On 27 February, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a list of
antibiotic-resistant organisms,[1] prioritising them according to ‘critical’, ‘high’ and ‘medium’
priority.There were three organisms on the critical list:Acenitobacter baumannii (carbapenem resistant);Pseudomonas aeruginosa (carbapenem resistant); andEnterobacteriaceae (carbapenem-resistant, ESBL producing).All three organisms are familiar and, indeed, increasingly common in burns units
across the world. The extended healing times for major burns, combined with
life-or-death requirements for continued antibiotic treatments that can be
difficult to withdraw, make burns units the breeding ground for all these
multi-resistant organisms. A number of burns unit outbreaks published in
international peer-reviewed journals highlight the impact of shutting down
services due to the outbreak of organisms such as acenitobacter, and the
difficulties in managing them.[2]There is an urgent need for coordination at national and international levels between
public health, infection control, microbiology and burns services with a view to
strategic planning and direction of multidisciplinary research in burns units.
Large scale and heavily resourced research programmes that include multinational
and multimodal collaborations using potential ancillary antimicrobial strategies
ranging from phage therapy[3] and anti-biofilm technologies to light therapies and other novel or variant
topical antimicrobials remain sparse and underpowered. Major incidents involving
mass casualties including burns, and hence large numbers of patients that put
pressure on capacity and cross-infection measures, look increasingly likely on the
current geopolitical stage, further increasing the likelihood of emerging
pan-resistant organisms.There is no coordinated information-gathering exercise or audit of microbiology
trends across burns services in the UK, and for which there is an urgent need, to
further inform and develop the foundations for a better understanding of the
problem, facilitate action and join together the relevant agencies to tackle this
problem.Knowledge is power. The time is now.