Surveillance of antibiotic resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the WHO Western Pacific Region, 2000

This article published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 25, No 4, November 2001 contains the annual report on the program of surveillance of antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in the World Health Organization's Western Pacific Region for 2000.

Page last updated: 17 December 2001

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


The WHO Western Pacific Gonococcal antimicrobial Surveillance Programme1

Introduction | Methods | Results and discussion | Acknowledgements | References

Abstract

A long-term program of surveillance of antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in the World Health Organization's Western Pacific Region (WHO WPR GASP) continued in 2000. About 11,000 gonococci were examined in 15 focal points. Widespread resistance to the penicillin group of antibiotics was confirmed. Resistance to quinolone antibiotics, already widely dispersed, increased further with a shift to higher levels of resistance in many centres. Gonococci with decreased susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins were observed in 5 centres. Spectinomycin resistance was infrequently encountered. Options for cheap and effective treatment of gonorrhoea in the WPR are increasingly limited. Commun Dis Intell 2001;25:274-277.

Introduction

Early and successful antibiotic treatment of gonococcal infection is important not only for the individual patient but is also a significant factor in control of disease and the prevention of complications. The ability of Neisseria gonorrhoeae to become resistant to cheap and effective antibiotics is well recognised and has significantly compromised both individual and public health management of gonorrhoea. Because treatment of gonorrhoea is best given as single dose treatment on initial diagnosis, standardised treatment schedules have been established. However, antibiotic resistance in the gonococcus can arise quickly. It is therefore important to have available accurate data on antimicrobial resistance in the gonococcus in order to guide selection of an appropriate antibiotic treatment. Antibiotic resistance in gonococci often spreads rapidly between countries, and infected travellers often present for treatment in countries distant from the place of contact. Thus for a number of reasons it is important to have available regional as well as local data on antibiotic resistance.

The WHO Western Pacific Region (WPR) Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme (GASP) is a continuing program of susceptibility surveillance in the Region and has published surveillance data annually since 1992.1 The Region has an unfortunate history of development of antimicrobial resistance in gonococci with penicillin, spectinomycin and quinolone resistant N. gonorrhoeae all appearing in and spreading beyond the WPR. This communication provides an analysis of surveillance of antimicrobial resistance in N. gonorrhoeae in the WHO WPR in 2000.

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Methods

The methods used by the WHO WPR GASP have been published2 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 2000. Most isolates were collected from symptomatic STD clinic patients. 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.3

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Results and Discussion

About 10,500 gonococcal isolates were examined in 15 participating countries (listed in the Acknowledgements) in 2000.

Resistance to the penicillins remained widespread by both chromosomal (CMRNG) and plasmid mediated mechanisms (penicillinase producing N. gonorrhoeae - PPNG). Table 1 provides details of CMRNG, PPNG and/or total penicillin resistance in 15 WPR focal points. Very high proportions of combined forms of penicillin resistance (CMRNG + PPNG) were recorded in Korea (91%), the Philippines (89%), China (80%), Brunei (63%), Singapore (58%), Hong Kong SAR (54%), and Vietnam (48%). With the exception of the Hong Kong SAR and Vietnam where penicillin resistance declined somewhat, these proportions approximated those found in preceding years. Apart from New Caledonia (no penicillin resistance), Papua New Guinea (36.5% of strains penicillin resistance), and Tonga (no penicillin resistance), data from some Pacific Island states were unavailable this year. With the exception of Papua New Guinea, low levels of penicillin resistant were observed in these countries in past years. Other participants submitting data in 2000 (Australia, Japan and New Zealand) had proportions of penicillin resistance between 8 and 28 per cent. Malaysia had a high proportion of isolates showing resistance in a small sample.

The following table displays penicillin sensitivity of strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 15 countries in the WHO WPR, 2000. If you are not able to access these data please e-mail cdi.editor@health.gov.au.

Table 1. Penicillin sensitivity of strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 15 countries in the WHO WPR, 2000

Country
No. tested PPNG CMRNG All Pen R
No. % No. % No. %
Australia
3,468
302
8.7
377
10.8
679
19.5
Brunei
59
 
 
 
 
37
63.0
China
1,007
344
34.1
464
46.0
808
80.1
Fiji
756
25
3.3
3
0.3
28
3.6
Hong Kong SAR
2,743
292
10.6
1,191
43.4
1,483
54.0
Japan
213
1
0.5
59
27.6
60
28.1
Korea
190
119
62.6
54
28.4
173
91.1
Malaysia
12
9
75.0
1
8.3
10
82.6
New Caledonia
74
0
 
0
 
0
0.0
New Zealand
694
20
2.9
35
5.0
55
7.9
Papua New Guinea
224
77
34.3
5
2.2
82
36.5
Philippines
290
259
89.3
0
0.0
259
89.3
Singapore
635
349
55.0
18
2.8
367
57.8
Tonga
50
0
0.0
0
0.0
0
0.0
Vietnam
157
74
47.1
1
0.7
75
47.8

PPNG Penicillinase producing N. gonorrhoeae
CMRNG Chromosomally mediated resistance in N. gonorrhoeae


Resistance to the quinolone antibiotics remained a major problem in many parts of the WPR and the situation deteriorated further in 2000. Data from 12 WPR countries are shown in Table 2 and quinolone resistant strains (QRNG) are divided into 'less susceptible' and 'resistant' categories on the basis of susceptibility determinations. Eleven of 12 WPR countries which examined isolates for quinolone resistance detected QRNG in 2000. High proportions of QRNG were detected in China, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Japan and Vietnam maintaining a situation observed in previous reports. In the above countries and also in Korea and Australia, the proportion of strains fully resistant to quinolone antibiotics increased while the proportion of less sensitive isolates decreased, i.e. there was again an upward shift in overall levels of resistance. In Hong Kong the percentage of 'resistant' QRNG has increased from about 50 per cent in 1998 to about 66 per cent in 1999 to 80 per cent in 2000 and in China quinolone resistance rates again increased markedly in an expanded sample. A shift to higher MICs in Japan saw the proportion of 'resistant' QRNG there increase from about 23 per cent in 1999 to 40 per cent in 2000. In Brunei the proportion of QRNG was essentially unchanged from previous years.

The following table displays quinolone resistance in strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 12 countries in the WHO WPR, 200. If you are not able to access these data please e-mail cdi.editor@health.gov.au.

Top of pageTable 2. Quinolone resistance in strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 12 countries in the WHO WPR, 2000

Country
No. tested Less susceptible Resistant
No. % No. %
Australia
3,468
334
9.6
285
8.2
Brunei
60
3
5.0
7
12.0
China
1,007
141
14.0
858
85.2
Hong Kong SAR
2,743
459
16.7
2,180
79.5
Japan
213
65
30.5
86
40.0
Korea
190
122
64.2
50
26.3
Malaysia
12
0
 
0
 
New Zealand
694
14
2.0
16
2.3
Papua New Guinea
224
0
0.0
2
0.9
Philippines
290
4
1.4
110
37.9
Singapore
635
39
6.1
121
19.0
Vietnam
157
18
11.5
67
42.7


An ominous trend was the presence of a small number of isolates with altered susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins. These strains were seen in Singapore, Brunei, China, Australia and New Zealand. Because of methodological differences in testing, MIC values are not directly comparable between centres, but values ranged up to 0.25 mg/L. Third generation cephalosporins are crucially important agents in the treatment of gonorrhoea as resistance to other agents accelerates.

A small number of spectinomycin resistant strains were found in China, Papua New Guinea, Vietnam, Brunei and Korea. Only very occasional strains resistant to this injectable antibiotic have been found in recent WPR surveys.

Although tetracyclines are not a recommended treatment for gonorrhoea, these agents are widely used and readily available in the WPR. One particular type of plasmid-mediated resistance gives rise to high-level tetracycline resistance (TRNG). About 6,900 gonococci were examined for high-level tetracycline resistance in 12 WPR countries in 2000 (Table 3). High proportions of TRNG isolates were again prominent in Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, Vietnam, China and Papua New Guinea ranging between 25 and 70 per cent. In other countries the proportions of TRNG ranged between 0.5 and 11 per cent of strains examined. The proportion of TRNG has increased significantly in China in recent years from around 3 per cent in 1998 to nearly 15 per cent in 1999 to 25 per cent in 2000.

The following table displays high level tetracycline resistance in strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 11 countries in the WHO WPR in 2000. If you are not able to access these data please e-mail cdi.editor@health.gov.au.

Table 3. High level tetracycline resistance in strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae isolated in 11 countries in the WHO WPR in 2000

Country
No. tested No. TRNG % TRNG
Australia
3,468
318
9.2
Brunei
33
24
72.0
China
1,007
260
25.8
Japan
213
1
0.5
Korea
190
5
2.6
Malaysia
12
3
25.0
New Zealand
694
23
3.3
Papua New Guinea
224
75
33.5
Philippines
290
33
11.4
Singapore
635
453
71.3
Vietnam
155
69
44.5


The data recorded in 2000 in the WPR indicate that further increases in gonococcal resistance to antibiotics have occurred. Resistance to the penicillins is so widespread that any contemplated use of this group of antibiotics would require prior validation of likely efficacy. A similar requirement would now seem to be appropriate for quinolone antibiotics given the extensive resistance revealed in this and earlier surveys. Finding suitable alternative treatments is difficult given the cost of suitable antibiotics. The recognition of gonococci with altered susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins is also a matter of concern. Although treatment failure attributable to resistance to this antibiotic is yet to be confirmed, there will be considerable and continuing interest in the number of strains which show this altered susceptibility in future surveys and also in the MICs associated with this phenomenon.

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Acknowledgements

The following members of the WHO Western Pacific Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme supplied data in 2000 for the WPR GASP:

Members of the Australian Gonococcal Surveillance Programme throughout Australia; HMH Kassim, Brunei, Darussalam; Y Shunzhang and S Xiaohong, Nanjing, China; S Bavoro, Suva, Fiji; KM Kam, Hong Kong; M Tanaka, Fukuoka and T Kuroki, Yokohama, Japan; K Lee and Y Chong, Seoul, Korea; R Yasin, Malaysia; B Garin, Noumea, New Caledonia; M Brokenshire, Auckland, New Zealand; MV Hombhanje, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea; CC Carlos, Manila, Philippines; C Ngan and AE Ling, Singapore; AT Ika, Nuku'alofa, Tonga; Le Thi Phuong, Hanoi, Vietnam.

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Author affiliations

1. Address for correspondence: Professor John Tapsall, WHO Collaborating Centre for STD and HIV, Department of Microbiology, The Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, New South Wales Australia 2031; Facsimile: + 61 2 9398 4275; E-mail j.tapsall@unsw.edu.au</em>]

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References

1. WHO Western Pacific Region Gonococcal Surveillance Programme. World Health Organization Western Pacific Region Gonococcal Surveillance, 1992 annual report. Commun Dis Intell 1994;18:61-63.

2. WHO 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.

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


This article was published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 25, No 4, November 2001.

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