitalized or recently hospitalized patients. ■■ 14,000 deaths per year.
At least $1 billion in excess medical costs per year.
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN
■■
■■ Deaths related to C. difficile increased 400% between 2000 and 2007, in part
■■ Although resistance to the antibiotics used to treat C. difficile infections because of a stronger bacteria strain that emerged.
is not yet a problem, the bacteria spreads rapidly because it is naturally ■■ Almost half of infections occur in people younger than 65, but more than
resistant to many drugs used to treat other infections.
90% of deaths occur in people 65 and older.
■■ In 2000, a stronger strain of the bacteria emerged. This strain is resistant ■■ About half of C. difficile infections first show symptoms in hospitalized or
to fluoroquinolone antibiotics, which are commonly used to treat other
recently hospitalized patients, and half first show symptoms in nursing home
infections.
patients or in people recently cared for in doctors’ offices and clinics.
■■ This strain has spread throughout North America and Europe, infecting and
killing more people wherever it spreads.
CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
WHAT CDC IS DOING Healthcare Providers Can:
■■ Tracking and reporting national progress toward preventing
■■ Prescribe antibiotics carefully (see http://www.cdc.gov/
C. difficile infections. getsmart/specific-groups/hcp/index.html). Once culture
results are available, check whether the prescribed antibiotics
■■ Promoting C. difficile prevention programs and providing gold- are correct and necessary.
standard patient safety recommendations.
■■ Order a C. difficile test (preferably a nucleic acid amplification test)
■■ Providing prevention expertise, as well as outbreak and laboratory if the patient has had 3 or more unformed stools within 24 hours.
assistance, to health departments and healthcare facilities.
■■ Be aware of infection rates in your facility or practice, and follow
WHAT YOU CAN DO infection control recommendations with every patient. This includes
using contact precautions (gloves and gowns) and isolation for
CEOs, Medical Officers, and other Healthcare patients who are suspected to have C. difficile, and continuing those
Facility Leaders Can: practices for those with positive test results.
■■ Support better testing (nucleic acid amplification tests), Patients can:
tracking, and reporting of infections and prevention efforts.
■■ Take antibiotics only as prescribed by your doctor and
■■ Ensure policies for rapid detection and isolation of patients complete the prescribed course of treatment. Antibiotics
with C. difficile are in place and followed. can be lifesaving medicines.
■■ Assess hospital cleaning to be sure it is performed thoroughly, ■■ Tell your doctor if you have been on antibiotics and get diarrhea
and augment this using an Environmental Protection Agency- within a few months.
approved, spore-killing disinfectant in rooms where C. difficile
patients are treated.
■■ Wash your hands before eating and after using the bathroom.
■■ Notify other healthcare facilities about infectious diseases when
■■ Try to use a separate bathroom if you have diarrhea, or be sure the
patients transfer, especially between hospitals and nursing homes. bathroom is cleaned well if someone with diarrhea has used it.
■■ Participate in a regional C. difficile prevention effort.
ONLINE RESOURCES
Vital Signs, March 2012: Making Health Care Safer
http://www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/hai/
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CARBAPENEM-RESISTANT
ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
9,000 600
DRUG-RESISTANT
INFECTIONS DEATHS
PER YEAR
7,900 1,400
CARBAPENEM- CARBAPENEM-
RESISTANT RESISTANT
KLEBSIELLA SPP. E. COLI
THREAT LEVEL
URGENT CRE HAVE BECOME RESISTANT TO ALL
This bacteria is an immediate public health threat
that requires urgent and aggressive action. OR NEARLY ALL AVAILABLE ANTIBIOTICS
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DRUG-RESISTANT
NEISSERIA GONORRHOEAE
188,600 RESISTANCE TO
TETRACYCLINE
DRUG-RESISTANT
GONORRHEA INFECTIONS
2,460 REDUCED SUSCEPTIBILITY
TO AZITHROMYCIN
THREAT LEVEL
URGENT
This bacteria is an immediate public health threat
that requires urgent and aggressive action.
820,000 GONOCOCCAL INFECTIONS
PER YEAR
Neisseria gonorrhoeae causes gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted plus either azithromycin or doxycycline as first-line treatment for gonorrhea. The emergence
of cephalosporin resistance, especially ceftriaxone resistance, would greatly limit treatment
disease that can result in discharge and inflammation at the options and could cripple gonorrhea control efforts.
urethra, cervix, pharynx, or rectum. In 2011, 321,849 cases of gonorrhea were reported to CDC, but CDC estimates that more
than 800,000 cases occur annually in the United States.
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN
Percentage Estimated number of cases
N. gonorrhoeae is showing resistance to antibiotics usually used to treat it. These
drugs include: Gonorrhea 820,000
■■ cefixime (an oral cephalosporin) Resistance to any antibiotic 30% 246,000
■■ ceftriaxone (an injectable cephalosporin) Reduced susceptibility to cefixime <1% 11,480
Reduced susceptibility to ceftriaxone <1% 3,280
■■ azithromycin
Reduced susceptibility to azithromycin <1% 2,460
■■ tetracycline
Resistance to tetracycline 23% 188,600
PUBLIC HEALTH THREAT Source: The Gonococcal Isolate Surveillance Project (GISP)–5,900 isolates tested for susceptibility in 2011.
For more information about data methods and references, please see technical appendix.
Gonorrhea is the second most commonly reported notifiable infection in the United
States and is easily transmitted. It causes severe reproductive complications and
disproportionately affects sexual, racial, and ethnic minorities. Gonorrhea control relies on
prompt identification and treatment of infected persons and their sex partners. Because
some drugs are less effective in treating gonorrhea, CDC recently updated its treatment
guidelines to slow the emergence of drug resistance. CDC now recommends only ceftriaxone
DRUG-RESISTANT
NEISSERIA GONORRHOEAE
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Cephalosporin-resistant N. gonorrhoeae is often resistant to multiple classes of other antibiotics
and as a result, infections caused by these bacteria will likely fail empiric treatment regimens. If Prevalence of Penicillin, Tetracycline and Fluoroquinolone
cephalosporin-resistant N. gonorrhoeae becomes widespread, the public health impact during a Resistance and Reduced Cefixime Susceptibility in
N. gonorrhoeae isolates, U.S., 1987-2011
10-year period is estimated to be 75,000 additional cases of pelvic inflammatory disease (a major
New resistance
cause of infertility), 15,000 cases of epididymitis, and 222 additional HIV infections because HIV is
patterns have
transmitted more readily when someone is co-infected with gonorrhea. In addition, the estimated
developed over
direct medical costs would total $235 million. Additional costs are anticipated to be incurred as a
result of increased susceptibility monitoring, provider education, case management, and the need time. Resistance
for additional courses of antibiotics and follow-up. to previously
used antibiotics,
Gonorrhea is a global problem, requiring a global approach. Action in the United States alone such as penicillin,
is unlikely to prevent resistance from developing, but rapid detection and effective treatment
remains common.
of patients and their partners might slow the spread of resistance. Preventing gonorrhea is
critical. Screening, rapid detection, prompt treatment, and partner services are the foundations of
gonorrhea control in the United States. Effectively addressing the heavy burden of gonorrhea and Source: The Gonococcal Isolate Surveillance Project (GISP).
anticipated arrival of cephalosporin resistance requires continued use of these strategies as well
as the use of expedited partner therapy, promotion of safer sexual behaviors such as abstinence, Prevalence of N. gonorrhoeae isolates with reduced cefixime
mutual monogamy, and correct and consistent condom use, and activities designed to rapidly (MICs ≥ 0.25μg/ml) and ceftriaxone (MICs ≥ 0.125μg/ml)
detect and respond to antibiotic-resistant infections susceptibility, U.S. 2006–2011
ONLINE RESOURCES
CDC’s gonorrhea website Kirkcaldy RD, Bolan GA, Wasserheit JN. Cephalosporin-Resistant Gonorrhea in
http://www.cdc.gov/std/gonorrhea/default.htm North America. JAMA 2013;209(2):185-187.
http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1556135
CDC’s Antibiotic-Resistant Gonorrhea website:
http://www.cdc.gov/std/Gonorrhea/arg/default.htm CDC. Update to CDC’s Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines,
2010: Oral cephalosporins no longer a recommended treatment for gonococcal
CS239559-B
New Treatment Guidelines for Gonorrhea: Antibiotic Change. MedScape CDC infections. MMWR 2012;61(31):590-594.
Expert Commentary, 2012. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/768883 http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6131a3.htm?
57
These bacteria are a serious
THREAT LEVEL concern and require prompt and
SERIOUS sustained action to ensure the
problem does not grow.
MICROORGANISMS WITH
A THREAT LEVEL OF SERIOUS
Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter
Drug-resistant Campylobacter
Fluconazole-resistant Candida (a fungus)
Extended spectrum β-lactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLs)
Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE)
Multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Drug-resistant non-typhoidal Salmonella
Drug-resistant Salmonella Typhi
Drug-resistant Shigella
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
Drug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
Drug-resistant tuberculosis
58
MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT
ACINETOBACTER
7,300
MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT
500
DEATHS FROM MULTIDRUG-
ACINETOBACTER INFECTIONS RESISTANT INFECTIONS
12,000
ACINETOBACTER
INFECTIONS
PER YEAR
■■ Coordinate local and regional infection tracking and ■■ Ask everyone including doctors, nurses, other medical staff,
control efforts.
and visitors, to wash their hands before touching the patient.
■■ Require facilities to alert each other when transferring patients with ■■ Take antibiotics exactly as prescribed.
any infection.
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DRUG-RESISTANT
CAMPYLOBACTER
310,000
DRUG-RESISTANT
CAMPYLOBACTER
INFECTIONS
PER YEAR
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS 1,300,000
CAMPYLOBACTER
13,000
HOSPITALIZATIONS
120
DEATHS
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow. INFECTIONS PER YEAR
antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter infections sometimes last longer. For more information about data methods and
references, please see appendix.
DRUG-RESISTANT
CAMPYLOBACTER
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Campylobacter spreads from animals to people through contaminated food,
particularly raw or undercooked chicken and unpasteurized milk. Infections
WHAT YOU CAN DO
may also be acquired through contact with animals and by drinking ■■ Clean. Wash hands, cutting boards, utensils, sinks,
contaminated water. Antibiotic use in food animals can result in resistant and countertops.
Campylobacter that can spread to humans. Resistant Campylobacter are ■■ Separate. Keep raw meat, poultry, and seafood
common in many countries and cause illness in travelers. Key measures to separate from ready-to-eat foods.
prevent resistant infections include:
■■ Cook. Use a food thermometer to ensure that foods are cooked to a
■■ Avoiding inappropriate antibiotic use in food animals. safe internal temperature.
■■ Tracking antibiotic use in different types of food animals. ■■ Chill. Keep your refrigerator below 40°F and refrigerate food that
■■ Stopping spread of Campylobacter among animals on farms. will spoil.
■■ Improving food production and processing to reduce contamination. ■■ Avoid drinking raw milk and untreated water.
■■ Educating consumers and food workers about safe food handling ■■ Report suspected illness from food to your local health department.
practices. ■■ Don’t prepare food for others if you have diarrhea or vomiting.
Be especially careful preparing food for children, pregnant women,
WHAT CDC IS DOING
■■
infections.
■■ Supporting and improving local, state, and federal public National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System
health surveillance. http://www.cdc.gov/narms
■■ Guiding prevention efforts by estimating how much illness occurs Campylobacter Information
and identifying the sources of infection. http://www.cdc.gov/nczved/divisions/dfbmd/diseases/campylobacter/
■■ Educating people about how to avoid Campylobacter infections. Traveler’s Health
http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2012/chapter-2-the-pre-travel-
consultation/travelers-diarrhea.htm
Vital Signs, June 2011: Making Food Safer to Eat
http://www.cdc.gov/VitalSigns/FoodSafety/
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FLUCONAZOLE-RESISTANT
CANDIDA
THREAT LEVEL 3,400 220 46,000
SERIOUS FLUCONAZOLE-RESISTANT
CANDIDA INFECTIONS
DEATHS CANDIDA INFECTIONS
PER YEAR
This fungus is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
Candida species with increased resistance to antifungal drugs including azoles and
echinocandins.
■■ CDC conducts multicenter surveillance for antifungal resistance in the United States,
candidal infections, their economic impact, and possible areas where prevention and
control strategies can be focused.
FLUCONAZOLE-RESISTANT
CANDIDA
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Prevention strategies for candidemia are not well defined. Most infectious are thought to be caused by Candida that the patient carries on his or her own body. Therapy to
prevent infections (antifungal prophylaxis) may be appropriate for some groups at high risk of developing Candida bloodstream infection, such as low-birth-weight infants.
CDC recommendations for catheter care and handwashing can be helpful in reducing transmission in healthcare institutions.
There is increasing
incidence of Candida
infections due to azole-
and echinocandin-
resistant strains.
*This accounts for data collected from Atlanta, GA from 1992-1993 and from Baltimore, MD from 1998–2000.
**This accounts for data collected from 2008–present.
ONLINE RESOURCES
CDC’s candidiasis website
http://www.cdc.gov/fungal/candidiasis/
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EXTENDED SPECTRUM
β-LACTAMASE (ESBL) PRODUCING
ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
26,000
DRUG-RESISTANT
1,700
DEATHS
140,000
ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
INFECTIONS INFECTIONS PER YEAR
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS $40,000
IN EXCESS MEDICAL COSTS PER YEAR
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow. FOR EACH INFECTION
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN
Percentage of Enterobacteriaceae
healthcare-associated infections resistant
to extended spectrum cephalosporins
Estimated
number of
infections
Estimated
number of deaths
attributed
Some Enterobacteriaceae are resistant to nearly all:
ESBL-producing
23% 17,000 1,100
■■ penicillins Klebsiella spp.
In these cases, the remaining treatment option is an antibiotic from the carbapenem Totals 26,000 1,700
family. These are drugs of last resort, and use of them is also contributing to resistance (see
CRE fact sheet). For more information about data methods and references, please see technical appendix.
■■ Coordinate local and regional infection tracking and ■■ Ask everyone including doctors, nurses, other medical
control efforts.
staff, and visitors, to wash their hands before touching
■■ Require facilities to alert each other when transferring the patient.
patients with any infection. ■■ Take antibiotics only and exactly as prescribed.
Health Care CEOs, Medical Officers, and Other Healthcare
Facility Leaders Can:
■■ Require and strictly enforce CDC guidance for infection detection,
prevention, tracking, and reporting.
■■ Make sure your lab can accurately identify infections and alert clinical
and infection prevention staff when these bacteria are present.
ONLINE RESOURCES
CDC’s Heathcare-associated Infections(HAI) website
■■ Know infection and resistance trends in your facility and in the
www.cdc.gov/hai
facilities around you.
■■ When transferring a patient, require staff to notify the other facility Healthcare-associated Infections (HAIs), Guidelines and
about all infections. Recommendations
www.cdc.gov/hicpac/pubs.html
■■ Join or start regional infection prevention efforts.
■■ Promote wise antibiotic use.
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VANCOMYCIN-RESISTANT
ENTEROCOCCUS (VRE)
20,000
DRUG-RESISTANT
1,300
DEATHS FROM DRUG-RESISTANT
ENTEROCOCCUS INFECTIONS ENTEROCOCCUS INFECTIONS
66,000
ENTEROCOCCUS
INFECTIONS
PER YEAR
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS SOME ENTEROCOCCUS STRAINS ARE RESISTANT TO VANCOMYCIN
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
LEAVING FEW OR NO TREATMENT OPTIONS
Enterococci cause a range of illnesses, mostly among patients receiving healthcare, but include bloodstream infections, surgical site
infections, and urinary tract infections.
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MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT
PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA
6,700
MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT
440
DEATHS
PSEUDOMONAS
INFECTIONS
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS
51,000
PSEUDOMONAS
INFECTIONS
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt PER YEAR
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common cause of healthcare-associated infections including pneumonia, bloodstream infections, urinary
tract infections, and surgical site infections.
For more information about data methods and references, please see technical appendix.
MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT
PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
WHAT CDC IS DOING Healthcare Providers Can:
■■ Identifying and tracking risk factors for drug-resistant infections using
■■ Know when and what types of drug-resistant infections that
two systems, the National Healthcare Safety Network and the Emerging are present in your facility and patients.
Infections Program. ■■ Request immediate alerts when the lab identifies drug-
■■ Providing outbreak support such as staff expertise, prevention resistant infections in your patients.
guidelines, tools, and lab assistance, to states and facilities. ■■ Alert the other facility when you transfer a patient with a drug-
■■ Developing tests and prevention recommendations to control drug- resistant infection.
resistant infections. ■■ Protect patients from drug-resistant infections.
■■ Helping medical facilities improve antibiotic prescribing practices. ■■ Follow relevant guidelines and precautions at every patient encounter.
■■ Prescribe antibiotics wisely.
WHAT YOU CAN DO ■■ Remove temporary medical devices such as catheters and ventilators
States and Communities Can: as soon as no longer needed.
■■ Know resistance trends in your region. Patients and Their Loved Ones Can:
■■ Coordinate local and regional infection tracking and ■■ Ask everyone including doctors, nurses, other medical
control efforts. staff, and visitors, to wash their hands before touching
■■ Require facilities to alert each other when transferring the patient.
patients with any infection. ■■ Take antibiotics only and exactly as prescribed.
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DRUG-RESISTANT NON-TYPHOIDAL
SALMONELLA
1,200,000
SALMONELLA INFECTIONS PER YEAR
Non-typhoidal Salmonella (serotypes other than Typhi, Paratyphi A, Paratyphi B, and Paratyphi C) usually causes diarrhea (sometimes
bloody), fever, and abdominal cramps. Some infections spread to the blood and can have life-threatening complications.
Non-typhoidal Salmonella causes approximately 1.2 million illnesses, 23,000 *3-year average (2009–2011)
hospitalizations, and 450 deaths each year in the United States. Direct medical costs are For more information about data methods and references, please see technical appendix.
estimated to be $365 million annually. CDC is seeing resistance to ceftriaxone in about
3% of non-typhoidal Salmonella tested, and some level of resistance to ciprofloxacin in
about 3%. About 5% of non-typhoidal Salmonella tested by CDC are resistant to five or
more types of drugs. Costs are expected to be higher for resistant than for susceptible
infections because resistant infections are more severe, those patients are more likely to be
hospitalized, and treatment is less effective.
DRUG-RESISTANT NON-TYPHOIDAL
SALMONELLA
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Salmonella spreads from animals to people mostly through food. Antibiotic use ■■ Avoid drinking raw milk.
in food animals can result in resistant Salmonella, and people get sick when ■■ Report suspected illness from food to your local health department.
they eat foods contaminated with Salmonella. Key measures to prevent resistant
infections include: ■■ Don’t prepare food for others if you have diarrhea or vomiting.
■■ Avoiding inappropriate antibiotic use in food animals. ■■ Be especially careful preparing food for children, pregnant women, those
in poor health, and older adults.
■■ Tracking antibiotic use in different types of food animals.
■■ Stopping spread of Salmonella among animals on farms.
Resistance in Non-Typhoidal Salmonella, 1996–2011
■■ Improving food production and processing to reduce contamination.
■■ Educating consumers and food workers about safe food handling
practices.
Drug resistance
WHAT CDC IS DOING in non-typhoidal
■■ Tracking changes in antibiotic resistance through ongoing surveillance. Salmonella
continues to
■■ Promoting initiatives that measure and improve antibiotic use in climb from
food animals. 1996 levels.
■■ Determining foods responsible for outbreaks of Salmonella infections.
■■ Supporting and improving local, state, and federal public health
surveillance.
■■ Guiding prevention efforts by estimating how much illness occurs and
identifying the sources of infection. For more information about data methods and references, please see appendix.
CS239559-B
DRUG-RESISTANT
SALMONELLA
SEROTYPE TYPHI
3,800
DRUG-RESISTANT SALMONELLA
67%
OF SALMONELLA TYPHI
620
HOSPITALIZATIONS
TYPHI INFECTIONS PER YEAR INFECTIONS ARE DUE TO SALMONELLA TYPHI
IN THE U.S. DRUG RESISTANT PER YEAR IN THE U.S.
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
21,700,000 SALMONELLA TYPHI
INFECTIONS WORLDWIDE
Salmonella serotype Typhi causes typhoid fever, a potentially life-threatening disease. People with typhoid fever usually have a high
fever, abdominal pain, and headache. Typhoid fever can lead to bowel perforation, shock, and death.
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN more than susceptible infections because illness may last longer. Deaths in the United
States are rare now, but before there were antibiotics, 10% to 20% of patients died.
Physicians rely on drugs such as ceftriaxone, azithromycin, and ciprofloxacin for treating
patients with typhoid fever. Salmonella serotype Typhi is showing resistance to:
Estimated Estimated
■■ ceftriaxone Percentage of Estimated number illnesses per number of
all Salmonella of illnesses per 100,000 U.S. deaths per
■■ azithromycin Typhi* year population year
■■ ciprofloxacin (resistance is so common that it cannot be routinely used) Resistance or
partial resistance to 67% 3,800 1.3 <5
ONLINE RESOURCES
National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System
http://www.cdc.gov/narms
Typhoid Fever
http://www.cdc.gov/nczved/divisions/dfbmd/diseases/typhoid_fever/
Traveler’s Health “Traveler’s Diarrhea”
http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2012/chapter-2-the-pre-travel-
consultation/travelers-diarrhea.htm
CS239559-B
DRUG-RESISTANT
SHIGELLA
27,000
DRUG-RESISTANT
SHIGELLA INFECTIONS
PER YEAR
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS
500,000 40
SHIGELLA DEATHS
INFECTIONS PER YEAR
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt PER YEAR
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
Shigella usually causes diarrhea (sometimes bloody), fever, and abdominal pain. Sometimes it causes serious complications such as reactive
arthritis. High-risk groups include young children, people with inadequate handwashing and hygiene habits, and men who have sex with men.
practices.
While resistance
to ampicillin
WHAT CDC IS DOING has decreased,
■■ Tracking changes in antibiotic resistance through ongoing Shigella continues
surveillance. to become more
resistant to
■■ Determining settings and high-risk groups for outbreaks of trimethoprim-
resistant infections. sulfamethoxazole.
■■ Educating healthcare providers about specific resistance problems.
■■ Promoting prudent antibiotic use and handwashing. *Data for 1978-1995 were from three sentinel county surveys. Annual testing began in 1999.
CS239559-B
METHICILLIN-RESISTANT
STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS
(MRSA)
80,461
SEVERE MRSA
11,285
DEATHS FROM
INFECTIONS PER YEAR MRSA PER YEAR
THREAT LEVEL
STAPH BACTERIA ARE A LEADING CAUSE OF
SERIOUS
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
HEALTHCARE-ASSOCIATED INFECTIONS
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) causes a range Revised Annualized National Estimates,
of illnesses, from skin and wound infections to pneumonia and ABCs MRSA 2005–2011 (updated Nov, 2012)
WHAT YOU CAN DO Remove temporary medical devices such as catheters and ventilators as soon as no
■■
longer needed.
States and Communities Can: Patients and Their Loved Ones Can:
■■ Know resistance trends in your region. ■■ Ask everyone, including doctors, nurses, other medical staff,
■■ Coordinate local and regional infection tracking and control efforts. and visitors, to wash their hands before touching the patient.
■■ Require facilities to alert each other when transferring patients with any infection. ■■ Take antibiotics only and exactly as prescribed.
CS239559-B
DRUG-RESISTANT
STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE
19,000
1,200,000 EXCESS HOSPITALIZATIONS
DRUG-RESISTANT
INFECTIONS PER YEAR 7,000
DEATHS
$96,000,000
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow. IN EXCESS MEDICAL COSTS PER YEAR
Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae, or pneumococcus) is the leading cause of bacterial pneumonia and meningitis in the United States. It also is a major
cause of bloodstream infections and ear and sinus infections.
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN In 30% of severe S. pneumoniae cases, the bacteria are fully resistant to one or
more clinically relevant antibiotics. Resistant infections complicate treatment
S. pneumoniae has developed resistance to drugs in the penicillin and and can result in almost 1,200,000 illnesses and 7,000 deaths per year. Cases
erythromycin groups. Examples of these drugs include amoxicillin and azithromycin of resistant pneumococcal pneumonia result in about 32,000 additional doctor
(Zithromax, Z-Pak). S. pneumoniae has also developed resistance to less commonly visits and about 19,000 additional hospitalizations each year. The excess costs
used drugs. associated with these cases are approximately $96 million.
PUBLIC HEALTH THREAT Invasive pneumococcal disease means that bacteria invade parts of the body that
are normally sterile, and when this happens, disease is usually severe, causing
Pneumococcal disease, whether or not resistant to antibiotics, is a major public hospitalization or even death. The majority of cases and deaths occur among adults
health problem. Pneumococcal disease causes 4 million disease episodes and 50 years or older, with the highest rates among those 65 years or older. Almost
22,000 deaths annually. Pneumococcal ear infections (otitis media) are the everyone who gets invasive pneumococcal disease needs treatment in the hospital.
most common type of pneumococcal disease among children, causing 1.5
million infections that often result in antibiotic use. Pneumococcal pneumonia
is another important form of pneumococcal disease. Each year, nearly 160,000
children younger than 5 years old see a doctor or are admitted to the hospital
with pneumococcal pneumonia. Among adults, over 600,000 seek care for or are
hospitalized with pneumococcal pneumonia. Pneumococcal pneumonia accounts
for 72% of all direct medical costs for treatment of pneumococcal disease.
DRUG-RESISTANT
STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) is an effective tool to prevent infections. Vaccine use has
Cases of antibiotic-resistant invasive disease per 100,000 persons,
not only reduced the burden of invasive pneumococcal disease, but it has also reduced antibiotic
by age group and resistance profile — Active Bacterial Core surveillance
resistance by blocking the transmission of resistant S. pneumoniae strains. From 2000–2009, PCV7
provided protection against seven pneumococcal strains, and beginning in 2010 use of PCV13
expanded that protection to 13 strains. Achieving high vaccination coverage and encouraging
appropriate antibiotic use will slow the spread of pneumococcal resistance. Using the right The very young
antibiotic at the right time is crucial. and senior adults
are most at risk
CA HO HACO
THREAT LEVEL
SERIOUS TUBERCULOSIS IS AMONG THE MOST COMMON INFECTIOUS DISEASES AND
This bacteria is a serious concern and requires prompt
and sustained action to ensure the problem does not grow.
FREQUENT CAUSES OF DEATH WORLDWIDE
Tuberculosis (TB) is among the most common infectious diseases and a frequent cause of death worldwide. TB is caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis
(M. tuberculosis) and is spread most commonly through the air. M. tuberculosis can affect any part of the body, but disease is found most often in the lungs. In most cases, TB is
treatable and curable with the available first-line TB drugs; however, in some cases, M. tuberculosis can be resistant to one or more of the drugs used to treat it. Drug-resistant TB
is more challenging to treat — it can be complex and requires more time and more expensive drugs that often have more side effects. Extensively Drug-Resistant TB (XDR TB) is
resistant to most TB drugs; therefore, patients are left with treatment options that are much less effective. The major factors driving TB drug resistance are incomplete or wrong
treatment, short drug supply, and lack of new drugs. In the United States most drug-resistant TB is found among persons born outside of the country.
Some TB is XDR TB, defined as MDR TB plus resistance to any Deaths caused by antibiotic-
■■
50
resistant TB
fluoroquinolone and to any of the three second-line injectable drugs
(i.e., amikacin, kanamycin, capreomycin) For more information about data methods and references, please see technical appendix.
CS239559-B
tuberculosis/Pages/default.aspx
drtb/mdrtb.htm
83
THREAT LEVEL These bacteria are concerning, and
careful monitoring and prevention
CONCERNING action are needed.
MICROORGANISMS WITH
A THREAT LEVEL OF CONCERNING
Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA)
Erythromycin-resistant Group A Streptococcus
Clindamycin-resistant Group B Streptococcus
84
VANCOMYCIN-RESISTANT
STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS
13 CASES
IN
4 STATES SINCE 2002
THREAT LEVEL
CONCERNING SOME STAPHYLOCOCCUS STRAINS ARE RESISTANT TO VANCOMYCIN
This bacteria is concerning, and careful monitoring
and prevention action are needed.
LEAVING FEW OR NO TREATMENT OPTIONS
Staphylococcus aureus is a common type of bacteria that is found on the skin. During medical procedures when patients require
catheters or ventilators or undergo surgical procedures, Staphylococcus aureus can enter the body and cause infections. When
Staphylococcus aureus becomes resistant to vancomycin, there are few treatment options available because vancomycin-resistant
S. aureus bacteria identified to date were also resistant to methicillin and other classes of antibiotics.
CS239559-B
ERYTHROMYCIN-RESISTANT GROUP A
STREPTOCOCCUS
1,300 160 DRUG-RESISTANT GROUP A DEATHS
STREP INFECTIONS PER YEAR
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) causes many illnesses, including pharyngitis (strep throat), streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, necrotizing fasciitis
(“flesh-eating” disease), scarlet fever, rheumatic fever, and skin infections such as impetigo.
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN Penicillin is the recommended first-line treatment for GAS infections. Amoxicillin is a type
of penicillin that is often used to treat strep throat. Currently, GAS is not resistant to
GAS has developed resistance to clindamycin and a category of drugs called macrolides. treatment with penicillin. If resistance to penicillin emerges, it would severely compromise
Macrolides include erythromycin, azithromycin and clarithromycin. GAS has also developed treatment of invasive GAS infections. For people who are allergic to penicillin, two of
resistance to a less commonly used drug—tetracycline. Of these, resistance to erythromycin the alternative antibiotics, azithromycin and clarithromycin, can be used to treat strep
and the other macrolide antibiotics is of the most immediate concern. throat. In fact, azithromycin is prescribed more commonly than penicillin. Of GAS bacterial
samples tested at CDC from 2010 and 2011, 10% were erythromycin-resistant (and therefore
PUBLIC HEALTH THREAT resistant to other macrolides such as azithromycin and clarithromycin), while 3.4% were
clindamycin-resistant. Increasing resistance to erythromycin will complicate treatment of
Each year in the United States, erythromycin-resistant, invasive GAS causes 1,300 illnesses strep throat, particularly for those who cannot tolerate penicillin.
and 160 deaths.
A more current concern is the increase in bacteria that show the genetic potential for
GAS is a leading cause of upper respiratory tract infections such as strep throat. There becoming resistant to clindamycin. Clindamycin has a unique role in treatment of severe
are 1-2.6 million cases of strep throat in the U.S. each year. These bacteria are also the GAS infections. For severe, life-threatening infections, like necrotizing fasciitis and toxic
leading cause of necrotizing fasciitis, an invasive disease that can be fatal in 25%–35% shock syndrome, a combination of penicillin and clindamycin is recommended for treatment.
of cases. Invasive disease means that bacteria invade parts of the body that are normally
sterile. When this happens, disease is usually very severe, causing hospitalization or even
death. Those at highest risk for invasive disease are the elderly, those with skin lesions,
young children, people in group living situations such as nursing homes, and those with
underlying medical conditions, such as diabetes.
ERYTHROMYCIN-RESISTANT
GROUP A STREPTOCOCCUS
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Encouraging appropriate antibiotic use, including using the right antibiotic at the
Prevalence of erythromycin, clindamycin and tetracycline resistance
right time, and for the right amount of time, is crucial to preventing the spread among group A streptococcal isolates, CDC’s Active Bacterial Core
of drug-resistant GAS. Doctors should adhere to the recommended antibiotics for surveillance (ABCs), 2010–2011
treating GAS infections, including using penicillin or amoxicillin whenever possible.
Rates of resistance to
WHAT CDC IS DOING two core antibiotics
continue to increase
CDC has collaborated with the Infectious Diseases Society of America to update for group A strep.
guidance on diagnosing strep throat and selecting antibiotics to treat it. These
guidelines reinforce appropriate use of antibiotics for this common illness. CDC
is also promoting appropriate antibiotic use among outpatient healthcare
providers and the public through its Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work
program. As part of this program, CDC hosts Get Smart About Antibiotics
Week, an annual one-week observance of the importance of appropriate
antibiotic use and its impact on antibiotic resistance. Through partnerships
between CDC, state health departments, and universities, CDC is tracking GAS
through Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs).
ONLINE RESOURCES
WHAT YOU CAN DO Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs)
http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/index.html
■■ Prevent infections by practicing good hand hygiene.
Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work Program
■■ Take antibiotics exactly as the doctor prescribes. Do not skip http://www.cdc.gov/getsmart/
doses. Complete the prescribed course of treatment, even
when you start feeling better. Group A Strep
■■ Only take antibiotics prescribed for you. Do not share or use http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dbmd/diseaseinfo/groupastreptococcal_g.htm
leftover antibiotics.
Necrotizing Fasciitis
■■ Do not save antibiotics for the next illness. Discard any leftover medication http://www.cdc.gov/features/necrotizingfasciitis/
once the prescribed course of treatment is completed.
Strep Throat
■■ Do not ask for antibiotics when your doctor thinks you do not need them.
http://www.cdc.gov/features/strepthroat/
Scarlet Fever
http://www.cdc.gov/features/scarletfever/
CS239559-B
CLINDAMYCIN-RESISTANT GROUP B
STREPTOCOCCUS
7,600 440
DRUG-RESISTANT
GROUP B STREP DEATHS
INFECTIONS
THREAT LEVEL
27,000 SEVERE CASES OF
GBS IN 2011
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a type of bacteria that can cause severe illnesses in people of all ages, ranging from bloodstream
infections (sepsis) and pneumonia to meningitis and skin infections.
RESISTANCE OF CONCERN GBS also is one of the most common causes of meningitis and other severe infections in
infants from 7 days to 3 months old (late-onset disease). GBS is also an increasing cause
GBS has developed resistance to clindamycin and erythromycin. GBS that are resistant of bloodstream infections, pneumonia, skin and soft tissue infections, and bone and joint
to erythromycin will also be resistant to azithromycin. Recently, the very first cases with infections in adults, especially among pregnant women, the elderly, and people with certain
resistance to vancomycin have been detected among adults. These cases are extremely rare medical conditions such as diabetes.
and also very concerning since vancomycin is the most commonly used drug for treatment of CDC estimates from preliminary data that 27,000 cases of severe GBS disease, such as blood
potentially resistant gram-positive infections in adults. Strains with decreasing responsiveness infections or meningitis, occurred in 2011, causing 1,575 deaths. Forty-nine percent of GBS
to treatment with penicillin drugs have been described but remain very rare. Resistance to isolates (samples) tested were erythromycin-resistant, and 28% were clindamycin-resistant.
clindamycin is of the most immediate clinical concern, although the other forms of resistance Although the incidence of early-onset disease has been decreasing, the proportion of GBS
are worrisome. infections resistant to erythromycin and clindamycin has increased steadily since 2000.
PUBLIC HEALTH THREAT Resistance to the penicillin drug class could threaten the success of strategies to prevent
early-onset disease and lead to treatment failures since penicillin drugs are the top choice
Each year in the United States, clindamycin-resistant Group B Strep causes an estimated for treating GBS. Additionally, the increasing resistance to recommended second-line drugs,
7,600 illnesses and 440 deaths. clindamycin and erythromycin, limits prevention and treatment for patients with GBS who
In the United States, GBS is the leading cause of serious bacterial infections in newborns, are allergic to penicillin.
including bloodstream infections, meningitis, and pneumonia. When these GBS infections
occur in the first 7 days of life, they are known as early-onset disease. To prevent early-
onset disease in newborns, antibiotics are given during labor and delivery to mothers who
test positive for GBS (tested at 35–37 weeks of pregnancy with a vaginal/rectal swab) and
to those who have other risk factors for passing GBS to their newborns.
CLINDAMYCIN-RESISTANT GROUP B
STREPTOCOCCUS
FIGHTING THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE
Doctors should test all pregnant women for GBS at 35–37 weeks of pregnancy and
adhere to the recommended antibiotics during labor and delivery for prevention of early- Proportion of Group B Streptococcus isolates resistant
onset disease. Broad efforts to promote appropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and to erythromycin and clindamycin—
Group B strep Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs), 2000-2010*
inpatient settings will also help minimize the spread of resistance among GBS bacteria.
continues to
become more
WHAT CDC IS DOING resistant to two
CDC, in collaboration with professional associations, has developed evidence-based major antibiotics,
Guidelines for the Prevention of Perinatal Group B Streptococcal Disease. These leaving those
guidelines discuss diagnosis and management, and recommendations are provided allergic to first
regarding antibiotic choices and dosing. They also support GBS screening line drugs in
for all pregnant women at 35–37 weeks of pregnancy and use of antibiotics jeopardy.
during labor and delivery to prevent newborn infection. Through partnerships
between CDC, state health departments, and universities, CDC is tracking GBS *Most recent data available.
through its Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs). This program monitors
antibiotic resistance and has contributed to the detection of the very first cases in the Incidence of Early-Onset Disease Caused by Group B Streptococcus—
U.S. of vancomycin-resistant GBS, as well as tracking of susceptibility trends of other Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs), 1989–2010
antibiotics important for treatment of GBS. CDC is promoting appropriate antibiotic use Early-onset
among outpatient health care providers and the public through its Get Smart: Know group B strep
When Antibiotics Work program. disease has
declined by
WHAT YOU CAN DO 80% since the
■■ Pregnant women should talk to their doctor or nurse about their GBS
introduction of
status and let them know of any medication allergies during a checkup. evidence-based
prevention
■■ When women get to the hospital or birthing center for delivery, they
strategies.
should remind their doctor or nurse if they have GBS and if they are
ACOG = American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, AAP = American Academy
allergic to any medications. of Pediatrics
■■ Practice appropriate antibiotic use whenever you see a doctor or are prescribed
an antibiotic for any condition:
Take antibiotics exactly as the doctor prescribes. Do not skip doses. Complete
ONLINE RESOURCES
●●
the prescribed course of treatment, even when you start feeling better.
●● Only take antibiotics prescribed for you. Do not share or use leftover
antibiotics.
Group B Strep (GBS)
http://www.cdc.gov/groupbstrep/about/index.html
●● Do not save antibiotics for the next illness. Discard any leftover medication
once the prescribed course of treatment is completed. Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs)
●● Do not ask for antibiotics when your doctor thinks you do not need them. http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/index.html
CS239559-B
91
EXTENDED SPECTRUM β-LACTAMASE
PRODUCING
92 ENTEROBACTERIACEAE
TECHNICAL APPENDIX
93
Technical Appendix
Clostridium difficile
Methods
National estimates of the number of Clostridium difficile (C. difficile)
infections (CDI) requiring hospitalization or in already hospitalized
patients were obtained from the data submitted through the
Emerging Infections Program’s C. difficile surveillance in 2011, of
34 counties in 10 U.S. states (http://www.cdc.gov/hai/eip/cdiff_techinfo.html). During
2011, a total of 15,452 CDI cases were identified across the participating sites. Data on
hospitalization following CDI or at the time of infection were obtained for all cases from
8 of 10 U.S. states and from a random sample of 33% from cases from the other 2 states.
The sampled cases were used to estimate total number of hospitalizations in the 2 states
where sampling was performed. The national estimates were made using 2011 population
estimates from U.S. Census Bureau adjusting for age, gender and race distribution of
the American population.1 Approximately 18% of cases were reported without a race
value. Multiple imputation was used to estimate the missing race based on the data that
are available and the results were summarized. The C. difficile attributable mortality was
estimated from death certificate data.2 Trends on deaths related to C. difficile were obtained
from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.3 Estimates were rounded to two
significant digits.
References
1 Lessa FC, Mu, Y, Cohen J, Dumyati G, Farley MM, Winston L, Kast K, Holzbauer S, Meek
J, Beldavs S, McDonald LC, Fridkin SK. Presented at the IDWeek 2012, Annual Meeting
of the Infectious Disease Society of America, Society for Healthcare Epidemiology,
Pediatric Infectious Disease Society, and HIV Medical Association; San Diego, October
2012.
2 Hall AJ, Curns AT, McDonald LC, Parashar UD, Lopman BA. The Roles of Clostridium
difficile and Norovirus Among Gastroenteritis-Associated Deaths in the United States,
1999-2007. Clin Infect Dis. 2012 Jul;55(2):216–23.
3 Kochanek KD, Xu J, Murphy SL, Miniño AM, Kung HC. Deaths: Preliminary Data for 2009.
National Vital Statistics Report.
94
Technical Appendix
Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae
Multidrug-Resistant Acinetobacter
Fluconazole-Resistant Candida
Extended Spectrum Β-lactamase producing
Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLs)
Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus (VRE)
Multidrug-Resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Methods
National estimates of the number of healthcare-associated infections
(HAIs) with Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida,
Acinetobacter, or Enterococci were obtained from a 2011 survey of
11,282 patients in 183 hospitals in 10 different states, among whom
452 were identified with at least one HAI for a total of 504 HAIs (some
patients had >1 HAI).
95
The number of deaths attributable to the antimicrobial-resistant healthcare-associated
infection was determined by multiplying the estimated number of resistant infections by
6.5%, an overall estimate of attributable mortality from antibiotic-resistant hospital-onset
infections previously determined.4 This estimate accounts for the overall distribution of
the different types of infections commonly caused by antibiotic-resistant pathogens in
hospitalized patients and is generally much lower than the crude mortality observed in
many of these patients owing to their severe underlying disease status. Definitions of
multidrug resistance used in this analysis are published elsewhere.2 The proportion of U.S.
hospitals reporting carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae was derived as reported
elsewhere.5 Estimates were rounded to two significant digits.
References
1 Magill SS, Edwards JR, Bamberg W, Beldavs Z, Dumyati G, Kainer M, Lynfield R, Maloney
M, McAllister-Hollod L, Nadle J, Ray SR, Thompson DL, Wilson LE, Fridkin SK. Presented
at the IDWeek 2012, Annual Meeting of the Infectious Disease Society of America,
Society for Healthcare Epidemiology, Pediatric Infectious Disease Society, and HIV
Medical Association; San Diego, October 2012.
2 Sievert DM, Ricks P, Edwards JR, Schneider A, Patel J, Srinivasan A, Kallen A, Limbago
B, Fridkin S; National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Team and Participating NHSN
Facilities. Antimicrobial-resistant pathogens associated with healthcare-associated
infections: summary of data reported to the National Healthcare Safety Network at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2009–2010. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol.
2013 Jan;34(1):1–14
3 Cleveland AA, Farley MM, Harrison LH, Stein B, Hollick R, Lockhart SR, Magill SS,
Derado G, Park BJ, Chiller TM. Changes in incidence and antifungal drug resistance
in candidemia: results from population-based laboratory surveillance in Atlanta and
Baltimore, 2008–2011. Clin Infect Dis. 2012 Nov 15;55(10):1352–61.
4 Roberts RR, Hota B, Ahmad I, Scott RD 2nd, Foster SD, Abbasi F, Schabowski S, Kampe
LM, Ciavarella GG, Supino M, Naples J, Cordell R, Levy SB, Weinstein RA. Hospital and
societal costs of antimicrobial-resistant infections in a Chicago teaching hospital:
implications for antibiotic stewardship. Clin Infect Dis. 2009 Oct 15;49(8):1175–84
5 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Vital Signs: Carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2013 Mar 8;62(9):165–70.
96
Technical Appendix
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Methods
Estimates of the number of gonococcal infections with any resistance
pattern, reduced susceptibility to cephalosporins or azithromycin,
or resistance to tetracycline are reported. They are derived by
multiplying an estimate of the annual number of gonococcal
infections in the United States1 by the prevalence of reduced
susceptibility or resistance among urethral Neisseria gonorrhoeae
isolates collected and tested by the Gonococcal Isolate Surveillance Project (GISP)
during 2011.2
Many assumptions were made in deriving the estimates. Data from the National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) provided accurate gonorrhea prevalence
estimates, although NHANES only measures urogenital infections and does not include
oropharyngeal or rectal infections. The average duration of infection, used to calculate
incidence, was based on expert opinion, due to an absence of published data. Also,
estimates of resistance in GISP are nationally representative. However, compared to the
regional distribution of reported gonococcal infections, GISP relatively over-samples
patients from the West Coast, where resistance has traditionally first emerged in the United
States. The Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute categorizes susceptibility to cefixime
and ceftriaxone as minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) ≤0.25 µg/ml.3 For this
analysis, isolates with cefixime MICs ≥0.25 µg/ml were considered to have reduced cefixime
susceptibility, and isolates with ceftriaxone MICs ≥0.125 µg/ml were considered to have
reduced ceftriaxone susceptibility. An azithromycin MIC ≥2.0 µg/ml was considered to have
reduced azithromycin susceptibility, and a tetracycline MIC ≥2.0 µg/ml was considered
resistant. Resistance to any antimicrobial includes resistance to penicillin (MIC ≥ 2 µg/ml),
tetracycline, ciprofloxacin (MIC ≥ 1µg/ml), or spectinomycin (MIC ≥ 128 µg/ml), or reduced
susceptibility to the cephalosporins or azithromycin.
GISP, established in 1986, is a sentinel surveillance system with partners that include CDC,
sexually transmitted disease clinics at 25–30 sentinel sites, and 5 regional laboratories in the
United States.4 Gonococcal isolates are collected from up to the first 25 men diagnosed with
gonococcal urethritis at each sentinel site each month. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing
is performed using agar dilution for a panel of antimicrobials that includes penicillin,
tetracycline, ciprofloxacin, spectinomycin, cefixime, ceftriaxone, and azithromycin.
References
1 Satterwhite CL et al. Sexually transmitted infections among US women and men:
prevalence and incidence estimates, 2008. Sex Transm Dis 2013;40(3):187–93.
97
Technical Appendix
Drug-Resistant Campylobacter
Methods
Estimates of the number of illnesses and deaths from infections with
Campylobacter resistant to ciprofloxacin or azithromycin are reported.
They were derived by multiplying an estimate of the annual number
of Campylobacter illnesses or deaths in the United States1 by the
average prevalence of resistance among Campylobacter tested by the
National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) during the years 2009–2011.
Resistance breakpoints from the NARMS 2011 Human Isolates Report were used.2
Many assumptions were made in deriving the estimates. The estimated number of illnesses
from resistant Campylobacter was divided by the U.S. population and multiplied by 100,000
to calculate the estimated number of illnesses from resistant infections per 100,000
people. The U.S. population in 2006 (approximately 299 million people) was used for the
calculations because the estimated number of Campylobacter illnesses in the United States
was based on this population.1 The sentinel county survey data displayed in Figure 1 was
previously reported.3
References
1 Scallan E, Hoekstra RM, Angulo FJ, et al. Foodborne illness acquired in the United
States—major pathogens. Emerg Infect Dis 2011;17:7–15.
3 Gupta A, Nelson JM, Barrett TJ, et al. Antimicrobial Resistance among Campylobacter
Strains, United States, 1997–2001. Emerg Infect Dis 2004;10:1102-9.
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Technical Appendix
Drug-Resistant Non-Typhoidal Salmonella
Methods
Estimates of the number of illnesses and deaths from infections with
non-typhoidal Salmonella resistant to ceftriaxone, resistant or partially
resistant to ciprofloxacin, or resistant to five or more antibiotic classes
are reported. They were derived by multiplying an estimate of the
annual number of non-typhoidal Salmonella illnesses or deaths in the
United States1 by the average prevalence of resistance among non-typhoidal Salmonella
isolates tested by the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) during
the years 2009–2011. Resistance breakpoints from the NARMS 2011 Human Isolates Report
were used.3 For ciprofloxacin, isolates with intermediate susceptibility results (minimum
inhibitory concentration of 0.12–0.5 µg/ml) were considered partially resistant.
Many assumptions were made in deriving the estimates. The estimated number of illnesses
from resistant Salmonella was divided by the U.S. population and multiplied by 100,000
to calculate the estimated number of illnesses from resistant Salmonella per 100,000
population. The U.S. population in 2006 (approximately 299 million people) was used for
the calculations because the estimated number of non-typhoidal Salmonella illnesses in
the United States was based on this population.1 The methods used to estimate the direct
medical costs for Salmonella infections were previously reported.2
References
1 Scallan E, Hoekstra RM, Angulo FJ, et al. Foodborne illness acquired in the United
States—major pathogens. Emerg Infect Dis. 2011;17:7–15.
3 CDC. Vital Signs: Incidence and Trends of Infection with Pathogens Transmitted
Commonly Through Food—Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 10 U.S.
Sites, 1996–2010. MMWR 2011;60:749–55.
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Technical Appendix
Drug-Resistant Salmonella Serotype Typhi
Methods
An estimate of the number of illnesses and deaths from Salmonella
serotype Typhi resistant or partially resistant to ciprofloxacin was
derived by multiplying an estimate of the annual number of illnesses
or deaths from typhoid fever in the United States1 by the average
prevalence of ciprofloxacin resistance or partial resistance among
Salmonella Typhi isolates tested by the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring
System (NARMS) during 2009–2011. Resistance breakpoints from the NARMS 2011 Human
Isolates Report were used.2 For ciprofloxacin, isolates with intermediate susceptibility
results (minimum inhibitory concentration of 0.12–0.5 µg/ml) were considered partially
resistant.
Many assumptions were made in deriving the estimates. The estimated number of illnesses
from ciprofloxacin resistant or partially resistant Salmonella Typhi was divided by the U.S.
population and multiplied by 100,000 to calculate the estimated number of illnesses from
resistant or partially resistant infections per 100,000 people. The U.S. population in 2006
(approximately 299 million people) was used for the calculations because the estimated
number of typhoid fever illnesses in the United States was based on this population.
Worldwide case estimates3 and pre-antibiotic era mortality4 are from published sources.
References
1 Scallan E, Hoekstra RM, Angulo FJ, et al. Foodborne illness acquired in the United
States—major pathogens. Emerg Infect Dis 2011;17(1):7–15.
3 Crump JA, Mintz ED. Global trends in typhoid and paratyphoid fever. Clin Infect Dis
2010;50(2):241-6.Heymann DL, editor. Control of Communicable Diseases Manual. 19th
ed. Washington DC: American Public Health Association; 2008.
4 Heymann DL, editor. Control of Communicable Diseases Manual. 19th ed. Washington
DC: American Public Health Association; 2008.
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Technical Appendix
Drug-Resistant Shigella
Methods
Estimates of the number of illnesses and deaths from infections with
Shigella resistant to azithromycin or ciprofloxacin are reported. They
were derived by multiplying an estimate of the annual number of
Shigella illnesses or deaths in the United States1 by the prevalence
of resistance among Shigella tested by the National Antimicrobial
Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) in 2011, the year azithromycin testing began.
Resistance breakpoints from the NARMS 2011 Human Isolates Report were used.2 As
clinical azithromycin breakpoints have not been established for Shigella, the values used
here were based on epidemiological cut-off values used in the NARMS report. Isolates with
azithromycin minimal inhibitory concentrations of ≥32 µg/ml were considered resistant.
Many assumptions were made in deriving these estimates. The estimated number of
illnesses from resistant Shigella was divided by the U.S. population and multiplied by
100,000 to calculate the estimated number of illnesses from resistant infections per
100,000 people. The U.S. population in 2006 (approximately 299 million people) was
used for the calculations because the estimated number of Shigella illnesses in the United
States was based on this population.1 The sentinel county survey data displayed were
previously reported.3,4,5
References
1 Scallan E, Hoekstra RM, Angulo FJ, et al. Foodborne illness acquired in the United
States—major pathogens. Emerg Infect Dis 2011;17:7–15.
3 Tauxe RV, Puhr ND, Wells JG, Hargrett-Bean N, Blake PA. Antimicrobial resistance of
Shigella isolates in the USA: the importance of international travelers. J Infect Dis
1990;162:1107–11.
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Technical Appendix
Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
Methods
National estimates of the number of invasive MRSA healthcare-
associated infections (HAIs) were derived from the Emerging Infection
Program/Active Bacterial Core Surveillance1 for Invasive MRSA using
data reported for infections occurring during 2011 (http://www.
cdc.gov/abcs/reports-findings/surv-reports.html). During 2011,
4,872 reports of invasive MRSA (isolates of MRSA cultured from a normally sterile site and
identified by a participating clinical laboratory) were received from the 9 participating
program sites (population of 19,393,677). Reports include both healthcare-associated
infections and community-associated infections, but are limited to invasive infections
(approximately 85% are bloodstream infections).
Estimates were made using National Center for Health Statistics bridged-race vintage 2011
post-censal file and U.S. renal data systems, adjusting for race, age, gender, and receipt
of dialysis. Mortality includes all-cause mortality during hospitalization, and estimates
were adjusted in similar fashion as infection estimates. Approximately 18% of cases were
reported without a race value, multiple imputation was used to estimate the missing race
based on the data that are available and the results were summarized. Regarding device
and procedure-associated infections with MRSA, the proportion of facilities reporting
at least one S. aureus HAI reported as MRSA for each HAI type was obtained from CDC’s
National Healthcare Safety Network Antimicrobial Resistance Report 2009–2010.2 Estimates
were rounded to two significant digits.
References
1 Kallen AJ, Mu Y, Bulens S, Reingold A, Petit S, Gershman K, Ray SM, Harrison LH, Lynfield
R, Dumyati G, Townes JM, Schaffner W, Patel PR, Fridkin SK; Active Bacterial Core
surveillance (ABCs) MRSA Investigators of the Emerging Infections Program. Health
care-associated invasive MRSA infections, 2005–2008. JAMA. 2010
2 Sievert DM, Ricks P, Edwards JR, Schneider A, Patel J, Srinivasan A, Kallen A, Limbago
B, Fridkin S; National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Team and Participating NHSN
Facilities. Antimicrobial-resistant pathogens associated with healthcare-associated
infections: summary of data reported to the National Healthcare Safety Network at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2009–2010. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol.
2013 Jan;34(1):1–14
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Technical Appendix
Vancomycin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Methods
Vancomycin resistant S. aureus (VRSA) have been a nationally
notifiable condition since 2004.1 The national estimate of the number
of VRSA cases is derived from individual case reports and confirmation
at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). All
reported VRSA are submitted to CDC for confirmatory antimicrobial
susceptibility with reference broth microdilution.2 Vancomycin resistance in S. aureus is
defined as an MIC ≥ 16 ug/ ml. All isolates meeting this criterion are further characterized
with PCR to detect known resistance mechanisms. All 13 U.S. VRSA identified to date have
carried the vanA resistance determinant.3
References
1 http://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/document/nndss_event_code_list_2013.pdf
3 http://www.cdc.gov/HAI/settings/lab/vrsa_lab_search_containment.html
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Technical Appendix
Drug-Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
Methods
Trends in the incidence of antibiotic-resistant invasive pneumococcal
disease per 100,000 persons are from Active Bacterial Core
surveillance (ABCs), which is part of CDC’s Emerging Infections
Program (EIP) network.1 ABCs conducts surveillance for invasive
bacterial infections, including Streptococcus pneumoniae, at 10 sites
located throughout the United States representing a population of approximately 30
million persons. Isolates are collected on ≥90% of all cases (approximately 3200 isolates
per year) and sent to reference laboratories for susceptibility testing to eighteen different
antibiotics using Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) methods. Estimates of
invasive pneumococcal disease are also from ABCs.2
Estimates of the burden of antibiotic resistant pneumococcal disease are derived from three
sources. First, numbers of cases were estimated by applying the rate for full resistance to
clinically relevant drugs (i.e. penicillin, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, erythromycin, levofloxacin,
tetracycline, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) in 2011 (30%) to estimates of cases of all
S. pneumoniae infections (4 million) as estimated by Huang and colleagues.3 Numbers of
deaths were estimated by applying the rate of full resistance to a clinically relevant drug
(33%) to the total number of deaths from pneumococcal disease.3 Excess pneumococcal
pneumonia visits, hospitalizations, and costs were estimated using the previous overall
burden estimates3 but consideration of the burden of disease that would have occurred in
the absence of resistance to penicillin, erythromycin, and levofloxacin.4
References
1 CDC. Active Bacterial Core Surveillance Methodology (2012). http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/
index.html [Accessed 5/23/2013].
2 CDC. Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs) Report, Emerging Infections Program
network, Streptococcus pneumoniae (2011). http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/reports-findings/
survreports/spneu11.pdf [Accessed 5/23/2013].
3 Huang SS, Johnson KM, Ray GT, et al. Healthcare utilization and cost of pneumococcal
disease in the United States. Vaccine 2011;29(18):3398-412.
4 Murphy CR, Finkelstein JA, Ray GT, Moore MR, Huang SS. Attributable Healthcare
Utilization and Cost of Pneumonia due to Drug-Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae. In:
IDWeek; 2012 October 19, 2012; San Diego, CA: Infectious Diseases Society of America;
2012.
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Technical Appendix
Erythromycin-Resistant Group A Streptococcus
Methods
Estimates of the proportion of GAS isolates resistant to erythromycin,
clindamycin and tetracycline are from isolates collected through
Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs), which is part of CDC’s
Emerging Infections Program (EIP) network.1 ABCs conducts
surveillance for invasive bacterial infections, including GAS, at 10
sites located throughout the United States representing a population of approximately 32
million people. Isolates are collected on ~80% of all cases (approximately ~1000 isolates
per year) and sent to reference laboratories for susceptibility testing to twelve different
antibiotics using Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) methods.
Cases and deaths were estimated by applying 2011 resistant rate to erythromycin (10%, see
Strep Group A Streptococcus pathogen page) to total cases (13300) and total deaths (1,550)
reported in the 2011 report of the Active Bacteria Core surveillance (ABCs).2
References
1 CDC, Active Bacterial Core Surveillance Methodology (2012). http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/
index.html [Accessed 5/23/2013].
2 http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/reports-findings/survreports/gas11.html
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Technical Appendix
Clindamycin-Resistant Group B Streptococcus
Methods
Estimates of the proportion of GBS isolates resistant to erythromycin
and clindamycin are from isolates collected through Active Bacterial
Core surveillance (ABCs), which is part of CDC’s Emerging Infections
Program (EIP) network.1 ABCs conducts surveillance for invasive
bacterial infections, including GBS, at 10 sites located throughout
the United States representing a population of approximately 32 million persons. Isolates
are collected currently from 7 of these states, from ~85% of the cases in these states
(approximately ~1500 isolates per year) and sent to reference laboratories for susceptibility
testing to twelve different antibiotics using Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute
(CLSI) methods. Estimates of severe disease are also from ABCs.2
Cases and deaths were estimated by applying the 2010 overall resistant rate to clindamycin
(28%) from the ABCs antimicrobial susceptibilities report3 to total cases (27,000) and total
deaths (1,575) reported in the 2011 ABCs GBS surveillance report.2
References
1 CDC. Active Bacterial Core Surveillance Methodology (2012). http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/
index.html [Accessed 5/23/2013].
2 CDC. Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs) Report, Emerging Infections Program
network, Group B Streptococcus (2011). http://www.cdc.gov/abcs/reports-findings/
survreports/gbs11.pdf [Accessed 7/23/2013].
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GLOSSARY
Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs): A core component of CDC’s Emerging
Infections Programs network (EIP), a collaboration between CDC, state health departments,
and universities. ABCs is an active laboratory- and population-based surveillance system
that tracks invasive bacterial pathogens of public health importance. It currently operates
among 10 EIP sites across the United States, representing a population of approximately
41 million persons. At this time, ABCs conducts surveillance for six pathogens: group A
and group B Streptococcus (GAS, GBS), Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis,
Streptococcus pneumoniae, and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
Adverse drug event: When therapeutic drugs (example, antibiotics) have harmful effects;
when someone has been harmed by a medication.
Antibiotic: Type of medicine made from mold or bacteria that kills or slows the growth of
other bacteria. Examples include penicillin and streptomycin.
Antibiotic class: A grouping of antibiotics that are similar in how they work and how they
are made.
Antibiotic growth promotion: Giving farm animals antibiotics to increase their size in
order to produce and sell more meat.
Antibiotic resistance: The result of bacteria changing in ways that reduce or eliminate the
effectiveness of antibiotics. Antibiotic resistance is one type of antimicrobial resistance.
Antimicrobial: A general term for the drugs, chemicals, or other substances that either
kill or slow the growth of microorganisms. Among the antimicrobial agents in use today
are antibacterial drugs (which kill bacteria), antiviral agents (which kill viruses), antifungal
agents (which kill fungi), and antiparisitic drugs (which kill parasites).
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Bacteria: Single-celled organisms that live in and around us. Bacteria can be helpful,
but in certain conditions can cause illnesses such as strep throat, ear infections, and
bacterial pneumonia.
Beta (β)-lactamase enzyme: A chemical produced by certain bacteria that can destroy
some kinds of antibiotics.
Conjugate vaccine: A vaccine in which an antigen is attached to a carrier protein from the
same microorganism. This approach enhances the immunological response to the vaccine
and thereby enhances the overall effectiveness of the vaccine.
EIP: The Emerging Infections Program network is a national resource for surveillance,
prevention, and control of emerging infectious diseases. It was established in 1995. The
EIP is a network of 10 state health departments and their collaborators in local health
departments, academic institutions, other federal agencies, and public health and clinical
laboratories; infection preventionists; and healthcare providers.
Epidemiology: The study of diseases to find out who is affected, how disease is spread,
trends in illnesses and deaths, what behaviors or other risk factors might put a person
at risk, and other information that can be used to develop prevention strategies.
Epidemiologists use surveys and surveillance systems to track illnesses, and they often
investigate disease outbreaks.
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Erythromycin: An antibiotic used to treat certain infections caused by bacteria, such as
bronchitis, diphtheria, Legionnaires’ disease, pertussis (whooping cough), pneumonia,
rheumatic fever, sexually transmitted diseases, and infections of the ear, intestine, lung,
urinary tract, and skin. It is also used before some surgery or dental work to prevent
infection.
Extensively drug-resistant (XDR): Resistance to nearly all drugs that would be considered
for treatment. Exact definitions for XDR differ for each type of bacteria.
GISP: The Gonococcal Isolate Surveillance Project was established in 1986 to monitor
U.S. trends in antimicrobial susceptibilities of strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the type
of bacteria that causes gonorrhea. The goal of GISP is to establish a rational basis for the
selection of drugs used to treat gonorrhea. GISP is a collaborative project between selected
sexually transmitted disease clinics, five regional laboratories, and CDC.
HAIs: Healthcare-associated infections are those that occur in hospitals, outpatient clinics,
nursing homes, and other facilities where people receive care.
Hand hygiene: The practice of cleaning hands. This practice protects against infection
and illness.
Hypervirulent: Increased ability to cause severe disease, relapse rates, and death.
Invasive disease: A disease that can spread within the body to healthy tissue.
Isoniazid (INH): A first-line drug used to treat tuberculosis. Strains of tuberculosis resistant
to INH and rifampin are considered to be multidrug resistant.
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in people allergic to penicillin, but resistance to macrolides is increasing and has made
them less useful.
Methicillin: An antibiotic derived from penicillin. It was previously used to treat bacteria
such as Staphylococcus aureus.
Microorganism: Organisms so small that a microscope is required to see them. This term
includes bacteria, fungi, parasites, and viruses.
Morbidity: The number of people who are infected with a specified illness in a given
time period.
Mortality: The number of people who die in a given time from a specified illness.
NHSN: CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network is the nation’s most widely used
healthcare-associated infection tracking system. NHSN provides facilities, states, regions,
and the nation with data needed to identify problem areas, measure progress of
prevention efforts, and ultimately eliminate healthcare-associated infections. In addition,
NHSN allows healthcare facilities to track blood safety errors and important healthcare
process measures such as healthcare personnel influenza vaccine status and infection
control adherence rates.
Outbreak: When a group of people develop the same illness around the same time,
and the number of people affected is higher than normal. Outbreak investigations are
conducted to identify what exposure the affected people had in common.
Pan drug-resistance (PDR): Resistance to all drugs that would be considered for treatment.
Exact definitions for PDR differ for each bacteria.
Pneumonia: An inflammatory condition of the lungs affecting primarily the microscopic air
110
sacs known as alveoli. It is usually caused by infection with viruses or bacteria, and typical
symptoms include a cough, chest pain, fever, and difficulty breathing.
Reservoir: A person, animal, insect, plant, or other host that is carrying a pathogen (for
example, bacteria or fungi) that causes infectious diseases. Some pathogens have animal
reservoirs (to survive, they need animal hosts). Others pathogens have human reservoirs (to
survive, they need human hosts).
Resistant bacteria: Microorganisms that have changed in ways that reduce or eliminate
the effectiveness of drugs, chemicals, or other agents to cure or prevent infections.
Surveillance: The ongoing systematic collection and analysis of data. Surveillance systems
that monitor infectious diseases provide data that can be used to develop actions to
prevent infectious diseases.
Susceptible bacteria: When antibiotics are effective at killing or stopping the growth of a
certain bacteria, the bacteria is known as susceptible to antibiotics. Susceptible infections
are infections that can be treated effectively with antibiotics.
Systemic agents: Drugs that travel through the bloodstream and reach cells throughout
the body.
Vaccine: A product that produces immunity in a person’s body and therefore protects them
from an infectious disease. Vaccines are administered through shots, by mouth, and by
aerosol mist.
Virus: A strand of DNA or RNA in a protein coat that must get inside a living cell to grow
and reproduce. Viruses cause many types of illness. For example, varicella virus causes
chickenpox, and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) causes acquired immune
deficiency syndrome (AIDS).
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Many people in the CDC Office of Infectious Diseases (OID) contributed to this report.
Their efforts are acknowledged below in alphabetical order.
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