U.S. officials have found bacteria resistant to the antibiotic of last resort in a sample from a second pig, increasing concerns about the spread of a newly discovered superbug that initially surfaced in this country in March.
The latest report involves an antibiotic-resistant strain of E. coli from a pig intestine, which was detected by scientists at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a spokeswoman said Monday evening. The E. coli bacteria carried a gene making it resistant to the antibiotic colistin, the drug used against particularly dangerous types of superbugs that can already withstand many other antibiotics.
The sample is still undergoing analysis.
The bacteria were detected May 27, nearly two months after the first discovery of the gene in a pig sample.
USDA officials have provided few details, including where either animal was raised or killed.
The same gene, mcr-1, also was identified last month in an E. coli strain from a 49-year-old Pennsylvania woman with no recent travel outside the country. That marked the first time the colistin-resistant strain had been found in a person in the United States, raising alarms among health officials and infectious-disease experts tracking its appearance in Asia, Europe and Canada.
Each of the three U.S. cases involves different strains of E. coli. The latest animal case suggests the gene is already circulating through multiple routes here.
โMounting evidence suggests the mcr-1 gene is circulating within the United States,โ said Patrick McGann, one of the Defense Department researchers who identified the gene in the patient in Pennsylvania. โOur sample was in a woman with no recent travel history, the pig samples are from slaughterhouses in the USA, and (the) strains are all different.โ
But the sources have yet to be identified, McGann said.
U.S. officials have been looking for the gene since its emergence in pigs and people in China was reported late last year. There have since been dozens more reports in animals and people on three continents. The number of positive cases in animals is about 20 times that in humans, so researchers say itโs not that surprising that two pig samples have tested positive in the United States.
Public health officialsโ biggest fear is that the gene will spread to bacteria that are now susceptible only to colistin. In all three cases here, the gene was carried on a plasmid, a mobile piece of DNA that easily can transfer the gene to other bacteria. That would result in a kind of super-superbug, invincible to every life-saving antibiotic available.
In prepared testimony for a congressional hearing Tuesday on antibiotic resistance, a top expert at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it is essential to slow the spread of resistant bacteria.
โAntibiotic resistance is perhaps the single most important infectious disease threat of our time,โ notes Beth Bell, who heads prevention and control of a wide range of infectious diseases at the CDC.
According to Bell, the investigation by the agency and the Pennsylvania health department into the womanโs case is currently focused on identifying and screening contacts she had at home and while a hospital patient to determine whether any might carry bacteria with the mcr-1 gene.
