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Will a cheap pill cure gonorrhoea? New test can tell

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  • A certain strain of gonorrhoea may be successfully treated with an out-of-use drug
  • A single dose of ciprofloxacin, given by mouth, may cure the strain called wild-type gyrA serine
  • This drug can be given as a pill, instead of a painful injection

Researchers say a new test can tell which patients with gonorrhoea will benefit from treatment with the antibiotic ciprofloxacin.

The low-cost drug has been out of use amid concern that the bacterium that causes gonorrhoea was becoming resistant to it.

In this study, 106 patients identified as having a gonorrhoea strain called wild-type gyrA serine were cured with a single dose of ciprofloxacin. A test to screen for that strain has been available for three years, but this is the first time it has been systematically studied in humans, researchers said.

Easier and safer to treat

"Gonorrhoea is one of the most common drug-resistant infections worldwide and is becoming harder to treat. Current treatment methods require an antibiotic injection, which is expensive and painful," said lead author Dr Jeffrey Klausner, a professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles.

"This new test could make it easier and safer to treat gonorrhoea with different antibiotics, including one pill given by mouth. Using a pill instead of a shot would also make it easier and faster to treat sex partners of patients with gonorrhoea," he added in a UCLA news release.

The DNA test that researchers developed identifies a genetic mutation that makes the gonorrhoea bacterium resistant to ciprofloxacin. Ciprofloxacin works against infections without that mutation.

In 2007, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stopped recommending ciprofloxacin after the gonorrhoea bacterium developed resistance to it.

Small number of participants

But 70% to 80% of gonorrhoea infections in the United States still can be treated with ciprofloxacin, the researchers said. Scientists have been trying to reduce the need to use the injectable antibiotic, ceftriaxone. Gonorrhoea's resistance to ceftriaxone is less than 1%.

However, the researchers noted the study was limited by the small number of participants, and that several people who had the wild-type strain of gonorrhoea also had other strain types.

The findings were published on 7 August in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

Image credit: Unsplash

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