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Patients infected with 'superbug' die

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Two kidney patients who contracted a 'superbug' at Tuen Mun Hospital have died and a third has been found to be infected.

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The hospital is now trying to contact 300 other end-stage kidney failure patients to test for the hospital-acquired infection, vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE), which has been linked to the overuse of last-defence antibiotics.

In the first fatal cases in Hong Kong, the two patients, who died of kidney failure, were found to have been infected with VRE. A 67-year-old man died early last month, while the second man, 66, died last Monday. Another man was admitted to Tuen Mun Hospital but his condition was not known last night. Kidney patients on dialysis regularly use vancomycin to treat intestinal infections.

Infectious disease experts said the cases showed hospitals had a long way to go in controlling the use of antibiotics.

University of Hong Kong microbiologist Professor Yuen Kwok-yung, chair professor of the infectious diseases division, said: 'Antibiotics usage must be carefully gauged and monitored. Every doctor has a moral responsibility to ensure the drugs are not unnecessarily used.'

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A microbiologist at Princess Margaret Hospital, Dr Ng Tak-keung, said although VRE was not as virulent as another superbug - vancomycin resistant staphylococcus aureus - it affected patients who were severely ill with depressed immune systems.

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