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Persistent drug resistance problems caused by the overuse of antibiotics have exacerbated pneumonia outbreaks in northern China, according to health experts. Photo: Reuters

No new pathogens in respiratory disease surge, China tells WHO

  • WHO had asked for more information on ‘undiagnosed pneumonia’ among children in Beijing and the northeastern province of Liaoning
  • Recent spike worsened by overuse of antibiotics, health experts say
Beijing has told the World Health Organization that there was no new or unusual pathogen behind a spike in respiratory diseases among children in the past few months.

But a persistent drug resistance problem caused by the overuse of antibiotics had exacerbated outbreaks caused by the mycoplasma pneumoniae in recent months, health experts said.

Pathogens like mycoplasma pneumoniae can cause common bacterial infections that typically affect children.

WHO asks China for details on surge in ‘undiagnosed pneumonia’ cases

On Thursday, the WHO held a teleconference with China’s health authorities after it asked China for more information on “undiagnosed pneumonia” among children in Beijing and the northeastern province of Liaoning, according to media reports and infectious disease monitoring service ProMED.

It is not unusual for the WHO to ask a member country to give further information regarding outbreaks. A country has 24 hours to respond.

The WHO request drew widespread attention as it revived concerns about the evolution of Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, and the possibility of new pathogens, as well as debates about China’s transparency during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Beijing told the WHO on Thursday that outpatient and hospital admissions of children with mycoplasma pneumoniae started to rise as early as May. Respiratory diseases caused by other pathogens, including respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), adenovirus and influenza virus, began to jump in October.

Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections usually cause mild respiratory symptoms. However, experts and officials said this year’s outbreak was particularly serious because of the bacteria’s macrolide resistance.

Macrolide is a class of antibiotics commonly used to treat respiratory, skin and sexually transmitted diseases caused by mycobacterial infections.

David Hui Shu-cheong, a respiratory expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said doctors in Beijing had to obtain parents’ consent to prescribe antibiotics not usually used for children – so-called off-label use – because of macrolide-resistant mycoplasma pneumoniae.

“Doxycycline treatment may lead to yellow discolouration of teeth and slow down the growth of bones in children and thus is usually not recommended for children below the age of eight, while fluoroquinoline may damage cartilage and thus is usually not recommended for people below the age of 18,” Hui said, referring to two such antibiotics recently prescribed.

“However when there is a high frequency of mycoplasma resistance to macrolide, the off-label use of these drugs is needed.”

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WHO presses China for details amid outbreak of respiratory illness among children

WHO presses China for details amid outbreak of respiratory illness among children

Mainland experts have long warned of macrolide-resistant mycoplasma pneumoniae.

A paper published by a group of mainland scientists from the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2013 said the resistance rate of mycoplasma among patients in Beijing was much higher than in other countries.

Macrolide resistance rates of mycoplasma pneumoniae in the Beijing population rose from 68.9 per cent in 2008 to as high as 97.0 per cent in 2012, according to the paper, which was published in the peer reviewed journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

The paper said the extremely high resistance rates in Beijing may have been due to the inability to provide surveillance results, as well as the overuse of antibiotics.

Experts from the CDC in Shunyi district, Beijing, published a paper in 2019 about an outbreak in a primary school a year earlier.

A total of 55 students had been sick with mycoplasma pneumoniae infection during the outbreak, and 25 of them were hospitalised for complications.

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“The infections by macrolide-resistant mycoplasma pneumoniae are not always mild and pneumonia was common, and mycoplasma pneumoniae could cause serious complications which require long-term hospitalisation,” the authors said in the paper, which was published in the peer reviewed journal BMC Infectious Diseases.

While other pathogens have since overtaken mycoplasma pneumoniae as major causes of respiratory diseases among children, a directive issued by China’s State Council on Friday warned that pathogens causing influenza and mycoplasma pneumoniae would proliferate throughout this winter and into next spring.

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