IntroductionInappropriate antibiotic use is a major driver of antimicrobial resistance. However, the scope of literature and its prevalence across world regions remain largely unknown, as do the most common indicators and study designs used. In this study, we summarised the current literature on inappropriate use of antibiotics by world regions. We also provided the first global estimates of the overall amount of antibiotics that are potentially used inappropriately each year. MethodsWe considered both patient and provider-mediated inappropriate antibiotic use. We reviewed 412 studies published between 2000 and 2021 and used beta regression and marginal contrasts to compare prevalence of inappropriate use by study design, indicator, world region, and national income level. Country-level sales of antibiotics from 2022 were combined with inappropriate antibiotic use estimates derived from two study designs (clinical audits and patient interviews) and one indicator (lack of indication) to estimate the amount of antibiotics inappropriately used globally. ResultsClinical audits (50.1%, 208/412) and ‘non-prescription’ use (37.1%, 153/412) were the most common study design and indicator, respectively, used to estimate inappropriate antibiotic use. Inappropriate antibiotic use prevalence was ~6% higher in low-income and middle-income than in high-income countries. However, this difference disappeared after accounting for a proxy of access to care: physicians per capita. Globally, based on clinical audits, patient interviews and lack of indication, the estimated proportion of inappropriate antibiotic use was 29.5%, 36.5% and 30.8%, respectively, with an average of ~30% (~13 000 000 kg) the equivalent of the annual antibiotic consumption in China. ConclusionsInappropriate antibiotic use is highly prevalent across all countries regardless of national income level, with a third of global antibiotic consumption potentially due to unnecessary prescription (‘lack of indication’). Antibiotic stewardship efforts and defining internationally standardised indicators are needed to track progress in reducing the occurrence of inappropriate antibiotic use where necessary, as well as identifying gaps in access to care.
more »
« less
Biomimetic antimicrobial polymers: recent advances in molecular design
The increasing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections, coupled with the decline in the number of new antibiotic drug approvals, has created a therapeutic gap that portends an emergent public health crisis.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 1653418
- PAR ID:
- 10065009
- Publisher / Repository:
- Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Polymer Chemistry
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 18
- ISSN:
- 1759-9954
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 2407 to 2427
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Antibiotic resistance is a public health crisis. Antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are present in drinking water distribution systems. Metals are known selective pressures for antibiotic resistance, and metallic corrosion products are found within drinking water distribution systems due to the corrosion of metal pipes. While corrosion products are a source of metals, the impact of specific corrosion products on antibiotic resistance has not been investigated. The objective of this study was to determine the impact of six corrosion products—CuO, Cu2O, Pb5(PO4)3OH, b-PbO2, Fe3O4, and a-FeOOH—on the abundance of ARB and ARGs. Lab-scale microcosms were seeded with source water from Lake Michigan and amended with individual corrosion products. In general, copper and lead corrosion products increased antibiotic resistance, although not universally across different ARB and ARG types. Concentration and speciation of copper and lead corrosion products were found to have an impact on antibiotic resistance profiles. Meanwhile, iron corrosion products had minimal impact on antibiotic resistance. Overall, this study sheds light on how pipe materials may impact antibiotic resistance as a result of corrosion products.more » « less
-
Zhang, Xue (Ed.)ABSTRACT Bacterial growth and metabolic rates are often closely related. However, under antibiotic selection, a paradox in this relationship arises: antibiotic efficacy decreases when bacteria are metabolically dormant, yet antibiotics select for resistant cells that grow fastest during treatment. That is, antibiotic selection counterintuitively favors bacteria with fast growth but slow metabolism. Despite this apparent contradiction, antibiotic resistant cells have historically been characterized primarily in the context of growth, whereas the extent of analogous changes in metabolism is comparatively unknown. Here, we observed that previously evolved antibiotic-resistant strains exhibited a unique relationship between growth and metabolism whereby nutrient utilization became more efficient, regardless of the growth rate. To better understand this unexpected phenomenon, we used a simplified model to simulate bacterial populations adapting to sub-inhibitory antibiotic selection through successive bottlenecking events. Simulations predicted that sub-inhibitory bactericidal antibiotic concentrations could select for enhanced metabolic efficiency, defined based on nutrient utilization: drug-adapted cells are able to achieve the same biomass while utilizing less substrate, even in the absence of treatment. Moreover, simulations predicted that restoring metabolic efficiency would re-sensitize resistant bacteria exhibiting metabolic-dependent resistance; we confirmed this result using adaptive laboratory evolutions ofEscherichia coliunder carbenicillin treatment. Overall, these results indicate that metabolic efficiency is under direct selective pressure during antibiotic treatment and that differences in evolutionary context may determine both the efficacy of different antibiotics and corresponding re-sensitization approaches. IMPORTANCEThe sustained emergence of antibiotic-resistant pathogens combined with the stalled drug discovery pipelines highlights the critical need to better understand the underlying evolution mechanisms of antibiotic resistance. To this end, bacterial growth and metabolic rates are often closely related, and resistant cells have historically been characterized exclusively in the context of growth. However, under antibiotic selection, antibiotics counterintuitively favor cells with fast growth, and slow metabolism. Through an integrated approach of mathematical modeling and experiments, this study thereby addresses the significant knowledge gap of whether antibiotic selection drives changes in metabolism that complement, and/or act independently, of antibiotic resistance phenotypes.more » « less
-
Bradford, Patricia A (Ed.)ABSTRACT Corrosion inhibitors, including zinc orthophosphate, sodium orthophosphate, and sodium silicate, are commonly used to prevent the corrosion of drinking water infrastructure. Metals such as zinc are known stressors for antibiotic resistance selection, and phosphates can increase microbial growth in drinking water distribution systems (DWDS). Yet, the influence of corrosion inhibitor type on antimicrobial resistance in DWDS is unknown. Here, we show that sodium silicates can decrease antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs), while zinc orthophosphate increases ARB and ARGs in source water microbial communities. Based on controlled bench-scale studies, zinc orthophosphate addition significantly increased the abundance of ARB resistant to ciprofloxacin, sulfonamides, trimethoprim, and vancomycin, as well as the genessul1,qacEΔ1, an indication of resistance to quaternary ammonium compounds, and the integron-integrase geneintI1. In contrast, sodium silicate dosage at 10 mg/L resulted in decreased bacterial growth and antibiotic resistance selection compared to the other corrosion inhibitor additions. Source water collected from the drinking water treatment plant intake pipe resulted in less significant changes in ARB and ARG abundance due to corrosion inhibitor addition compared to source water collected from the pier at the recreational beach. In tandem with the antibiotic resistance shifts, significant microbial community composition changes also occurred. Overall, the corrosion inhibitor sodium silicate resulted in the least selection for antibiotic resistance, which suggests it is the preferred corrosion inhibitor option for minimizing antibiotic resistance proliferation in DWDS. However, the selection of an appropriate corrosion inhibitor must also be appropriate for the water chemistry of the system (e.g., pH, alkalinity) to minimize metal leaching first and foremost and to adhere to the lead and copper rule. IMPORTANCEAntibiotic resistance is a growing public health concern across the globe and was recently labeled the silent pandemic. Scientists aim to identify the source of antibiotic resistance and control points to mitigate the spread of antibiotic resistance. Drinking water is a direct exposure route to humans and contains antibiotic-resistant bacteria and associated resistance genes. Corrosion inhibitors are added to prevent metallic pipes in distribution systems from corroding, and the type of corrosion inhibitor selected could also have implications on antibiotic resistance. Indeed, we found that sodium silicate can minimize selection of antibiotic resistance while phosphate-based corrosion inhibitors can promote antibiotic resistance. These findings indicate that sodium silicate is a preferred corrosion inhibitor choice for mitigation of antibiotic resistance.more » « less
An official website of the United States government
