| Literature DB >> 31890158 |
Esabelle Lo Yan Yam1, Li Yang Hsu2, Eric Peng-Huat Yap1, Tsin Wen Yeo1, Vernon Lee2,3, Joergen Schlundt4, May O Lwin5, Direk Limmathurotsakul6,7, Mark Jit8,9,10, Peter Dedon11,12, Paul Turner13,14, Annelies Wilder-Smith1,15,16.
Abstract
The Asia Pacific region, home to two-thirds of the world's population and ten of the least developed countries, is considered a regional hot-spot for the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Despite this, there is a dearth of high-quality regional data on the extent of AMR. Recognising the urgency to close this gap, Singapore organised a meeting to discuss the problems in the region and frame a call for action. Representatives from across the region and beyond attended the meeting on the "Antimicrobial Resistance in the Asia Pacific & its impact on Singapore" held in November 2018. This meeting report is a summary of the discussions on the challenges and progress in surveillance, drivers and levers of AMR emergence, and the promising innovations and technologies that could be used to combat the increasing threat of AMR in the region. Enhanced surveillance and research to provide improved evidence-based strategies and policies are needed. The major themes that emerged for an action plan are working towards a tailored solution for the region by harnessing the One Health approach, enhancing inter-country collaborations, and collaboratively leverage upon new emerging technologies. A regionally coordinated effort that is target-driven, sustainable and builds on a framework facilitating communication and governance will strengthen the fight against AMR in the Asia Pacific region.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial Resistance; Asia Pacific; Drug Resistance; Global Health; Global Mobility; One Health; Singapore; Travel
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31890158 PMCID: PMC6921568 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-019-0654-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Box 1 Issues, recommendations and target outcomes to improve surveillance on AMR in the APAC
| Issues | Recommendations | Target Outcomes |
| Weak health systems | • Increase country capability and capacity to reliably detect the priority pathogens, and link laboratory results to clinical outcome. • Prescribe microbiological culture (particularly, blood and urine) appropriately. • Report case-based surveillance report, together with evaluating attributable mortality rate for AMR. | Improved capacity and capability to diagnose, treat and prevent AMR at all levels of the health system. |
| Unclear burden of AMR | • Improve surveillance to better describe the burden of AMR. • Better capture and report records of deaths and other clinical outcomes attributable to AMR. • Develop robust models that are practical and acceptable to policymakers and healthcare providers. | Ability to monitor and evaluate the effects of interventions, and project the impact of AMR using modelling options. |
| Lack of formal network to address AMR | • Engage policymakers to consider developing an official network for AMR in the region, based on role models developed by European CDC, African CDC and European Medicines Agency, such as EARS-NET and ESVAC. | Consolidation of resources and efforts across countries to deliver impactful programme at the regional level. |
| Lack of open-access data for global sharing | • Engage with policymakers to make data open-access, such as AMU and AMR surveillance data. • Improve the understanding and utilisation of all surveillance data to decide on resource allocation for interventions and to inform the implementation of action plans. | Robust and reliable data to support further policy engagement, monitoring and evaluating impact of interventions, and research and development. |
Box 2 Vaccination in the War Against AMR
| By reducing the need for antibiotics, vaccines may reduce the prevalence and hinder the development of resistant strains. Introduction of a conjugate pneumococcal vaccine for infants in the US in 2000 saw a 57% decline in invasive disease caused by penicillin-resistant strains and a 59% decline in strains resistant to multiple antibiotics by 2004 across a broad age range - 81% among children under 2 years of age and 49% among persons aged 65 years and older [ |
Box 3 Innovations to address AMR
• Harmonise sample and data collection procedures and enable access to samples and data for testing and mining. • Adopt molecular epidemiology using whole-genome sequencing to complement phenotypic studies for transmission dynamics. • Develop rapid diagnostic or point-of-care diagnostics for quick identification of pathogens and antimicrobial susceptibility. • Develop non-pathogen-based approaches that exploit human response signatures to complement existing pathogen-targeted technologies. • Collaborate with regulatory agencies to shorten the timeline for drug development at all stages, from target discovery to clinical trials, thus reducing the cost of developing new AMR therapeutics. • Develop new vaccine and antibiotic pipelines, and explore innovative approaches such as immunotherapy, phage therapy, drug repurposing, and combination therapy. |