About
Bradford
  HIV/AIDS
Articles
  Alternative
Therapies
  HIV/AIDS
Videos
  HIV/AIDS
Links
  HIV/AIDS
News

Introduction:
Positively Positive
- Living with HIV
  Out
About
HIV
  Resume/
Curriculum Vitae:
HIV / AIDS Involvements
  Biography   HIV/AIDS
News Archive
HIV/AIDS News spacer.gif spacer.gif
spacer.gif
   
AIDS Awareness Red Ribbon


www.pasteur.fr/en

From Yemen to Mayotte, the spread of a highly drug-resistant cholera strain

PRESS RELEASE 2024.12.06

Scientists from the National Reference Center for Vibrios and Cholera at the Institut Pasteur, in collaboration with the Centre hospitalier de Mayotte, have revealed the spread of a highly drug-resistant cholera strain. The study was published on December 12, 2024 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Cholera is an infectious diarrheal disease caused by certain bacteria of the species Vibrio cholerae. In its most severe forms, cholera is one of the most rapidly fatal infectious diseases: in the absence of treatment, patients can die within hours. Treatment primarily involves replacing lost water and electrolytes, but antibiotics are also used in addition to rehydration therapy. They are essential in reducing the duration of infection and breaking chains of transmission as quickly as possible.

A strain resistant to ten antibiotics – including azithromycin and ciprofloxacin, two of the three recommended for treating cholera – was identified for the first time in Yemen during the cholera outbreak in 2018-2019[1].

Scientists have now been able to trace the spread of this strain by studying the bacterial genomes. After Yemen, it was identified again in Lebanon in 2022[2], then in Kenya in 2023, and finally in Tanzania and the Comoros Islands – including Mayotte, a French département off the south-east coast of Africa – in 2024. Between March and July 2024, the island of Mayotte was affected by an outbreak of 221 cases caused by this highly drug-resistant strain.

"This study demonstrates the need to strengthen global surveillance of the cholera agent, and especially to determine how it reacts to antibiotics in real time. If the new strain that is currently circulating acquires additional resistance to tetracycline, this would compromise all possible oral antibiotic treatment," concludes Professor François-Xavier Weill, Head of the Vibrios CNR at the Institut Pasteur and lead author of the study.

[1] Press release 19/08/2023 - Genes fuelling antibiotic resistance in Yemen cholera outbreak uncovered

[2] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-51428-0


Sources :

Long-Distance Spread of a Highly Drug-Resistant Epidemic Cholera Strain, New England Journal of Medicine12 décembre 2024

Caroline Rouard1, Louis Collet2, Elisabeth Njamkepo1, Claire Jenkins3, Rosalie Sacheli4, Thierry Benoit-Cattin5, Julie Figoni6, François-Xavier Weill1

1. Institut Pasteur, Unité des Bactéries Pathogènes Entériques
2. Centre Hospitalier de Mayotte
3. UKHSA
4. CHU de Liege University Hospital Centre Ville
5. Centre Hospitalier de Mayotte
6. Santé publique France


Contact

Myriam Rebeyrotte
Service de Presse - Press Office
Institut Pasteur
25-28 rue du docteur Roux
75724 Paris cedex 15
tel : + 33 (0)1 45 68 81 01
www.pasteur.fr
www.pasteurdon.fr

Source:

"Reproduced with permission - INSTITUT PASTEUR"

INSTITUT PASTEUR 
www.pasteur.fr/en


For more HIV and AIDS News visit...

Positively Positive - Living with HIV/AIDS:
HIV/AIDS News


...positive attitudes are not simply 'moods'

Site Map

Contact Bradford McIntyre.

Web Design by Trevor Uksik
uks.jpg

Copyright © 2003 - 2024 Bradford McIntyre. All rights reserved.

DESIGNED TO CREATE HIV & AIDS AWARENESS

spacer.gif