| Literature DB >> 24237856 |
Angela Huttner1, Stephan Harbarth1, Jean Carlet2, Sara Cosgrove3, Herman Goossens4, Alison Holmes5, Vincent Jarlier6, Andreas Voss7, Didier Pittet1.
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is now a global threat. Its emergence rests on antimicrobial overuse in humans and food-producing animals; globalization and suboptimal infection control facilitate its spread. While aggressive measures in some countries have led to the containment of some resistant gram-positive organisms, extensively resistant gram-negative organisms such as carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae and pan-resistant Acinetobacter spp. continue their rapid spread. Antimicrobial conservation/stewardship programs have seen some measure of success in reducing antimicrobial overuse in humans, but their reach is limited to acute-care settings in high-income countries. Outside the European Union, there is scant or no oversight of antimicrobial administration to food-producing animals, while evidence mounts that this administration leads directly to resistant human infections. Both horizontal and vertical infection control measures can interrupt transmission among humans, but many of these are costly and essentially limited to high-income countries as well. Novel antimicrobials are urgently needed; in recent decades pharmaceutical companies have largely abandoned antimicrobial discovery and development given their high costs and low yield. Against this backdrop, international and cross-disciplinary collaboration appears to be taking root in earnest, although specific strategies still need defining. Educational programs targeting both antimicrobial prescribers and consumers must be further developed and supported. The general public must continue to be made aware of the current scale of AMR's threat, and must perceive antimicrobials as they are: a non-renewable and endangered resource.Entities:
Keywords: Animal medicine; Antibiotic stewardship; Antimicrobial conservation; Antimicrobial resistance; Care bundles; Environment; Global health; Hand hygiene; Human medicine; Infection control; Regulations; Surveillance networks; World Healthcare-Associated Infections Forum
Year: 2013 PMID: 24237856 PMCID: PMC4131211 DOI: 10.1186/2047-2994-2-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Figure 1An advertisement by Schenley Laboratories Inc. By 1944, laboratories across the country were increasing penicillin production. Schenley’s advertisement stated, "When the thunderous battles of this war have subsided to pages of silent print in a history book, the greatest news event of World War II may well be the discovery and development of penicillin." Credit: Research and Development Division, Schenley Laboratories Inc., Lawrenceburg, Indiana, USA.
Figure 2Community-associated, hospital-associated, and overall MRSA prevalences in the United States from 1999 through 2010. From the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy (http://www.cddep.org).
Summary of abstracts presented at the 2013 World Healthcare-Associated Infections Forum
| Susceptibility of isolates from patients with VAP in Saudi Arabia | Retrospective susceptibility study | Single adult ICU, Saudi Arabia, 2004 – 2009 | ||
| MRSA and proximity to concentrated animal feeding operations | Retrospective unmatched case-control study | Veterans Affairs Hospital, Iowa, USA, 2009 – 2011 | ||
| National burden of invasive MRSA infections, USA 2011 | Prospective, population-based surveillance study | USA, 2011 | ||
| Quantifying MDRO exposure from patients in a single hospital to all California facilities | Retrospective case-cohort study | California hospitals and long-term-care facilities, 2005 – 2009 | ||
| Dramatic increase of vancomycin-resistant enterococci in Germany with a belt of high proportions | Prospective surveillance study | > 600 ICUs and > 300 surgical wards throughout Germany, 2007 – 2012 | ||
| Antimicrobial use and HAI prevalence in Greek hospitals | Antimicrobial and HAI point prevalence study | 37 hospitals, Greece, 2012 | ||
| Obstacles in controlling KPC spread in Poland | Retrospective surveillance study | Poland, 2008 – June 2013 | ||
| Antimicrobial drug resistance in Asia Pacific | Prospective and retrospective surveillance studies | Taiwan, 2002 – 2011 | ||
| Trends of antimicrobial resistance in a Japanese hospital | Retrospective surveillance study | Tertiary care hospital, Japan, 2012 – April 2013 | ||
| Prevalence of carbapenemase carriage among inpatients in Karachi | Prospective surveillance study | Tertiary care hospital, Pakistan, 2012 | ||
| Risk factors for carriage of ESBL-producing enterobacteriaceae in the community | Prospective cohort study with nested, unmatched case-control study | Adult, community-dwelling volunteers, Netherlands, 2012 | ||
| Antimicrobial use and resistance in surgical patients in Vietnam | Literature review | Vietnamese hospitals, 2010 – 2012 | ||
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| Characteristics of an outbreak caused by OXA-48-producing CRE in a neonatal ICU in Jerusalem | Combined retrospective and prospective before-after cohort study | Neonatal ICU, Israel, 2012 | ||
| Prevention of | Combined retrospective and prospective before-after cohort study | Brazilian NICU, 2010 – 2012 | ||
| Overcoming hand hygiene fatigue by involving the link nurses | Before-after study | Tertiary care hospital, Hong Kong, 2008 – 2012 | ||
| Emerging MDRO: same risk of outbreaks? | Prospective surveillance study | 38 hospitals, France, 2010 – March 2013 | ||
| Can the medical device DAV132 decrease the impact of antibiotics on fecal microbiota? | Experimental animal models (porcine, canine, murine) | France, 2013 | ||
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| Infection prevention and control strategies of MDR infections in a neonatal ICU | Before-after study | Neonatal ICU, Malaysia, 2012 – April 2013 | ||
| Antimicrobial treatment for UTI among patients with total hip or knee arthroplasty | Two-stage combined retrospective and prospective cohort study | Tertiary care hospital, | ||
| Impact of intervention on antimicrobial consumption in aquaculture in Chile | Before-after economic analysis | Chile, 2008 – 2009 | ||
| Assessing the need for antimicrobial use guidelines among staff of a Saudi Arabian hospital | Voluntary survey | Tertiary care hospital, Saudi Arabia, 2013 | ||
| Variation in antimicrobial use patterns in Canadian Provinces | Retrospective population-level surveillance study | Canadian provinces, 2000 – 2010 | ||
| Pan-American Health Organization guideline for treatment of infectious diseases in Latin America | International guideline | Latin America, 2013 | ||
| Appropriateness of continued use of empirical vancomycin | Retrospective cohort study | Tertiary care hospital, South Korea 2012 | ||
| Case-control study to determine risk factors for CRE carriage | Retrospective matched (1:2) case-control study | Tertiary care hospital, Singapore, 2011 – 2013 | ||
| Antimicrobial stewardship in Africa-humble beginnings | Descriptive epidemiologic study | African hospitals, 2011 – 2012 | ||
| Impact of a regional intervention program to control carbapenemase-producing | Before-after study | 17 hospitals, Italy (Emilia-Romagna), 2011 – 2013 | ||
| Antibiotic control in Senegal | Before-after study | Community hospitals, Senegal, 2008 – 2012 | ||
| Antimicrobial stewardship in long-term-care facilities: what is effective? | Systematic literature review | Published studies retrieved through Medline & Embase, 1998 – 2013 | ||
| Inappropriate diagnosis and treatment of VAP is common in ICUs | Prospective observational study | ICUs in a single tertiary care center, USA, 2009 – 2010 | ||
| A multidisciplinary initiative to save antibiotics: the World Alliance Against Antibiotic Resistance | Cross-disciplinary alliance | 42 countries represented, 2011 – | ||
| Reducing antibiotic usage in Denmark: a campaign launch | Ongoing campaign | Danish general practitioners and general public, 2012 – | ||
ACP: antimicrobial conservation program; AMR: antimicrobial resistance; BSI: bloodstream infections; CAFO: concentrated animal feeding operation; CDI: Clostridium difficile infection; CRE: carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae; ESBL: extended-spectrum beta-lactamase; ESCMID: European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases; HAI: healthcare-associated infection; ICU: intensive care unit; KPC: Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase; LTCF: long-term-care facility; MDR: multi-drug resistant; MDRO: multidrug-resistant organism; MRSA: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; MSSA: methicillin-susceptible S. aureus; NICU: neonatal intensive care unit; OPE: OXA-48-producing enterobacteriacae; SSI: surgical site infections; UTI: urinary tract infection; VAP: ventilator-associated pneumonia; VRE: vancomycin-resistant enterococci.
Figure 3A decline in human per capita outpatient antibiotic use in North America and France has been documented over the past decade. From the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy (http://www.cddep.org).
The ten most urgent priorities for action against the spread of antimicrobial resistance cited by participants of the 4 WHAI Forum
| 1 | Limit the use of antimicrobials in food-producing animals by banning non-therapeutic applications, including growth promotion and metaphylaxis |
| 2 | Establish and enforce regulations on sales of antimicrobials for use in human medicine, including prohibition of over-the-counter sales worldwide |
| 3 | Develop a detailed charter on antimicrobial conservation to be ratified and upheld by ministries of health worldwide |
| 4 | Develop coordinated and culturally sensitive awareness campaigns targeting the general public and imparting the importance of protecting antimicrobials as a limited and non-renewable resource |
| 5 | Rigorously support the improvement of sanitation systems to eliminate resistant microbes in wastewater; regularly provide education about fundamental practices such as hand hygiene to prevent the spread of infection |
| 6 | Together with the pharmaceutical industry, explore (1) incentives to stimulate research and fast-track development of novel antimicrobials and (2) new economic models that reconcile public health interests with industry profitability |
| 7 | Establish standardized, universal methods and metrics for surveillance of antimicrobial use and resistance development, respectively |
| 8 | In medical and veterinary school curricula, require universal and detailed instruction in microbial resistance development and the prudent use of antimicrobials; for physicians and veterinarians in training, require on-the-job refresher courses |
| 9 | Include patients and other antimicrobial consumers in the development and implementation of action plans |
| 10 | Continue to develop and advance point-of-care rapid diagnostic tests to avoid the prescription of antibiotics for viral infections and allow more targeted therapy |