Study Finds Cipro Antibiotic Disrupts Gut Bacteria for Up to a Year, Fuels Resistance

May 6, 2025
Study Finds Cipro Antibiotic Disrupts Gut Bacteria for Up to a Year, Fuels Resistance
  • A recent study published in Nature reveals that a five-day course of the antibiotic Cipro can disrupt gut bacteria for up to a year.

  • Conducted by Stanford University, the research involved 60 healthy adults who took 500 mg of Cipro for five days, with stool samples collected over a 20-week period.

  • The study found that antibiotic use leads to persistent antibiotic resistance in gut bacteria that lasts for over 10 weeks, with some cases detectable for up to one year.

  • Researchers identified 513 bacterial populations exhibiting genetic mutations linked to fluoroquinolone resistance, indicating adaptive evolution in response to the antibiotic.

  • This research underscores the importance of monitoring gut microbiome composition to reduce antibiotic resistance and improve antibiotic stewardship.

  • Antimicrobial resistance is a pressing global health concern, linked to millions of deaths annually and predicted to kill nearly 40 million people by 2050.

  • The proliferation of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is outpacing the development of new antibiotics, exacerbating the issue.

  • Dr. Eitan Yaffe led the research team, which sequenced genomes of more than 5,600 bacterial species and analyzed over 2.3 million sequence variants.

  • Antibiotic overprescribing, especially in pediatrics and nursing homes, contributes significantly to the rise of antibiotic-resistant infections.

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