| Literature DB >> 35514307 |
Michelle J Cole1, Michaela Day1, Susanne Jacobsson2, Andrew J Amato-Gauci3, Gianfranco Spiteri3, Magnus Unemo2,4.
Abstract
Because cefixime and ceftriaxone resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae and gonorrhoea treatment failures were increasing, a response plan to control and manage multidrug-resistant N. gonorrhoeae (MDR-NG) in Europe was published in 2012. The three main areas of the plan were to: (i) strengthen surveillance of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), (ii) implement monitoring of treatment failures and (iii) establish a communication strategy to increase awareness and disseminate AMR results. Since 2012, several additional extensively drug-resistant N. gonorrhoeae (XDR-NG) strains have emerged, and strains with high-level ceftriaxone resistance spread internationally. This prompted an evaluation and review of the 2012 European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) response plan, revealing an overall improvement in many aspects of monitoring AMR in N. gonorrhoeae; however, treatment failure monitoring was a weakness. Accordingly, the plan was updated in 2019 to further support European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) countries in controlling and managing the threat of MDR/XDR-NG in Europe through further strengthening of AMR surveillance and clinical management including treatment failure monitoring. The plan will be assessed biennially to ensure its effectiveness and its value. Along with prevention, diagnostic, treatment and epidemiological surveillance strategies, AMR surveillance is essential for effective control of gonorrhoea.Entities:
Keywords: EU/EEA; MDR-NG; XDR-NG; antimicrobial resistance; cephalosporins; gonorrhoea; surveillance; treatment failure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35514307 PMCID: PMC9074391 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2022.27.18.2100611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
Indicator responses from Euro-GASP participating countries, 2017 (n = 22a)
| Component | Indicator | Number of countries where indicator was met |
|---|---|---|
| Strengthen surveillance | National gonococcal antimicrobial surveillance programme in place | 18 |
| STI clinic network established (sentinel or other) | 19 | |
| National platform for sharing of information/data on gonorrhoea AMR established | 16 | |
| Assessment of laboratory capacity performed | 14 | |
| National training modules (laboratory and/or clinical) available | 6 | |
| Clinical management | Case definitions for gonorrhoea treatment failure agreed and implemented | 10 |
| National gonorrhoea treatment failure reporting/monitoring implemented | 9 | |
| Gonorrhoea clinical management guidelines reviewed and revised | 11 | |
| Recommended culture and AMR testing for cases of suspected treatment failure | 17 | |
| Communication strategy | National communication plan agreed | 7 |
| Fact sheet adjusted and disseminated | 9 | |
| National publications or communications on | 13 |
AMR: antimicrobial resistance; Euro-GASP: European Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme; MDR: multidrug-resistant; STI: sexually transmitted infection.
a Responses received from Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Euro-GASP indicators, 2012 vs 2017
| Component | Indicator | Indicators 2012 [ | Indicators 2017 [ | Indicator achieved/progress |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strengthen surveillance | Number of countries participating in Euro-GASP | 20/30 | 27/31 | Increased by seven countries |
| Number of isolates reported through | 1,927 (3.7% of reported gonorrhoea cases) | 3,248 (3.6% of reported gonorrhoea cases) | Increased by 41% (1,321 isolates) | |
| Number of laboratories participating in Euro-GASP EQA | 15 | 28 | Increased by 13 laboratories | |
| Number of countries participating in the laboratory training | No training in 2012; 13 in 2014 | 14 | Increased by one country | |
| Proportion of countries reporting epidemiological characteristics (mode of transmission) in Euro-GASP | 16/20 (based on transmission data) | 17/27 (based on transmission data) | Increased by one country (based on transmission data) | |
| Completeness of Euro-GASP data for key epidemiological characteristicsa | 85.9% completeness on average; 51.2% for mode of transmission | 87.7% completeness on average; 61.6% for mode of transmission | Increased by 1.8% for key variables and by 10.4% for mode of transmission | |
| Time between Euro-GASP data collection and publication of interim and annual reportb | 12 months | 9 months | Report published 3 months sooner | |
| Clinical management | Number of cases of gonorrhoea treatment failure reported in EPIS-STI (using the template) | Only two cases reported in EPIS-STI since publication of 2012 ECDC response plan | True number of treatment failures unknown, but number is an underestimate based on treatment failures reported in literature. | |
| Communication strategy | Number of publications or communications on MDR-NG | Nine peer-reviewed Euro-GASP publications, four in progress. Reports: molecular typing report, annual EQAs and Euro-GASP reports, laboratory capacity survey, training surveys, response plan. | ||
ECDC: European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control; EPIS-STI: Epidemic Intelligence Information System-Sexually Transmitted Infection; EQA: external quality assessment; Euro-GASP: European Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme; MDR-NG: multidrug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
a Average percentage completeness taken across all countries for age, sex, mode of transmission (sexual orientation) and site of infection.
b Data collection period is normally during the month of May in the year following isolate collection.
Indicators for monitoring drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae at national and EU/EEA levels
| Component | Indicator |
|---|---|
| Strengthen antimicrobial surveillance – EU/EEA level | 1.1 Number and proportion of EU/EEA countries participating in Euro-GASP |
| 1.2 Number of isolates reported through Euro-GASP | |
| 1.3 Number of laboratories participating in Euro-GASP EQA | |
| 1.4 Number of countries and professionals from these countries participating in the ECDC laboratory training | |
| 1.5 Proportion of countries reporting epidemiological characteristics in Euro-GASP | |
| 1.6 Completeness of Euro-GASP data for key epidemiological characteristics | |
| 1.7 Euro-GASP reporting protocol reviewed annually | |
| Strengthen antimicrobial surveillance – national level | 1.8 Presence of a national representative isolate collection |
| 1.9 Number of countries offering national training modules (laboratory and/or clinical) | |
| 1.10 Proportion of all STI clinics (sentinel sites) that have access to culture and antimicrobial susceptibility testing | |
| 1.11 Proportion of all (reported) gonorrhoea cases tested with culture and with antimicrobial susceptibility results available | |
| 1.12 Proportion of patients who received recommended gonorrhoea treatment | |
| Clinical management and treatment failure monitoring | 2.1 ECDC contributes to public health aspects of revision of the gonorrhoea patient management guidelines |
| 2.2 Online reporting template for probable and confirmed gonorrhoea treatment failures developed | |
| 2.3 Number of verified gonorrhoea treatment failures reported to ECDC | |
| Control strategy and communications | 3.1 Adoption of national plan to control MDR/XDR gonorrhoea or inclusion in gonorrhoea, STI, sexual health or other relevant strategy |
| 3.2 Number of visits to ECDC Response Plan website | |
| 3.3 Number of peer-reviewed publications or other communications on antimicrobial resistant |
ECDC: European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control; EQA: external quality assessment; EU/EEA: European Union/European Economic Area; Euro-GASP: European Gonococcal Antimicrobial Surveillance Programme; MDR: multidrug-resistant; STI: sexually transmitted infection; XDR: extensively drug-resistant.
To monitor the response at the national level, national-level indicators can be used or the EU/EEA level indicators can be adapted to local and national needs.