Surveillance of antibiotic resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the WHO Western Pacific Region, 2004

This report published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 30 Number 1, March 2006, contains the 2004 annual report on Neisseria gonorrhoeae in countries in the WHO Western Pacific Region.

Page last updated: 30 March 2006

A print friendly PDF version is available from this Communicable Diseases Intelligence issue's table of contents.

Introduction | Methods | Results | Discussion | Acknowledgements | References

The WHO Western Pacific Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme

Abstract

The World Health Organization Western Pacific Region Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme (WHO WPR GASP) examined approximately 10,000 isolates of Neisseria gonorrhoeae from 15 countries for resistance to antibiotics in 2004. Treatment options for gonorrhoea in the Region are limited by persisting high rates of resistance to penicillins and quinolones. There were infrequent instances of spectinomycin resistance and the presence of gonococci with decreased susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins was again noted in several centres. Commun Dis Intell 2006;30:129–132.

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Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) Western Pacific Region (WPR) has continuing and increasing problems with antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae. This has been documented by its Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme (WPR GASP). Penicillin resistance emerged and spread in the 1970s with the appearance of penicillinase-producing N. gonorrhoeae (PPNG) and gonococci resistant to penicillins by chromosomally mediated resistance (CMRNG). Since its inception in 1994, the WPR GASP has reported on the progressive increase in quinolone resistance in gonococci in the Region.1,2 The rates of resistance to both of these antibiotic groups have been so high for so long that they should now only be used in programmatic treatments for infections acquired in this Region in specific situations where their efficacy is clearly demonstrated. Other established treatments for gonorrhoea have also suffered a loss of efficacy at different periods. Gonococci with high-level plasmid-mediated resistance to tetracyclines (TRNG) are frequently encountered in many centres,2 spectinomycin resistance emerged rapidly when used widely in Korea in the 1980s3 and more recently, there have been reports of the spread of gonococci with decreased susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins in Japan.4

Laboratory assessment of in vitro resistance to antibiotics in N. gonorrhoeae provides a reliable indication of the likely clinical efficacy of different treatment regimens. This report provides an analysis of antimicrobial resistance in N. gonorrhoeae in the WHO WPR derived from the results of the WHO WPR GASP surveillance for 2004.

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Methods

The methods used by the WHO WPR GASP have been published1 and provide full details of the source of isolates, sample populations, laboratory test methods and quality assurance programs used to generate data. These methods were unaltered in 2004. As a guide to the interpretation of the following data, a WHO expert committee has recommended that treatment regimens be altered once resistance to a particular antibiotic reaches 5 per cent.5,6

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Results

Just over 10,000 gonococcal isolates were examined for susceptibility to one or more antibiotics in 15 participating countries in 2004.

Quinolone antibiotics

Table 1 shows the distribution of quinolone-resistant N. gonorrhoeae (QRNG) in 13 countries that examined a total of 9,470 isolates in 2004. The proportion of QRNG found in isolates tested ranged from 2 per cent in New Caledonia and Papua New Guinea to nearly 100 per cent in the Hong Kong SAR and China. QRNG represented about 20 per cent of all gonococci tested in Australia and New Zealand, about 50 per cent were QRNG in Brunei, the Philippines and Singapore and 85 per cent or more in Japan, Korea, Laos and Viet Nam. These rates were in general higher than in previous years although decreases were noted in New Caledonia, the Philippines and Brunei when comparisons were made with 2003 data. Most of the resistance was at the higher level MICs (ciprofloxacin MIC = 1mg/L) that are associated with high rates of treatment failure.

Table 1. Quinolone resistance in strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 13 countries in the World Health Organization Western Pacific Region, 2004

Country
Tested Less susceptible Resistant All QRNG
n n % n % n %
Australia
3,542
68
1.9
757
21.4
825
23.3
Brunei
113
15
13.3
46
40.7
61
54.0
China
1,203
60
4.9
1,135
94.3
1,195
99.2
Hong Kong SAR
2,811
144
5.1
2,647
94.2
2,627
99.3
Japan
261
16
6.1
213
81.6
239
91.6
Korea
93
17
18.2
65
70.0
82
88.2
Lao PDR
48
4
8.0
42
88.0
46
96.0
New Caledonia
43
0
0.0
1
2.3
New Zealand
773
14
1.8
148
19.1
162
20.9
Papua New Guinea
92
1
1.0
1
1.0
2
2.0
Philippines
175
2
1.1
83
47.4
85
48.5
Singapore
160
10
6.2
80
50.0
90
56.2
Viet Nam
156
49
31.4
82
52.5
131
83.9

QRNG Quinolone-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

Cephalosporins

Strains with some decrease in susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins were again detected in isolates from Australia, Brunei, China, and Papua New Guinea in 2004. Because of some methodological differences in testing, MIC values are not directly comparable between centres, but values ranged up to 0.25 mg/L.

Spectinomycin

A small number of spectinomycin resistant strains were reported from China. Only very small numbers of spectinomycin resistant gonococci have been reported in recent years in WPR GASP surveys.

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Penicillins

Resistance to penicillins has been widespread and at high levels for many years in the WPR, and may be the result of penicillinase production or a combination of chromosomally mediated mechanisms. Table 2 shows the penicillin susceptibility of 9,983 gonococci in 15 WHO WPR centres. Little change was seen in 2004 from the generally high levels seen in previous years. There was an increase of note in PPNG in Brunei from 55 per cent in 2003 to 85 per cent, and a decrease in the Philippines from 78 per cent in 2003 to 37 per cent. The proportion of PPNG in Fiji increased to 6.4 per cent from the 3 per cent detected in 2003.

Table 2. Penicillin resistance in 9,983 strains of Neiserria gonorrhoeae isolated in 15 countries in the World Health Organization Western Pacific Region, 2004

Country
Tested PPNG CMRNG All Pen R
n n % n % n %
Australia
3,542
393
11.1
377
10.6
770
21.7
Brunei
111
95
85.6
0
95
85.6
China
1,002 for PPNG
489
48.8
26.4
75.2
Fiji
606
39
6.4
Hong Kong SAR
2,811
857
30.5
646
23.0
1,503
53.5
Japan
261
8
3.0
60
23.0
68
26.0
Korea
93
23
24.7
49
52.7
72
77.4
Lao PDR
48
40
83.0
8
17.0
48
100
New Caledonia
43
3
7.0
New Zealand
773
29
3.7
16
2.0
45
5.8
Papua New Guinea*
52 for PPNG
92 for all pen R
27
51.9
45
48.9
Philippines
175
65
37.1
90
51.4
Singapore
160
78
48.7
3
1.8
81
50.5
Tonga
110
3
2.7
6
5.4
9
8.1
Viet Nam
156
47
30.1
2
1.3
49
31.4

Papua New Guinea tested 52 of 92 isolates for lactamase production.

PPNG Penicillinase–producing Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

CMRNG Chromosome–mediated resistance Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

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Tetracyclines

Tetracycline antibiotics are still widely available in the WPR. About 6,300 isolates were examined for one particular form of resistance, namely, that high-level plasmid-mediated form referred to as TRNG, in 10 countries in 2004 (Table 3). Again, rates of resistance, expressed as a percentage of all isolates tested, were similar to those found in 2003, except for increases in New Zealand where the proportion doubled in 2004 to 17.9 per cent, and Singapore (58% in 2003 and 72% in 2004), and a decrease in the Philippines from 29 per cent to 8 per cent. Low proportions of TRNG (< 10%) were found in Japan, Korea, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea and the Philippines. The proportions of TRNG were from 14 to 34 per cent in isolates from Australia, China, New Zealand and Viet Nam while in Singapore TRNG were 72 per cent of 160 isolates tested.

Table 3. High-level tetracycline resistance in strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 10 countries in the World Health Organization Western Pacific Region, 2004

Country
Number tested TRNG
n
TRNG
%
Australia
3,542
490
13.8
China
1,202
411
34.2
Japan
261
6
2.3
Korea
93
2
2.1
New Caledonia
43
1
2.3
New Zealand
584
105
17.9
Papua New Guinea
92
4
4.3
Philippines
175
14
8.0
Singapore
160
115
71.9
Viet Nam
150
30
20.0

TRNG Tetracycline resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

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Discussion

Attempts to treat and control gonorrhoea are compromised by the emergence and spread of antibiotic-resistant N. gonorrhoeae. The data from 2004 indicate that the problems of providing efficacious treatment for gonorrhoea in the WHO WPR continue. The WHO recommends that standard treatment schedules should be changed when resistance to an antibiotic reaches a level of 5 per cent or more.6 Resistance rates for the recommended cheaper oral agents such as the penicillins or quinolones remained well above this 5 per cent level in many centres and show no signs of decreasing. It is highly unlikely that effective newer derivatives from these antibiotic families will be developed.7,8

Alternative treatments are available but these either require intramuscular injection or else are more expensive than traditional agents. One group of antibiotics now widely used is the third generation cephalosporins, either as an oral preparation such as cefixime or cefdinir or the injectable ceftriaxone. The slow spread of gonococci with decreased susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins continues in the WHO WPR. After first reports from Japan, from 2000 onwards a small number of isolates with altered susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins has been reported each year in WHO WPR surveys in various countries. At different times Australia, Cambodia, Brunei, China, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Singapore have reported their presence. The reduced susceptibility is associated with the presence of a number of mosaic penA genes4 and these gonococci are often multi-resistant due to the aggregation of different resistance mechanisms.9 These strains have now spread beyond the WHO WPR.10,11

Over-reliance on antibiotic treatment as a principal mechanism of gonococcal disease control in the absence of other important measures to decrease disease rates has undoubtedly contributed to the problem of antimicrobial resistance in N. gonorrhoeae.12 The combination of high gonococcal disease rates and general problems of antibiotic resistance in the WHO WPR will continue without concerted efforts that simultaneously address the linked, but separate, issues of control of sexually transmitted diseases and containment of antimicrobial resistance.8,12 Surveillance of antimicrobial resistance is an essential component of local, regional and international efforts for control of gonorrhoeae.

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Acknowledgements

Members of the WHO Western Pacific Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme in 2004 are: JW Tapsall and EA Limnios, Australia; Haji Mahani Haj Abu Bakar, Brunei Darussalam; Yin Yue Ping and Su Xiaohong, China; EM Buadromo and S Singh, Fiji: KM Kam and J Lo, Hong Kong; Yuko Watanabe and Masatoshi Tanaka, Japan; K Lee and Y Chong, South Korea; T Phouthavane, Lao PDR; R Goursaud, New Caledonia; M Brokenshire, New Zealand; C Manesikia, Papua New Guinea; CC Carlos, Philippines; Cecilia Ngan, Singapore, M Fakahau, Tonga, Le Thi Phuong, Hanoi, Viet Nam.

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References

1. World Health Organization Western Pacific Region Gonococcal Surveillance Programme. Surveillance of antibiotic susceptibility of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the WHO Western Pacific Region 1992–4. Genitourin Med 1997;73:355–361.

2. WHO Western Pacific Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme. Surveillance of antibiotic resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the WHO Western Pacific Region, 2003. Commun Dis Intell 2005;29:62–64.

3. Boslego JW, Tramont EC, Takafuji ET, Diniega BM, Mitchell BS, Small JW, et al. Effect of spectinomycin use on the prevalence of spectinomycin-resistant and of penicillinase-producing Neisseria gonorrhoeae. N Eng J Med 1987;317:272–278.

4. Ito M, Deguchi T, Mizutani KS, Yasuda M, Yokoi S, Ito S, et al. Emergence and spread of Neisseria gonorrhoeae clinical isolates harbouring mosaic-like structure of penicillin-binding protein 2 in Japan. Antimicrob Agent Chemother 2005;49:137–143.

5. Tapsall JW. Antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae. WHO/CDS/CSR/DRS/2001.3. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland, 2001. Available from: http://www.who.int/entity/drugresistance/Antimicrobial_resistance_in_Neisseria_gonorrhoeae.pdf

6. Management of sexually transmitted diseases. World Health Organization 1997; Document WHO/GPA/TEM94.1 Rev.1 p 37.

7. Shultz TR, Tapsall JW, White PA. Correlation of in vitro susceptibilities to newer quinolones of naturally occurring quinolone-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains with changes in GyrA and ParC. Antimicrob Agent Chemother 2001;45:734–738.

8. Simonsen GS, Tapsall JW, Allegranzi B, Talbot EA, Lazzari S. The ARCS Approach – A Public Health Tool for antimicrobial resistance containment and surveillance. Bull World Health Org 2004;82:928–934

9. Tanaka M, Nakayama H, Huruya K, Konomi I, Irie S, Kanayama A, et al. Analysis of mutations within multiple genes associated with resistance in a clinical isolate of Neisseria gonorrhoeae with reduced ceftriaxone that shows a multidrug-resistant phenotype. Int J Antimicrob Agent 2006;27:20–26.

10. Wang SA, Lee MAC, O'Connor N, Iverson CJ, Ohye RG, Whiticar PM, et al. Multi-Resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae with decreased susceptibility to cefixime—Hawaii, 2001. Clin Infect Dis 2003;37:849–852.

11. Hoffman SH, Lambertson L, Berthelsen L, Cowan. Neisseria gonorrhoeae with increasing cetriaxon MIC in Denmark in 2004: serotyping, bi-locus sequence typing and sexual preference. In: Proceedings of the 16 th Biennial Meeting of the International Society for STD Research, Amsterdam, 2005: Abstract WP-035.

12. Tapsall JW. What management is there for gonorrhea in the post-quinolone era? Sex Transm Dis 2006;33:8–10.

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Author affiliations

Corresponding author: Associate Professor John Tapsall, WHO Collaborating Centre for STD and HIV, Department of Microbiology, The Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, NSW 2031. Telephone: +61 2 9298 9084. Facsimile: + 61 2 9398 4275. Email j.tapsall@unsw.edu.au

 

This report was published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Vol 30 No 1, March 2006.

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