Cambridge: A multi-drug resistant infection that can cause life-threatening illness in people with cystic fibrosis (CF) and can spread from patient to patient has spread globally and is becoming increasingly virulent, according to new research published today in the journal Science. The study, led by the University of Cambridge and the Wellcome Trust
Sanger Institute, also suggests that conventional cleaning will not be
sufficient to eliminate the pathogen, which can be transmitted through
contaminated surfaces or in the air.
Mycobacterium abscessus, a species of multidrug resistant mycobacteria,
has recently emerged as a significant global threat to individuals with
cystic fibrosis and other lung diseases. It can cause a severe pneumonia
leading to accelerated inflammatory damage to the lungs, and may
prevent safe lung transplantation. It is also extremely difficult to
treat – fewer than one in three cases is treated successfully.
It was previously thought that patients acquired the infection from the
environment and that transmission between patients never occurred. The
research team had previously studied one specialist CF centre in the UK
and identified genetic and epidemiological evidence suggesting
person-to-person transmission of M. abscessus but it was unclear whether
this was a one off incident.
Now, by sequencing the whole genomes of over 1,000 isolates of
mycobacteria from 517 individuals attending CF specialist centres in
Europe, the US and Australia, researchers have demonstrated that the
majority of CF patients have acquired transmissible forms of M.
abscessus that have spread globally. Further analysis suggests that the
infection may be transmitted within hospitals via contaminated surfaces
and through airborne transmission. This presents a potentially serious
challenge to infection control practices in hospitals.
Using a combination of cell-based and mouse models, the researchers
showed that the recently-evolved mycobacteria were more virulent, likely
to cause more serious disease in patients.
“This mycobacterium can cause very serious infections that are extremely
challenging to treat, requiring combination treatment with multiple
antibiotics for 18 months or longer,” says Professor Andres Floto from
the Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, and the Cambridge
Centre for Lung Infection at Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.
“The bug initially seems to have entered the patient population from the
environment, but we think it has recently evolved to become capable of
jumping from patient to patient, getting more virulent as it does so.”
Professor Julian Parkhill from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute at
Hinxton, Cambridgeshire, adds: “Our research should provide a degree of
hope: now that we know the extent of the problem and are beginning to
understand how the infection spreads, we can start to respond. Our work
has already helped inform infection control policies and provides the
means to monitor the effectiveness of these.”
The Adult Cystic Fibrosis Centre at Papworth Hospital, Cambridgeshire,
has led the development and implementation of new infection control
policies to reduce the risk of transmission, now adopted across the UK
and elsewhere. This study has also influenced the design of a new CF
unit, due to open within the New Papworth Hospital on the Cambridge
Biomedical Campus in 2018, which will incorporate a state-of-the-art air
handling system.
One question that the researchers will now aim to answer is how the
pathogen manages to spread globally. Their current study has shown that
not only can it spread between individuals within specialist centres,
but it has also been able to spread from continent to continent. The
mechanism for this is unclear, but the researchers speculate that
healthy individuals may be unwittingly carrying the mycobacteria between
countries.
The sequencing data has also revealed potential new drug targets, and
the team is now focused on working with other groups at the University
of Cambridge and Colorado State University to develop these further.
Dr Janet Allen, Director of Strategic Innovation at the CF Trust, said:
“This paper highlights the risks posed through transmission of
multi-drug resistant organisms between people with cystic fibrosis. The
team in Cambridge are a world authority in this area. This work
demonstrates the global threat of this infection, the risks of
cross-infection within and between CF centres, and the need for improved
surveillance. This study exemplifies the enormous impact of CF
Trust-funded Strategic Research Centres, which were designed to generate
world-class research with the very highest impact. Without the support
of the CF community, this landmark study would not have been possible.”
Around one in 2,500 children in the UK is born with cystic fibrosis, a
hereditary condition that causes the lungs to become clogged up with
thick, sticky mucus. The condition tends to decrease life expectancy
among patients.
The research was funded by the Wellcome Trust and the UK Cystic Fibrosis Trust.
Reference
Bryant, JM et al. Emergence and spread of a human transmissible multidrug-resistant nontuberculous mycobacterium. Science; 11 Nov 2016; DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf8156