| Literature DB >> 33243302 |
Chantal M Morel1, Richard A Alm2, Christine Årdal3, Alessandra Bandera4,5, Giacomo M Bruno6,7, Elena Carrara8, Giorgio L Colombo9, Marlieke E A de Kraker10, Sabiha Essack11, Isabel Frost12, Bruno Gonzalez-Zorn13, Herman Goossens14, Luca Guardabassi15, Stephan Harbarth10,16, Peter S Jørgensen17,18, Souha S Kanj19, Tomislav Kostyanev14, Ramanan Laxminarayan12, Finola Leonard20, Gabriel Levy Hara21,22, Marc Mendelson23, Malgorzata Mikulska24, Nico T Mutters25, Kevin Outterson2, Jesus Rodriguez Baňo26,27, Evelina Tacconelli8,28, Luigia Scudeller29,30.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES/Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Cost; One health
Year: 2020 PMID: 33243302 PMCID: PMC7689633 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-020-00822-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Fig. 1Settings in which antibiotics are used and potential for transmission of resistance bacteria (and resistance genes) [15]
Fig. 2the GAP-ON€ framework
Antimicrobial resistant bacteria with cost implications in human health or in animal health and production
Important routes of transmission and the role of the environment as a reservoir of infection are indicated
1D = disease occurs due to the organism(s), C = no disease but costs associated with colonisation; H = human, A = animal, E = environment, Y = yes
2In the context of mycobacterial infection, MDR is defined as resistance to at least isoniazid and rifampin and XDR as resistance to isoniazid and rifampin and at least 3 of the 6 classes of aminoglycosides, polypeptides, fluoroquinolones, thioamides, cycloserine, and para-aminosalicyclic acid
Epidemiological data necessary to build a “One-Health” cost model of AMR
| Data element | Data items |
|---|---|
| Prevalence of colonisation (Human Health) | Proportion of individuals colonised by drug-resistant pathogens, by subgroups (please see text) at the time of health care access Proportion of individuals colonised by drug-resistant pathogens, by subgroups at point prevalence studies |
| Prevalence of colonisation (Animal Health) | Proportion of food animals colonised by drug-resistant pathogens post-slaughter |
| Prevalence of colonisation (Environment) | Presence/absence of drug-resistant pathogens in water, soil and air Relevant to Human health: • Proportion of healthcare facility or home surfaces contaminated with resistant microorganisms (implies choice of relevant surfaces) • Abundance and diversity of drug-resistant pathogens in health facility/household effluent Relevant to Animal health: • Proportion of animal housing, abattoir and food preparation surfaces contaminated with resistant microorganisms (implies choice of relevant surfaces) • Abundance and diversity of drug-resistant pathogens in farming, abattoir and food preparation entities (restaurants & food processing plants) effluent The Environment: • Abundance and diversity of drug-resistant pathogens per volume/quantity of water, soil or air measured. |
| Prevalence of infection (Human Health) | Number of patients with infection, out of overall number of patients in the health care setting in that specific subgroup, at the time of assessment |
| Prevalence of infection (Animal Health) | Number of animals with infection, out of overall number of animals in the veterinary care/farm setting in that specific subgroup, at the time of assessment |
| Incidence of colonisation (Human Health) | Number of new colonisations over an appropriate denominator (implies choice of denominator: see Table e.g. in outbreaks of KPC in NICUs, the number of new colonisations is also taken into account [ For example, number of unique cases of colonised |
| Incidence of colonisation (Animal Health) | Number of new colonisations out of animals not colonised |
| Incidence of infection (Human Health) | Number of patients with new infection caused by a pathogen resistant to 1st line, 2nd line, 3rd line antimicrobials, or MDR, by an appropriate denominator (implies choice of denominator: see Table |
| Incidence of infection (Animal Health) | Number of animals with new infection caused by a pathogen resistant to 1st line, 2nd line, 3rd line antimicrobials, or MDR, by an appropriate rate denominator (implies choice of denominator), by subgroup |
Probabilities associated with colonisation necessary in a “One-Health” cost model
| Data element | Probability |
|---|---|
| Morbidity (Human health) | Probability of developing infection in colonised individuals, Probability of contact precautions/isolation when colonised Probability of lower quality care when colonised or of missed care opportunity (e.g., surgical prophylaxis not administered in patients known to be colonised) Probability of undergoing diagnostic tests Probability of non-standard surgical prophylaxis Probability of being treated even in absence of infection, due to known colonisation status (increase in selection pressure related to environmental contamination) Lower quality of life |
| Morbidity (Animal health) | For companion animals, probability of being screened for colonisation with AMR pathogens (e.g. MRSA) in referral veterinary practices. Probability of developing infection in colonised animals Probability of surveillance of faecal samples for MDR organisms under public health programmes |
| Mortality (Animal health) | Probability of the animal being slaughtered due to colonisation with resistant pathogen. |
| Screening (Humans / animals) | Probability of starting a screening programme when there is a colonised patient (Number of colonised patients to trigger a screening programme) (humans / animals) |
| Bi-directional Transmission of colonisation between One Health Areas | Probability of each of 6 possible broad paths between One Health areas, and within-area probability of transmission (e.g. between LTCF and hospitals and vice versa) |
Probabilities associated with infection necessary in a “One-Health” cost model
| Data element | Probability |
|---|---|
Mortality (overall) (Human and animal health) | Probability of dying Treatment efficacy of 2nd line, 3rd line etc. drugs |
Mortality (attributable) (Human and animal health) | Probability of dying Treatment efficacy of 2nd line, 3rd line etc. drugs |
| Morbidity (Human and animal health) | Probability of developing long term consequences (e.g chronic or recurrent infections, long term disability from ICU stay, lower QoL, etc) from AMR infections, out of all patients infected Probability of developing adverse events, if treated with 2nd, 3rd etc. line drugs Longer hospital stay in patients/animals with AMR infections, compared to those with the same, but not AMR, infection Longer ICU stay for patients/animals with AMR infections |
| Additional diagnostic procedures for drug resistant infections (Human and animal health) | Probability of undergoing additional diagnostic procedures (e.g. imaging to diagnose site of infection or foci of distant infectious metastatic foci, FollowupFollow-up blood cultures, etc) |
| Screening (Humans / animals) | Probability of starting a screening programme when there is an infected patient/animal (Number of colonised patients to trigger a screening programme) (humans / animals) |
| Insurance | Probability of having an insurance to cover extra AMR costs (Please note that pet insurance is rare in most countries) |
Costs related to the patient colonised or infected with resistant pathogen in human health, necessary in a “One-Health” cost model
| Data element | Category of costs | Cost items |
|---|---|---|
| Direct costs | Costs of any treatment or prophylaxis of the patient borne by the health service (regardless of whether or not such costs are passed on to the payor/insurance company).a | − Cost of antibiotics for treating infections − Higher antibiotic expenses for empirical therapy due to a change in guidelines in response to higher frequency of drug-resistant infections − Cost of drug administration (central lines, etc.) − Cost of nursing care − Cost of cohorting (including cost of leaving not unoccupied beds due to isolation of one patient restricting the use of the bed(s) in the same room) − Extended length of stay, whereby ICU and non-ICU days should be separated − Costs due to de-colonisation, if applicable, (e. g. mupirocin), re-testing, e.g. additional follow-up screening − Cost of non-standard surgical prophylaxis in colonised/infected patients, with more expensive drugs − Costs of infection prevention and control interventions as screening at hospital admission or before surgery |
| Costs of long- term consequences of AMR infection | − Cost of additional laboratory tests or imaging to diagnose site of infection or foci of distant infectious metastatic foci − Cost of diagnosing and treating adverse events to 2nd, 3rd line etc. (Drugs used against MDROs infection need careful monitoring of toxicity and efficacy, thus more laboratory and radiological tests.) − Extra hospital admissions, or extra care for rehabilitation (e.g., respiratory, mobility, cognitive, neurological) and/or treatments required for disease sequelae directly linked to the drug-resistant infection, like recurrent infection, kidney failure, amputation, neurological sequelae, extra surgery | |
| Out-of-pocket expenditure borne by the patient for care | − Transport to and from the hospital (if the sole reason for the hospital admission was the infection) − Cost of funeral in cases of (attributable) death − Cost of (family/friend) care for the patient (e.g. hotel and meals to be near the hospital) due to excess length of stay of the patient related to the drug-resistant infection | |
| Surveillance and control activitiesb | − Costs of enhanced surveillance − Cost of any screening that is triggered − Costs of isolation, cohorting or contact precautions to the health care system, including facility design and operational costs | |
| Training of health care professionals and information/communication | − Costs of pre-service, in-service and continuous professional education per relevant cadre of human healthcare professional − Cost of any related public health or information campaign | |
| Legal and insurance costs (patient) | − Additional insurance costs to cover problems associated specifically with resistance − Litigation costs, when suing hospitals for transmission of resistance infection | |
| Legal and insurance costs (hospital) | − Litigation costs, when sued by patients for transmission of resistance infection − Costs of implementing or regulating and enforcing national robust, representative comprehensive surveillance programmes at all levels of health care from primary to tertiary levels | |
| Indirect costs | Indirect patients’ costs: Loss of productivity/earning/opportunity when seeking treatment for the resistant infection (or colonisation) or dying from the resistant infection | − Value of foregone workdays value of foregone workdays because of disease sequelae related to the drug-resistant infection foregone treatments that depend on effectiveness of prophylaxis, like surgical interventions such as hip or knee replacements or caesarian sections − Foregone leisure time (NB: difficult to quantify) − Loss of productivity/earnings by family &visitors attending patient − Loss of caretaker (family/friend) productivity – (workdays foregone) − Psychological impact (factored in as QALY) − Other costs related to different life style (e.g. amputation leading to prosthesis or wheel chair; home renovation works to adapt to disability; nursing care costs, if unable to perform activities) |
| Indirect hospital costs | − Reduced patient turnover and decreased revenues (due to longer hospital duration or to isolation/cohorting, or to decision not to perform a non-essential procedure –e.g. cosmetic surgery - etc.) − Reduced capacity of hospital (due to longer hospital duration or to isolation/cohorting − reputational costs borne by the hospital: any loss in hospital income related to the level of resistant infection/colonisation Note that a reduction in visits to one hospital may simply lead to an increase in visits for another. As this study takes a societal perspective only overall net reduction should be considered. (Assumption that no visits to the hospital are superfluous so that a reduction in visits due to fear of contracting a resistant pathogen imposes negative utility.) | |
| Societal/government | − Financial burden on the government for disability benefits | |
| Research and development of new antibiotics | − Cost to develop and bring a replacement drug to marketc |
aIn sites where resistance is common and a greater percentage of fixed health care costs are spent managing it, the more the cost of overheads should be included in cost equations. Note that most colonization will not be treated with drugs, except cases like MRSA in patients awaiting surgery. However, colonization is likely to lead to more frequent visits, additional diagnostic tests, isolation of the patient, change in other contact precautions, etc.
bThis work considers costs associated with phenotypic resistance in most cases. In the case of resistance surveillance, it considers genotypic resistance in that identification of resistance-carrying genes is assumed to impact on surveillance activities and screening in some cases
cWhen an antibiotic is rendered ineffective due to resistance, in a sense it is retired from the tool kit (in the language of accounting: it is fully depreciated). In companies or governments, reserves would have been set aside to account for the eventual need to replace the key asset. If this replacement cycle is done well, there is no downtime (for antibiotics, downtime is harm to patients from lack of effective therapy). So even if the antibiotic replacement cycle worked perfectly (with no harm to patients) there still is a cost: the effort to bring a replacement drug successfully to market. There is significant social waste since drug developers require many years (up to 15) from the university laboratory to an approved drug: it is difficult to judge the epidemiological need 15–-20 years onward. There currently are many ongoing patent races, with some duplication of effort as well
Costs related to a companion animal colonized or infected with a resistant pathogen (using its owner as proxy), necessary in a “One-Health” cost model
| Data element | Category of costs | Individual costs |
|---|---|---|
| Direct | Costs of any treatment of the animal borne by the veterinary service (regardless of whether or not such costs are passed on to an insurance company. | − Cost of antibiotics − Cost of drug administration (central lines, etc) − Costs of diagnostic tests − Cost of nursing care − Cost of cohorting (including cost of leaving not occupied beds due to isolation of one patient restricting the use of the bed(s) in the same room) − Extended length of stay − Cost of non-standard surgical prophylaxis. Surgical prophylaxis in infected patients, with more expensive drugs − Extra hospital admissions, or extra care required for disease sequelae directly linked to the drug-resistant infection, like recurrent infection, kidney failure, amputation, neurological sequelae, extra surgery |
| Out-of-pocket expenditure borne by the owner for care | − travel or transport to and from the veterinary clinic − special food, physiotherapy, transport − referring to specialists of complex cases − pet health insurance − Cost of disposal of remains/incineration/funeral | |
| Surveillance and control activities | − Costs of enhanced surveillance − Cost of any screening that is triggered − Costs of isolation, cohorting or contact precautions to the veterinary health care system − Costs for environmental decontamination of MDR bacteria | |
| Training of health care professionals and information/communication | − Costs of pre-service, in-service and continuous professional education per relevant cadre of veterinary healthcare professional − Cost of any related public health or information campaign | |
| Legal and insurance costs (patient) | − Additional insurance costs to cover problems associated specifically with resistance − Litigation costs, when suing hospitals for transmission of resistance infection | |
| Legal and insurance costs (hospital) | − Litigation costs, when sued by patients for transmission of resistance infection − Costs of implementing or regulating and enforcing national robust, representative comprehensive surveillance programmes among companion animals | |
| Indirect | Loss of owner productivity when seeking treatment for the animal’s resistant infection (or colonisation) or when the animal dies from the resistant infection | − value of foregone workdays |
Costs related to farm animals colonised or infected with resistant pathogens (using farmers as proxy), necessary in a “One-Health” cost model
| Data element | Category of costs | Individual costs |
|---|---|---|
| Direct | Costs related to resistant infection or colonisation with resistant bacteria within farm animals | − costs of 2nd, 3rd line antibiotic used for therapy vs growth promotion vs prophylaxis/metaphylaxis − Cost of veterinary consultation − Costs of diagnostic work-up − Reduction in farm productivity / output caused by AMR or antimicrobial restriction/ban |
| Out-of-pocket expenditure by the farmer | − any related animal transport, slaughter − costs of culling animals − Restocking with animals/eggs | |
| Surveillance and control activities | − Costs of enhanced surveillance − Cost of any screening that is triggered − Costs of isolation, cohorting or contact precautions | |
| Legal and insurance costs | − Insurance costs − Litigation costs − Costs due to penalties or taxes associated with antimicrobial use; this is a reality in several EU countries (e.g. yellow card rule and special taxes on certain antimicrobial products in Denmark) | |
| Information and training costs | − Cost of any AMR public health or information campaign (e.g. including screening, biosecurity advising aimed at preventing or managing animals with resistant infection) − Costs of pre-service, in-service and continuous professional education per relevant cadre of veterinary healthcare professional and farm staff | |
| Indirect costs | Loss of productivity to the farm or the wider food chain (if they are in some way dependent on output from the AMR affected farm and hence unable to maintain their normal level of productivity/sales).a | − Reduction in individual farm productivity / output − Longer time to market − Reduction in farm productivity / impact on the food chain (if food chain in some way dependent on output from the AMR affected farm and hence unable to maintain the normal level of productivity/sales) − Reduction in sales following a lower demand that is caused by knowledge of the existence of the resistant pathogen in the food chain |
| Out-of-pocket expenditure by the consumer | − Increased cost of meat and other animal food products as a consequence of increased production costs |
Costs to the environment, necessary in a “One-Health” cost model
| Data element | Category of costs | Individual costs |
|---|---|---|
| Direct costs | Cost of removing/decontaminating/cleaning/stemming flow | − Drug production effluent − Irrigation systems, farm run-off that contains resistant pathogens − Relevant waste in waste management systems − Relevant waste in drinking water storage and distributions systems |
| Costs of surveillance and control programmes | − Costs of enhanced surveillance − Cost of any screening that is triggered − Cost of having to shift activities to non-contaminated areas − Cost to authorities of enforcing penalties on industries | |
| Training of food chain professionals (Environment) | − Costs of pre-service, in-service and continuous professional education per relevant cadre of environmental health professional | |
| Legal and insurance costs | − Cost to authorities of enforcing any penalties on industries − Cost to industry to comply with AMR-related regulations surrounding treatment, disposal, etc. − Costs of implementing or regulating and enforcing national environmental surveillance programmes on water, soil and air in different components of the One Health triad as appropriate | |
| Indirect costs | Loss of productivity | − Overall economic loss in having unusable land while decontamination takes place (t.b.c.). Note this will be of greater significance in countries that are densely populated, densely apportioned economically (where the land is used to the maximum extent for economic purposes), rely on agriculture, and where water provision or flow is important economic asset. |
| Loss to medical or non-medical trade and tourism from reduced trade/tourism (e.g. exclusion of a place as a tourist destination explicitly due to AMR-related concerns) | − Loss in income from local tourism due to resistance in swimming water, drinking water, any other contamination (reputational costs). − Loss to medical or non-medical trade and tourism from reduced trade/tourism (e.g. exclusion of a place as a tourist destination explicitly due to AMR-related concerns) − Loss to the travel industry due to cancellations or to longer, sustained reductions in travel |
aAll types of productivity loss to the farm should be put together (again, individual from societal cost should not be separated to avoid double counting. Rather the model will ultimately scale the effects of individual resistance up to where the more generalized societal costs come into play