Common antibiotic use linked to rise of ‘almost untreatable’ superbug
- class1group10term12
- Oct 29, 2024
- 2 min read
Rifaximin is commonly used to treat liver disease
A common antibiotic used to treat liver disease could give rise to an “almost untreatable” superbug, scientists warned in a new study.
The antibiotic, rifaximin, has enabled the global emergence of vancomycin-resistant enterococcus faecium, or VRE, a superbug that frequently causes serious infections in hospitalised patients, according to an eight-year-long study published in the journal Nature.
The international team of researchers behind the study warn that the use of rifaximin is driving bacterial resistance to daptomycin, one of the last effective treatment options against VRE infections.
The findings challenge the long-held belief that rifaximin poses “low risk” for causing antibiotic resistance.

Rifaximin antibiotics and VRE bacteria on a petri dish (Adrianna Turner)
The researchers emphasise the need to better understand the negative impacts of antibiotic use and to reinforce their responsible use in clinical practice.
They are concerned that these superbugs could be transmitted to other patients in the hospital.
In the latest study, the researchers found changes in the DNA of daptomycin-resistant VRE that were absent in susceptible strains.
Subsequent analysis revealed that rifaximin’s use caused these changes and sparked the emergence of daptomycin-resistant VRE.

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