The mainstay of therapy for gonococcal infections is antimicrobial therapy. Gonorrhea treatment is complicated by the ability of N. gonorrhoeae to develop resistance to antimicrobials, therefore a combination therapy with Azithromycin and a Cephalosporin is used to improve treatment efficacy and potentially slow the emergence and spread of resistance.
The mainstay of therapy for gonococcal infections is antimicrobial therapy.
Gonorrhea treatment is complicated by the ability of Neisseria gonorrhoeae to develop resistance to antimicrobials, therefore a combination therapy with Azithromycin and a Cephalosporin is used to improve treatment efficacy and potentially slow the emergence and spread of resistance.
High-level resistance to these expanded-spectrum cephalosporins is now reported, and it seems developing another effective treatment has become unaffordable.
Although new combination antibiotic treatments are being evaluated. There are no affordable alternative therapeutic options currently available for the treatment of gonococcal disease. and it seems even newly developed antibiotics will be short solution and may be developed resistance as well.
The drug resistance may be developed by following mechanisms:
Five isolates with decreased ceftriaxone susceptibility (MIC 0.5 lg/ml) include:
San Diego, California (1987)
Cincinnati, Ohio (1992 and 1993)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1997)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (2012)
from 2006–2012, the prevalence of elevated Ceftriaxone (MICs) was higher in isolates from Men Who have Sex With Men (MSM) than from Men Who have Sex With women (MSW)
In 1992, Cefixime susceptibility testing began and was discontinued in 2007
In 2009, Cefixime susceptibility testing was restarted due to lack of drug supply in the United States
From 2006 to 2010, ceftixim Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) increased from 0.1 to 1.4
from 2006–2012, the prevalence of elevated cefixime (MICs) was higher in isolates from Men Who have Sex With Men (MSM) than from Men Who have Sex With women (MSW)