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tv   Frontline  PBS  July 8, 2015 4:00am-5:01am PDT

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>> narrator: tonight... >> we are seeing now the emergence globally of some forms of bacteria that are effectively untreatable. >> narrator: each year, at least two million people are infected with drug-resistant super bugs. >> they had asked me to sign the papers to let her go, and i did. >> narrator: and at least 23,000 die from them. >> he had some bugs that they had never seen before. >> narrator: frontline investigates how we got here. >> we immediately went on high alert, the equivalent of defcon 5. >> no matter what we did, the bacteria was still spreading. >> narrator: and why major drug companies are giving up on developing new antibiotics. >> you have to make some very ruthless decisions. >> these are not ruthless decisions.
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these are portfolio management decisions. our investors require that of us. >> narrator: and what happens now? >> there have been covers of magazines about "the end of antibiotics?"-- question mark. i would say you can change the title to "the end of antibiotics"-- period. >> narrator: tonight on frontline, "hunting the nightmare bacteria." >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support for frontline is provided by the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information is available at macfound.org. additional support is provided by the park foundation dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues. the ford foundation, working with visionaries on the front lines of social change worldwide. at fordfoundation.org.
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the wyncote foundation. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagler, and additional support from scott nathan and laura debonis. major funding for this program is provided by the kendeda fund. >> narrator: this is the story of three seemingly disconnected events beginning at the same time. what they each have in common is a type of infection that is becoming impossible to treat... a type of infection that has triggered deadly outbreaks, even at one of our most prestigious hospitals. it is a crisis that is spreading alarmingly fast, threatening everyone, even the healthy. (siren blaring)
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our first story starts in tucson, arizona, in may 2011. >> when i think about that time, i think about spring... and just, you know, how busy it was and how beautiful she was. she was 11 and a half years old and just physically perfect, beautiful from head to toe, slim, you know, white-blond hair from being out in the sun. a little bit of freckles across her nose, bright blue eyes paying attention to what her clothes looked like and her hair, never stopped talking, talked a mile a minute. that was addie, at that just, you know, in the month before she got sick. >> narrator: award-winning
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journalist david hoffman first heard about addie rerecich while investigating for frontline what doctors and government officials are now calling a "nightmare," a kind of dangerous bacteria that is increasingly resistant to the strongest antibiotics. this is what brought us to tucson... >> morning. >> hi, tonya, i'm david hoffman. >> narrator: ...to find out more about an astonishing set of events that began one sunday when addie complained to her mother about a pain in her hip. >> i thought, well, you know she's just finishing up softball. she had been to the track meet you know, all kind of, well, it could have been an injury. i gave her some ibuprofen. as the night wore on, her pain got worse. she didn't sleep much that night, woke me up a couple of times asking if she could take a hot bath or have another ibuprofen. >> narrator: the next morning,
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tonya rerecich, a nurse for 16 years, took addie to a local hospital, where they said she had symptoms of a virus. but over the next few days, the pain spread and the fever got worse. >> i was afraid at that point. i remember being very afraid and so i packed a bag and we went to another hospital that had specialized in children's care. i remember thinking, "she looks bad. this is bad. something's really, really wrong." they put her on antibiotics. they were... her blood pressure was dropping, they were making space in the icu for her. the next morning she needed oxygen via mask. they looked at part of her lungs and diagnosed her with pneumonia. i remember sitting there watching the sun come up and thinking, "how did she get so
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sick? how did this happen so fast?" >> i met addie in a hospital bed in the intensive care unit. she was lying there, breathing quickly. she was scared. she had little infected boils all over her body. what really looked most likely when i saw her was a staph bacteria causing septic shock.sh and addie fit a pattern that i recognized with community associated mrsa. >> hoffman: when you say "community," i mean, this is what you mean. a kid picks it up in a playground with a scraped knee, right? >> correct. >> narrator: the spread of mrsa, a staph bacteria that causes infections resistant to many antibiotics, has long been a big problem inside hospitals. but over the last two decades it's also been found outside, in the community. >> in addie's case, she was a a skin picker.
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she, as do many kids, picked at her little scabs. and that was likely what introduced the staph infection. >> narrator: but the staph was just the start of addie's troubles. >> she already had evidence of an early pneumonia. and it looked like she was about to get a lot sicker. >> i asked him what were the odds of her making it, getting well. >> hoffman: what did he say? >> he said 30%, but he had to think about it for a minute, and i knew he was lying to me. i knew. by the time your blood has bacteria in it, you're in real trouble. >> narrator: the staph infection had so damaged her lungs, the doctors had no choice. to save her life, they put her on a lung bypass machine called ecmo. >> i remember ying, "ecmo?"... with a squeaky voice, like "no, really? you're not really talking about
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ecmo." >> narrator: this was total life support. >> it's got huge tubes that are put into an artery and a vein and the patient's blood comes out of their body, runs through the machine and the machine does what your lung does. >> narrator: the tubes presented a whole new set of dangers. >> those tubes can harbor bacteria. >> ready? >> narrator: and one of thend dilemmas of modern medicine... >> good job! >> narrator: the interventions that can save you can also put you at serious risk. >> you did great! >> so any patient we put on ecmo has a much higher risk of having additional infections. that's just the nature of the beast. >> hoffman: is that what happened here? >> correct. >> hoffman: and she got a particularly nasty one. what was it called? >> stenotrophomonas. >> narrator: stenotrophomonas is an entirely different kind of bacteria from staph.
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>> does it hurt? >> narrator: found in hospitals, it can live inside breathing tubes, and it's extremely difficult to treat. >> the problem with stenotrophomonas is, even at the outset, it's already a very resistant bacteria. there are only four or maybe five antibiotics normally that are able to treat that particular bacteria. >> narrator: addie was confronting the frightening new face of antibiotic resistance: a group of bacteria called gram- negatives. >> hoffman: so can you explain to me why these gram-negatives are so stubbornly nasty? >> gram-negative bacteria, it's a medical term and it really references the armor that surrounds the gram-negative bacteria. that armor makes it veryve difficult for normal antibiotics to get into the bacteria and to kill it. >> so miss addie... >> so stenotrophomas is incredibly difficult to treat
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because it has that serious body armor surrounding it. >> are you guys going to come out and go that way? okay. >> narrator: the ability of gram-negatives to aggressively fight off antibiotics was now playing out in addie. >> hold the phone. >> she was first put on one antibiotic that's good for stenotrophomonas, and it worked for a while. and then guess what, the antibiotic doesn't work anymore. let's give her a different one. well, then it would, you know, work. a couple weeks-- three weeks-- and then the stenotrophomonas would sort of like bloom back up, rear its ugly head, so to speak. >> and you're doing great! you are. >> finally one day they said something i never thought i would hear. the stenotrophomonas is pan-resistant, "pan" meaning resistant to everything.
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like a panorama. >> narrator: addie and her mother had entered the post-antibiotic era. >> i had to go to her and say, "i don't have... i don't have options based on medical science. i have run out of options. i don't see a way out of this." >> i remember a long weekend went by and they had asked me to sign the papers to let her go and i did. >> narrator: but there was one hope left of saving addie's life: to remove the infection with surgery. >> i remember asking the doctors then about lung transplant. and they said "no." that it couldn't be done; that it would be too dangerous. >> the problem was that she was too sick to be transplanted. and that sounds a bit strange because you think of a transplant as the final life-saving thing you've got. but because of that resistant stenotrophomonas, the expected survival of transplanting her
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was not good. in fact, you might say close to zero. >> you're not going to blow bubbles? >> narrator: doctors faced a question of medical ethics-- whether to risk such a valuable resource as a young set of lungs when addie's chances of survival were so low. >> hoffman: what tipped the balance? >> i think it was addie's mom, tonya, who was such a strong advocate and didn't give up. >> ♪ happy birthday to you... ♪ >> and it was also the fact that this was not an unresponsive body lying on the table. this was a young girl who was communicating with us and had temper tantrums and sparks of life. which we could all see on the ecmo apparatus. i mean the... how can you say no to this, you know, living, alive human being who is communicating with you? >> i need a high-five.
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that's awesome! >> narrator: but addie would still have to wait in the intensive care unit, hoping to get a new set of lungs. as addie was fighting for her life, a 19-year-old american named david ricci was about to face another threat on the streets of india. >> so after 30 hours on a train, we finally ended up in calcutta. >> narrator: here, gram- negatives were spreading in frightening ways and coming from unexpected places. >> i wanted to experience another culture and put myself in an environment where i was serving, where i was helping people. i think, uh...
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india ended up changing me a lot more than i could have ever changed india. eight little monkeys jumping on the bed. >> narrator: he had come here with a mission group to work in orphanages. >> the momma called the doctor and the doctor said, "no more monkeys jumping on the bed." >> narrator: one morning, the group headed off to work at one of those orphanages, a mother teresa home. >> it was in the slums of the slums, really, where this orphanage was, so we had to walk through all of these narrow streets that i had never walked through before. >> and we basically took a shortcut through the train station. so you crossed over the tracks and then we were walking adjacent to the train tracks. and as we were going under an overpass... >> i was in the very back, walking, and all of a sudden you know, out of nowhere... >> a train went by and i noticed, i just remember thinng in my head that it went
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by, "wow, that went by rather quickly." >> the momentum and the speed hooked my sleeve and ran me over and dragged me underneath the train. the wheel ran over my leg and i start losing a ton of blood. i just started bleeding everywhere. >> narrator: ricci was pulled from under the train. lucky to be alive, he was rushed to a local hospital. a doctor came in. >> he reached up on the top shelf and he pulls out this leather bundle. and then, you know, he takes out a big knife-- you know, a big machete-type-looking saw-knife, and he just starts telling all the nurses to hold me down and to hold me steady and then he just started cutting my leg off. just hacking it off. >> we were standing outside and we could hear him screaming the whole time. >> and then i passed out. >> narrator: within 24 hours ricci was moved to another hospital and his condition
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deteriorated quickly. >> hey, everybody, i talked to the doctors. they said i don't have that much longer, but i'll put in a good word for you once i get there. >> narrator: ricci was barely hanging on. >> miss you all. >> narrator: and by the time his family reached india, there were new complications. >> they were just telling us we need to take him back in for another surgery. another surgery. and we didn't understand why. he almost had a surgery every day. and they, they said, you know, "we've got to clean up the infection." and, and so, you know, i just thought it's just an infection you know. i really didn't realize what they meant by infection. >> narrator: what ricci and his family didn't know was that they were on the front lines of a
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superbug crisis that was just beginning to unfold. >> the study which found the ndm-1 superbug in delhi's water samples is making the indian health establishment see red. >> narrator: researchers had discovered a new danger. >> bacteria carrying the gene that produces this ndm-1 enzyme are resistant to very powerful antibiotics. >> it absolutely was a bombshell. it was unexpected. >> the lancet infectious diseases journal found that ndm-1 enzyme in 11 different types of bacteria. >> narrator: ndm-1 isn't bacteria; it's actually a resistance gene that can turn bacteria into superbugs. ndm-1 is resistant to almost all antibiotics. even more frightening, it is promiscuous. the resistance gene can jump from bacteria to bacteria, making treatable infections suddenly untreatable.
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but there was more. ndm-1 wasn't just in hospitals. to everyone's surprise, it was found out in the environment too. >> first, from a scientific standpoint, we didn't realize that this could be done quite so easily. it meant that in places where water and sanitation was poor, where there was going to be lots of bacteria sitting next to each other, that you could have very rapid spread of resistance information across unrelated bacteria, just out there in the environment, which is a hugely greater risk than if it were only to happen within the bodies of patients who had these infections. >> hoffman: so you're saying that the bacteria were swapping this information just out there on the street without being in a person. >> that's correct. so they could transfer resistance genes even when they were in the same puddle of water. >> narrator: with the spread of ndm-1, a much wider population
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is put at risk. and what has health officials around the world especially worried is that ndm-1 is hardy and it travels. after two weeks in an indian hospital, david ricci was flown home to seattle, and taken to the trauma unit at harborview medical center. >> i first heard about david's case in july of 2011. i was sitting in my office doing some work and one of my colleagues, an orthopedic surgeon, dr. doug smith, gave me a call asking me if i had known about a patient up on one of our acute care floors with a number of drug-resistant pathogens. i brought up his medical record and saw a huge amount of drug resistance, drug resistance we don't typically see. all these r's mean that the bacteria is resistant to that antibiotic. knowing that david had come from india, i was immediately
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concerned, even before seeing david, about bacteria in the wound containing this new type of drug resistance. >> narrator: lab results confirmed lynch's worst fears. ricci had brought ndm-1 into the united states. it was one of the first cases to ever be identified here, and lynch had little to go on. >> there's not a lot of clinical experience for treating these bacteria, anywhere. in the literature, there's no books, there's no things on it. so we had to figure out what to do for david right then and there. >> i get this knock on my door and they open up the door and there's these doctors and they tell me, "we need to isolate you. we need to put you on your own and quarantine you." >> narrator: ricci was in the throes of the ndm-1 nightmare. the gene was spreading resistance to other infections in his leg. >> they showed us the list of them.
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there were about five bugs. and they said all these infections are resistant to antibiotics. and when they said that, that's what worried me because i'm like, how is he going to get rid of them? >> narrator: lynch tried several powerful antibiotics. but they didn't work. >> have you done any of the colistin-rifampin combinations? >> narrator: he had only one option left: a 1940s antibiotic called colistin. >> we went away from it because of its toxicity and the ability to use new antibiotics. the problem now is we don't have a lot of new options and we're going back to some of our older antibiotics. >> the hardest part was watching to see what the antibiotics did to him. >> it started to eat away at my organs on the inside, you know. i could just feel it, just this poison rushing through my blood. >> narrator: the treatment was too toxic. >> we had to stop the only drug we had left to treat the gram-negative rods that were in his wound.
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>> hoffman: so you're telling me that he had these bugs and you had nothing left to treat him with. >> at this point we had nothing left to treat him with. >> i just couldn't believe that there wasn't an antibiotic that would fix it, to tell you the truth. >> narrator: they would have to cut out more of the infection by cutting off more of ricci's leg. but it would be months before they knew whether all of the ndm-1 was gone. over the last ten years, hospitals in the new york city area have become the epicenter of another highly resistant and deadly type of gram-negative bacteria. this superbug didn't come from overseas; this one was homegrown. it lives in the digestive system and, like ndm-1, it's a gene
quote
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that can spread its resistance to other bacteria. it's called kpc. no one knows exactly how many patients in the new york city area have been infected with kpc... or how many have died from it. nationally, most hospitals aren't required to report outbreaks to the government and most won't talk publicly about them. but as part of frontline's investigation, one of the nation's most prestigious hospitals, the clinical center at the national institutes of health, the nih, agreed to recount how it dealt with a major kpc outbreak. (siren wailing) it began in the summer of 2011 when a woman carrying kpc was transferred from a new york city hospital, here, to the nih, in bethesda, maryland.
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>> talking about hospital infections is really difficult for a hospital because what you are saying is that we all know that when you come to the hospital there are certain risks. but we have now laid bare what are those risks. >> narrator: the nih had never treated a case of kpc before. and as the patient was brought into the icu, the staff was determined to keep the kpc from spreading to other patients. >> we immediately went on high alert, the equivalent of hospital epidemiology def-con 5. and we tried to implement as many things as we could think of, at the time, to prevent any further spread of the organism in the hospital. >> they called it kpc, and so we learned later that was klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase, and that's a mouthful. but we really didn't
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know what that meant. >> the patient was placed in what we call enhanced contact isolation, which means everybody who went in the room, including visitors, had to wear gloves and gowns. >> narrator: the room was at the end of the hall, separate from other patients. >> let me just check your blood sugar, okay? >> narrator: but this was the intensive care unit, where patients are very sick and highly vulnerable, and that presented heightened risks. >> it's the kind of place where the bacteria can spread with ease. people are very busy and there are a lot of things going on. patients get very sick very quickly and require intervention. the bacteria can be spread on the hands; they can be spread on pieces of equipment that might go from patient to patient. so you have to be really cautious. >> narrator: their efforts to contain the kpc appeared to work. when other icu patients were tested for kpc... >> we found nothing. so at that point we thought that there had not been spread of the
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bacteria. >> narrator: the new york patient ultimately recovered and was discharged after four weeks in the hospital. >> we really felt like we had dodged a bullet. >> narrator: but then, a big surprise. >> five weeks later, unexpectedly... >> could you do me a favor? could you get me just a tube fixator out of the r-t closet? >> a kpc bacteria turned up in a respiratory culture. >> narrator: and with it, a mystery. >> how this could have spread from the first patient to the second patient. >> they were not in the icu at the same time, they didn't have the same caregivers, they didn't have the same equipment, so initially we thought that it might be possible that this was a second introduction of yet another kpc organism. >> i was extremely concerned because the infections with these bacteria had a high mortality rate. >> narrator: as they began to investigate, searching for kpc
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on equipment and testing the patients yet again, they realized the problem was much bigger. >> we started finding other patients in the intensive care unit to whom the bacteria hadwh spread. >> narrator: they had an outbreak. the kpc was spreading. the patients were getting sicker. and antibiotics weren't working. >> and we tried combinations of five, six antibiotics. we tried making oral antibiotics into intravenous antibiotics. we even got an investigational antibiotic from a pharmaceutical company. >> hoffman: an experimental one, a test one. >> an experimental antibiotic, and that also did not work. >> narrator: desperate to contain the outbreak the hospital took unprecedented steps. they created a separate icu for
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kpc patients, brought in robots to disinfect empty rooms. >> had monitors here reminding us to wash our hands built a whole wall up in the other side. we moved every patient in the icu, completely cleaned it moved patients back in and no matter what we did, the bacteria was still... it was still spreading. >> we didn't know what was going on. >> narrator: with the hospital in crisis, genetic researchers in building 49 next door were scrambling to figure out how the kpc was spreading. >> we had now gotten to the point where they were identifying a patient a week and it was not clear how these patients might be related to each other. >> narrator: julie segre and her colleague evan snitkin started to compare the dna samples of the kpc taken from the patients. >> are these all the dnas then? >> yeah, these are all the... >> narrator: each patient had a number.
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>> so this shows you, based on the dna sequences, how we think the bacteria spread throughout the hospital. >> narrator: by matching the dna, they discovered something none of them knew. >> three, four and eight were all silent carriers, and what's scary about that is they can be transmitting to other patients without anyone knowing that they even have the bacteria themselves. so this bacteria seemed to have been all over the hospital before they had come up positive. >> hoffman: and the hospital didn't know that? >> they didn't know because this bacteria has the capacity to live in the stomach of patients without causing infections. >> for me, the data were stunning. >> hoffman: why was it stunning? >> because it became very clear that we had missed the transmission sequence. >> narrator: the high-tech genomics revealed a disturbing truth: the outbreak would be much more difficult to contain. and to stop it, they needed to figure out exactly how the kpc was moving through the hospital. was it on the hands of workers?
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or visitors? or on hospital equipment? and then, as they urgently searched for silent carriers throughout the rest of the hospital, their worst nightmare came true. the outbreak had spread beyond the icu. >> that's a very scary moment. suddenly, it's in the general patient population. >> narrator: the staff was in a panic. as they looked on helplessly patients began to die. (monitor beeping) >> we felt responsible for it. we are responsible for the patients. you go into a room and maybe there's a hole in your glove. it's a very complex environment, alarms are ringing, did you miss something? did you forget to tell the doctor something? did i forget to wash my hands between mr. x and mrs. y? is that why mrs. y got kpc? >> narrator: there were few options left.
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>> dr. gallin asked me if we needed to close the hospital or if we needed to close the hospital to admissions. ultimately we decided not to close the hospital, but... >> hoffman: but it was a possibility? >> absolutely. >> narrator: instead, they expanded testing hospital-wide and isolated all those found with kpc. finally, six months after patient one first arrived, the outbreak subsided, almost as suddenly as it had begun. by then, 18 patients had been infected with kpc and the ultimate tragedy: six people had died from it. many inside nih continued to be concerned. >> hoffman: do you think kpc is now gone from your hospital? >> oh no, absolutely not. i think that, that we have to be extremely vigilant in the coming years.
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because of the increasing rise the increasing prevalence of kpcs in the united states. >> one of the reasons that really brought me into this field is that i asked the director of clinical microbiology what do you do, you know, when you isolate one of these bacteria and you see that it is resistant to all known known antibiotics. i said, "well, what do you do then?" and he said, "i pray." well, that's not really part of how we typically-- that means that we have come to the end of how we practice medicine with drugs. >> narrator: the prospect of life without antibiotics is barely imaginable for a world that has had a cheap and plentiful supply of them since the end of world war ii. they are a staple of modern medicine. it's hard to recall a time without them, when an infected cut could kill a healthy young
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person in a matter of days. but it's now clear that we are heading back in that direction that the miracle of these drugs is slipping away. >> antibiotics are unique drugs. they're not like any other class of drugs. 50 years from today the cholesterol drugs we have now will work just as well as they work today. the cancer drugs we have now will work just as well as they do today. that's true of all the other drug classes. antibiotics are the only class of drugs that the more we use, the more rapidly we lose. when you use it, it becomes less effective for me and vice versa. >> narrator: that is the essence of antibiotic resistance. >> the more you expose a bacteria to an antibiotic, the greater the likelihood that resistance to that antibiotic is going to develop. so the more antibiotics we put into people, we put into the environment, the more opportunities we create for
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these bacteria to become resistant. >> narrator: but people forgot about the danger of resistance because the drugs were so effective. >> and what they had forgotten was the warning that alexander fleming himself, the man who discovered penicillin, gave us in 1945-- that resistance was already being seen and the more we wasted penicillin, the more people were going to die of penicillin-resistant infections. >> bacterial resistance is largely inevitable. but it is also something that we have certainly helped along the way. we've fueled this fire of bacterial resistance. these drugs are miracle drugs, these antibiotics that we have, but we haven't taken good care of them. >> narrator: public health officials estimate that up to half of all antibiotic use in the u.s. is either unnecessary or inappropriate. >> and in overusing these antibiotics, we have set ourselves up for the scenario
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that we find ourselves in now, where we're running out of antibiotics. >> narrator: but the growing scarcity of effective antibiotics isn't just a problem of overuse. it's also been driven by what's happening inside the drug industry itself. >> the place where it started to turn really challenging, i'd say, would be in the '80s and the '90s, when we began to see occasional bacteria that were very hard to treat. and it became less obvious that you were able to invent new antibiotics. and the brand new things just weren't coming at the same pace. and then in the '90s and the first part of this century, we began to see resistant bacteria for which we really didn't have very much or anything at all. and we had nothing coming to treat them. >> narrator: that's because most major drug companies weree pulling out of the antibiotic research field just as the gram-negative threat was worsening.
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one of the last companies to stay was pfizer, which had made its name on antibiotics. by the mid-2000s, it had set its sights squarely on the gram-negative problem. >> we thought there was medical need. that's what really matters. and we thought that given our history and being able to develop penicillin, the anti-fungals, you know antibiotics, that in fact, if we put our minds to it, that we would succeed. but this is a highly risky and unpredictable enterprise. >> narrator: despite the risk,>> pfizer built a world-class research team in groton, connecticut, and brought in a veteran in gram-negative research: john quinn. >> in 1983, when i finished my training, almost every pharmaceutical company had an antibiotic development team and by the time i landed at pfizer in 2008, we were really down to three big guys and some smaller companies
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bio-techs and so on. and i think all of us felt that, you know, we had a moral obligation to continue to work in this area. there was a pressing clinical need. most companies had abandoned the field and we were still in the game. we were proud to still be in the game. >> narrator: quinn and his team believed they were on to something big-- several different compounds to treat gram-negatives. the potential breakthroughs got the attention of the company's science advisors, including brad spellberg. >> i felt that their pipeline was probably the most comprehensive and important anti-bacterial pipeline in the world, focusing on the types of bacteria that we're really having severe problems with right now. >> hoffman: which are the...? >> the highly resistant gram-negative bacteria. these would have solved problems and saved lives had they been successfully developed. >> narrator: but bringing these drugs to market faced the economic paradox of antibiotics.
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>> if you need an antibiotic you need it only briefly. indeed, that's the correct way to use an antibiotic. you use it only briefly. and from an economic standpoint of a developer that means you're not getting the return on the investment you've made, because you've spent between $600 million and $1 billion to bring that new antibiotic to market. >> hoffman: wait, you mean it costs up to a billion dollars to bring a new drug to market. >> it can easily cost up to a billion dollars to bring a new drug to the market. and the initial reaction to it is, "that's great and let's not use it. let's use it as little as possible." >> so here is a large company saying, "i can make billions off cholesterol drugs, blood pressure drugs, arthritis drugs, dementia, things that i know patients are going to have to take every day for the rest of their lives. why would i put my r&d dollars into the antibiotic division that isn't going to make me any money, when i can put it over here?" >> so here's the deal. >> that's going to make a lot of money for the company. i answer to the shareholders. >> narrator: that was the problem facing pfizer in 2011.
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>> don't kid yourself. >> narrator: its stock had plummeted on wall street, and its blockbuster cholesterol drug, lipitor, was about to lose its patent. >> i received an email on my blackberry that there was a mandatory emergency meeting in two hours-- can't be good. so i called in for the meeting and was told that the announcement had been made that the groton facility was going to be closed. >> narrator: the company ended 70 years of leadership in antibiotic development, leaving its search for a gram-negative cure unfinished. >> the external people who i spoke to, many of whom are personal friends, said to me "well, pfizer's just doing what other companies have done. there's nothing particularly wrong with that. it's not immoral. we are a capitalist society." >> narrator: frontline asked pfizer to explain the decision. >> hoffman: i get the sense that you have to make some very ruthless decisions about where to put the company's capital
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about where to invest, where to put your emphasis. when you pulled out of gram-negative research like that and shifted to vaccines, do you look back on that and say, you know, "we learned something about this"? >> these are not ruthless decisions. these are, you know, portfolio decisions about how we can serve medical need in the best way. we want to stay, you know, in the business of providing new therapeutics for the future. our investors require that of us; i think society wants a pfizer to be doing what we do in 20 years. we make portfolio management decisions. >> it takes a long time to learn to make any class of drug. when a major company leaves an area, we really do have a loss of skills, of history in terms of understanding how to develop a new antibiotic. >> hoffman: the antibiotic pipeline is drying up, some people say. >> i think it's worse than drying up. >> hoffman: really?
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>> i think it is terribly close to a drought. this is one of the great catastrophes of our age. >> narrator: widespread antibiotic resistance has been a long time in the making. and with the pharmaceutical industry pulling back from developing new antibiotics serious questions are now being raised about whether the u.s. government is prepared to confront the problem. >> hoffman: dr. srinivasan, i'm just thinking back a little bit about history that when we do have big challenges in public health, oftentimes we've tackled them in a big way. i'm thinking about, for example, hiv/aids and how we tackled that problem, and it required a lot of effort and people were in charge. and i took a look the other day at the research levels devoted to the problem of antimicrobial resistance at nih. antimicrobial resistance is way down the list. >> right. >> hoffman: it's actually number 70 on their list.
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what does that say about the priority? >> well, i think what that points to is the fact that, you know, our research in this area has lagged. we're going to have to do a lot more in the area of antimicrobial resistance. you know, i think for a long time, we weren't investing a lot in antimicrobial resistance because we always had new antibiotics to combat the problem. >> hoffman: we got complacent. >> in a sense, i think we did. you know, there were always new drugs to treat these infections and so i think the need to do basic research on antimicrobial resistance moved down our priority list. >> narrator: but with the spread of gram-negatives fast accelerating, with new outbreaks of kpc and the rise of ndm-1, last march the centers for disease control and prevention decided it was time to sound a loud alarm. >> we now turn to health news tonight. >> there's a warning from the cdc. >> new and extremely dangerous. >> superbug, it's a deadly
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nightmare bacteria. >> that even the cdc has called it a nightmare. >> a nightmare? at first i thought that was someone else's hyperbolic headline. until i saw it was the cdc. >> the cdc is usually very straight-laced and doesn't use words like that. >> hoffman: if this is a really big public health problem, who's in charge of this problem for the united states government? can you tell me who's in charge? >> who's in charge of resistance? >> hoffman: of antimicrobial resistance and fighting it and it's a threat to public health, right? >> it is a threat. >> hoffman: so who's in charge with dealing with that? with coordinating it? >> well, i think that the issue of who's in charge of combating antimicrobial resistance speaks to the fact that this is a very, very complex problem. so there's not one single group that can take full ownership of solving the problem of resistance. >> hoffman: when i look at the department of health and human services, for example, i look at the assistant secretaries, there's not an assistant secretary who deals with antimicrobial resistance. there is for other kinds of health problems.
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it seems that this is a problem that hasn't actually registered in the high levels of the government. it's a crisis, you said. >> it is a crisis. it's indeed a crisis. there are a variety of different issues that have to be addressed. they require a variety of different actions by all of the different federal agencies who are involved in this. >> it's not that the government agencies are not aware of the problem and are not doing anything. it's that we have not had a comprehensive plan for how to deal with antibiotic resistance. we don't have reporting mechanisms like they do in europe to know where resistance is occurring... who is using the antibiotics. are we overusing them? >> hoffman: wait, you're telling me we don't know the answers to the extent of the problem? we don't have the data?ta >> that is correct. i do not know how many resistant infections are occurring rit now. i don't know what the frequency of resistance in different bacteria are. we do not have those data.
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>> narrator: frontline requested an interview with the secretary of health and human services kathleen sebelius. we wanted to ask about the lack of data and about the priority the department is giving to the new superbug crisis. but she declined to be interviewed. the cdc now estimates that every year at least two million people are infected with resistant bacteria. and at least 23,000 die from these infections-- that's more than die from aids every year. it is a stark yet incomplete picture. >> so this is a hidden epidemic. it's a hidden epidemic because there's nowhere on your death certificate that would say that such and such person died of an infection that could not be treated. and if it's not a cause of death, then it's not something that people recognize as something that actually killed them. if people were dying because of drug-resistant infections and they had a big x on their
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foreheads which said that they had drug-resistant infections, trust me, there would be policy action. >> narrator: it's been two years since kpc first came to nih. but as it turns out, the hospital never did fully rid itself of the deadly superbug. last year, a young man came to nih because of complications from a bone marrow transplant. while he was there, he contracted kpc and died, the seventh victim of the outbreak. >> i guess if i had a major message it would be that it's never going to end. so, this organism and organisms like this are going to be with us till the cows come home and we have to learn how to deal with them. we have to change our culture in the hospital. >> narrator: kpc has been found
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in hospitals in at least 44 states. but that's just from the hospitals that are reporting it. ♪ ♪ as for david ricci, it's been two years since his last operation. it had taken three surgeries and another round of highly toxic antibiotics before doctors believed they had removed all the ndm-1 from his leg. >> there's no muscle left on it and i've only got about six inches left and the bone stops there. >> narrator: so far, ricci has remained healthy, though not entirely free from the fear of ndm-1. >> you know, my doctors were pretty straightforward with me and they were very honest and
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said there is a good chance that this infection might not go away. >> hoffman: might not ever go away? >> yeah. they said, "we don't have enough experience to know what's going to happen." >> narrator: ndm-1 has now spread to at least 48 countries. here in the u.s., there were 16 new cases identified by the cdc last year. this year, that number has already more than doubled. >> hoffman: so david was actually sort of a harbinger of something to come. >> david was an example of something that's already here. so there are entire continents that have this major problem. public health problem already. david was simply a sample of that population in... new to us and that's key because hospitals in any city in the country are going to have
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patients from all over the world. that globalization, that mobility is going on now. this is already here. >> all right, addie, let there be light. this is the day that the lord has made. >> narrator: it's also been two years for addie rerecich. >> yeah, but it's like not fun. let there be no light whatsoever. >> narrator: two years since she came home after receiving a new set of lungs. >> hi. >> it was like bringing home a premature baby. we brought home monitors and she couldn't do anything for herself. she couldn't even turn over in the bed. she couldn't turn side to side. that's how weak and contracted and debilitated she was. >> hoffman: so how are you doing now? >> basically, i'm fine. nothing seems out of whack right now. i seem... i feel pretty good.
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i look pretty much like i did before. i have all my friends back. >> hoffman: did you understand what was happening to you or... >> uh-uh. no. >> hoffman: did anybody talk about infection and what that... what infection meant? >> no. basically, what i was told is i'd say i want to go home and she'd say... she'd say i couldn't make the the drive home, ever, like i was too sick to go home. >> everything's hard for addie now. everything's a battle. she has to take a handful of pills twice a day. we have to worry constantly about picking up a bacteria or a virus. she's had pneumonia five times in the past two years. bacterial pneumonia, that d
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to be treated with antibiotics and every time i wonder, is this the time that we're going to come up against a bacteria that they don't have anything to treat it with? (children singing) >> i think for lung transplants, the survival rate, about 80% make it a year and about 50% make it five years. and every year after that, the risks just go up. >> let's bow our heads in prayer. >> hoffman: people might say "the story of addie is horrible but that won't happen to my daughter." is this-- could this happen to anybody? >> it happened to addie. she was healthy. it could happen to anybody. it could happen to your next-door neighbor. it could happen to your child. it could happen to anybody. now i'm not here to practice doomsday thinking, but those bacteria are out there and they're out there in healthy
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people in the community. >> if you don't mind standing up, you can walk around and please greet each other. >> can we? >> sure. the average person thinks, "oh, i have an infection. i take an antibiotic. i get better." yeah, it's not that simple anymore. >> good morning, caleb. >> how you doing, sweetheart? >> i'm good. thank you. >> addie didn't get better did she? >> no, she never did get better, really. she didn't. she had to have surgery and take the infection out, but... >> hoffman: it may have saved her life? >> mm-hmm. for now. bought her time. that's what happened. we bought her some time, and i am grateful for every minute of it. (children singing) >> hi, i'm addie. i don't think we've ever met.
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>> i remember you. i know i've seen you somewhere before. >> yeah, me too. (laughs) >> were you my nurse? >> yeah. >> next time on frontline... they live under the veil in fear. >> were they also raping the nine-year old? >> with undercover footage, frontline shows the islamic state's brutal treatment of women. and follows an underground network helping them escape. a frontline special report. >> go to pbs.org/frontline to learn more about the worst super bugs and how to protect yourself. >> we have to be extremely vigilant. >> track the outbreak at the nih as it spread throughout the hospital.
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i fix my coffee, i walk my dog. ♪ i go to the computer i check my email. ♪ then i come downstairs and start cutting paper or printing paper. ♪ if i've really got my groove on i'll work on big canvases. ♪ if the groove just isn't working that day, i'll do more rudimentary things like prepping panels