Research develops new tool to treat deadly superbug | UniSC | University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

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Research develops new tool to treat deadly superbug

World-leading software that can both detect and predict antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in one of nature’s toughest and deadliest superbugs has been developed by a University of the Sunshine Coast-led research team.

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common bacterium found in water and soil that can cause human infections ranging from swimmer’s ear and skin inflammation to deadly pneumonia, sepsis, lung failure and bone disease.

A leading cause of bacterial mortality globally, the pathogen’s innate resistance to many antibiotics, and its ability to develop resistance to newer antibiotics, makes it difficult to treat.

The software breakthrough follows six years of collaborative laboratory, clinical and bioinformatics work led by UniSC Centre for Bioinnovation members Associate Professor Erin Price and Dr Derek Sarovich and their UniSC PhD graduate Dr Danielle Madden at the Sunshine Coast Health Institute.

Associate Professor Erin Price and Dr Derek Sarovich working in the SCHI lab. Photos Jamie Farnell

'If our software becomes widely used, doctors could better target their antibiotic prescriptions, which in turn could lessen antibiotic overuse and slow AMR development across populations' - Erin Price

The innovative software uses whole-genome sequencing of the pathogen’s DNA to identify the precise genetic changes that cause AMR.

This new ability to predict the pathogen’s resistance to 10 of the most clinically important antibiotics will allow medical professionals to diagnose P. aeruginosa AMR infections earlier and more accurately, enabling faster and more effective treatment options.

Dr Price, a molecular geneticist and microbiologist, said it was a potential game-changer in helping doctors decide what type of antibiotics to prescribe to patients with P. aeruginosa infection.

PCR equipment shows infection levels (in red)

“Antimicrobial resistance is a global health epidemic that requires urgent mitigation to avoid a post-antibiotic era, where simple infections cannot be treated with antimicrobials that once revolutionised modern medicine,” she said.

“If unmitigated, AMR infections are predicted to cause 10 million deaths globally by 2050 and cost more than $100 trillion a year.

“Earlier and more accurate diagnosis is crucial, particularly in such a dangerous and highly multi-drug-resistant pathogen.

“Our new software provides a rapid and highly accurate method for AMR identification in P. aeruginosa.

“It is already available to hospitals with onsite genome sequencing capacity, and hopefully this technology will also become routine in GP clinics in future.

“If our software becomes widely used, doctors could better target their antibiotic prescriptions, which in turn could lessen antibiotic overuse and slow AMR development across populations.”

UniSC PhD graduate Danielle Madden uses a multichannel pipette in the SCHI lab.

The team’s paper has just been published in Genome Medicine with co-authors Dr Tim Baird of Sunshine Coast University Hospital, Dr Kate McCarthy of Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, and Professor Scott Bell of The Prince Charles Hospital.

Dr Sarovich, a molecular microbiologist and bioinformaticist, said the research found the new software tool was far superior to existing AMR detection software in terms of accuracy and precision.

“It produces results close to the current ‘gold standard’ in antimicrobial susceptibility testing, which is achieved through a slow, laborious method,” he said.

“We tested the software in both Australian and international strain datasets, so it will have excellent use in diagnostic, public health, research, and pathogen surveillance laboratories both here and abroad.

“It could also be applied in agriculture, veterinary practice and environmental settings, as the pathogen also causes disease in plants and in horses, livestock and companion animals.”

Dr Madden said working on the ARDaP software project during her UniSC PhD was inspiring.

“It was rewarding to see theoretical research applied directly to solve real-world problems,” she said.

“The collaboration between laboratory researchers, clinicians and bioinformaticians was key to our success and highlights the importance of interdisciplinary approaches in tackling complex challenges like AMR.”

The research was supported by Advance Queensland, Wishlist Sunshine Coast Health Foundation, and National Health and Medical Research Council.

The researchers examine bacterial growth in plates of clinical samples.

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