| Literature DB >> 11971765 |
Marc Lipsitch1, Matthew H Samore.
Abstract
The need to stem the growing problem of antimicrobial resistance has prompted multiple, sometimes conflicting, calls for changes in the use of antimicrobial agents. One source of disagreement concerns the major mechanisms by which antibiotics select resistant strains. For infections like tuberculosis, in which resistance can emerge in treated hosts through mutation, prevention of antimicrobial resistance in individual hosts is a primary method of preventing the spread of resistant organisms in the community. By contrast, for many other important resistant pathogens, such as penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium resistance is mediated by the acquisition of genes or gene fragments by horizontal transfer; resistance in the treated host is a relatively rare event. For these organisms, indirect, population-level mechanisms of selection account for the increase in the prevalence of resistance. These mechanisms can operate even when treatment has a modest, or even negative, effect on an individual host's colonization with resistant organisms.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11971765 PMCID: PMC2730242 DOI: 10.3201/eid0804.010312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigureFour mechanisms by which antibiotic treatment can create selection for resistance in the population, showing direct effects—increased resistance in treated (yellow) vs. untreated (white) hosts, and indirect effects—increased resistance in others (turquoise) due to treatment of specific hosts. (A) Subpopulations (usually mutants) of resistant (red) bacteria are present in a host infected with a predominantly susceptible (green) strain; treatment fails, resulting in outgrowth of the resistant subpopulation, which can then be transmitted to other, susceptible hosts (turquoise). (B) Successful treatment of an individual infected with a susceptible strain reduces the ability of that host to transmit the infection to other susceptible hosts, making those hosts more likely to be infected by resistant pathogens than they would otherwise have been, and shifting the competitive balance toward resistant infections. (C) Treatment of an infection eradicates a population of susceptible bacteria carried (often commensally) by the host, making that host more susceptible to acquisition of a new strain. If the newly acquired strain has a high probability of being resistant (as in the context of an outbreak of a resistant strain), this can significantly increase the treated individual’s risk of carrying a resistant strain, relative to an untreated one. (D) Treatment of an infection in an individual who is already colonized (commensally) with resistant organisms may result in increased load of those organisms if competing flora (perhaps of another species) are inhibited—leading to increased shedding of the resistant organism and possibly to increased individual risk of infection with the resistant organism.
Mechanisms by which antimicrobial treatment has direct and indirect effects on resistance
| Mechanism (effect of treatment) | Relationship between selection for resistance and treatment success | Relationship between no./dose of antibiotics and selection | Examples | Figure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| mergence of resistance during treatment (Da, Ib) | (−)c | (−) | TB, HIV, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterobacter spp. | 1a |
| Reduced transmission of susceptible strains (I) | (+)d | (+) | May occur for nearly every infection | 1b |
| Increased susceptibility to colonization (D, I,) | ?e | ? | Commensals of skin, intestinal and respiratory tracts | 1c |
| Increased density of colonization in individuals already colonized with resistant organisms, by inhibiting competitors (D,I) | ? | (+)−? | VREf and antianaerobic treatments | 1d |
aD=direct. bI=indirect. c(-)=inverse relationship. d(+)=positive relationship. e?=relationship uncertain. fVRE=vancomycin-resistant Enterococci.