Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 12 | Page 38

OPINION DOCTORS' Lounge (continued from page 35) with a PCR method was described in Oct. 2018 in the International Journal of Medical Microbiology, Dr. Ruiz-Gaitan et al. As for the rapid appearance on multiple continents of multidrug-resistant yet dis- tinctly different genetic forms: we think that fungicides might be the problem. Agro-in- dustrial fungicide use is a multi-billion-dol- lar business in this country alone. These fun- gicides are used all over the world. Studies of those used have shown correlations with development of the distinct genetic classes of resistance among Candida species. The rise of ever more powerful fungicides has coincided with the rise of fungal organ- isms that can sicken and kill more of us as time goes by. Farmers lose large portions of their crops to invasive pests. To protect their crops and their livelihoods, they have resorted more and more not just to pesti- cides but to fungicides. There are agricultural organizations that strive to get farmers to rotate crops and use other methods of preventing fungal crop destruction without resorting to heavier use of more powerful chemicals. The success of this effort at using more biologically safe methods of control remains to be seen. The organizations note somewhat pessimistical- ly that “It is easier to spray than change.” Large farming conglomerates spend huge sums on these chemicals, which provides a cost incentive to find alternative methods. As with other multidrug-resistant or- ganisms, what cannot be presumed is that in-vitro sensitivity translates to in-vivo ef- fectiveness. Even with drug combinations, not all of the superior anti-fungals have good penetration into the CSF or urine, for instance. As for the development of multidrug resistance, I am among the myriad thou- 36 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE sands of doctors who remain guilty of giving people oral fluconazole instead of the indi- cated topical agents. Just as the farmers do, doctors reach for the more powerful, faster and easier oral agents. I’m hoping that what you are about to read about antisepsis and the removal of this organism will cure all of us of that habit. Resistance is not the only awful part. We have agents in development that will probably help. The worst part is killing the organism where we all live, in the hospitals and clinics where the sick people are. This organism can live on plastic for at least 14 days. The rate of recovery of this over a pe- riod of a week after “normal cleaning” was higher than that of Candida albicans on both moist and dry surfaces. The North Brompton hospital eventually closed its in- tensive care unit and moved everyone out as the only effective way to reduce transmis- sion of this fungus. That is how they finally stopped the outbreak. Mr. Richtel notes in The New York Times article that in a case at the Brooklyn Mount Sinai Hospital, fungal spores were recovered from the ceiling, the windows, the curtains, the bathroom, the floors etc. They hid in the crevices, the phone and the bedside table, on the computer and the IV tubing. The usual disinfectant that hospitals use contains hydrogen peroxide in wipes and liquid cleaners; however, a room “termi- nally” cleaned with this solution did not kill all the spores. In London, fumigation with sodium hypochlorite vapor and then closing the room for a period of days still resulted in recovery of some spores in a petri dish, which is how the CDC consultant first identified the cause of that outbreak. Repeated applications of problematically high (enough to irritate everyone’s respira- tory tract) concentrations of bleach may be necessary, along with repeated fumigation with hydrogen peroxide vapor and irradi- ation with ultraviolet light. I foresee that hospitals of the future will return to all-white environments, the better to bleach them with. The good news is that of 258 health care workers in one outbreak, only one was found to be colonized, had not transmitted it to anyone else, and cleared the colonization with oral and topical antifun- gals, chlorhexidine and nasal ointments. How to avoid fungicide? In the future, it might be best to grow a lot of your own food. Ask your farmers at the farmers’ mar- ket about what their animals eat and what chemicals are on the pastures. I cannot promise you that the grapes in the wine you drink were not subject to fungicide, since fungus is death to the vines. But what comes out of your own backyard or your commu- nity allotment will not have preservatives or chemicals, unless you put them there. It’s still planting season in Kentucky. Get out there and grow something. Dr. Barry practices Internal Medicine with Norton Community Medical Associates-Bar- ret. She is a clinical associate professor at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Department of Medicine.