The number of US cases of an emerging, multi-drug resistant fungus has ballooned from 7 to more than 122 in 9 months.
What’s more? The fungus, Candida auris, seems to be spreading.
So-called ‘superbugs’ usually reference bacteria that are especially hard to kill, having evolved resistance to multiple antibiotics. Superbugs have become a major problem, with some bacteria evolving resistance to so many drugs there is no longer a readily available way to kill them. To stave off an antibiotic apocalypse, we may eventually need to discover lots of new drugs, or alternate methods of vanquishing these tough critters.
Why superbug?
Like those bacteria, C. auris appears to have evolved resistance to multiple drugs. It causes severe illness and has a high-mortality rate, especially among high-risk, hospitalized patients. The fungus was first identified in 2009 and has now been reported in more than a dozen countries. According to the CDC, 77 cases have been identified in hospitals in seven states, mainly in elderly people. The number jumped to 122 when close contacts of those patients were also screened.
The fungus C. Auris: a serious global health threat
C. auris is opportunistic—you’re unlikely to get it unless you’re already sick and in the hospital for something else. So far, most US cases have been treatable using antifungal drugs, but health care officials are concerned because some strains are resistant to all three major classes of antifungal drugs. It can also survive on surfaces in places like hospitals, and easily spread between patients. The CDC has labeled it “a serious global health threat.”
For now, C. auris appears to be relatively rare in the US. But perhaps the most frightening thing about antibiotic-resistant bacteria is that because state and federal agencies have done a poor job keeping track of superbug-related deaths, we really don’t have a handle on how big the problem is. Let’s hope that as these super fungus spread, we do a better job keeping track of them.
Are we going to be able to eradicate this superbug fungus?
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