| Literature DB >> 33268385 |
Iruka N Okeke1, Nicholas Feasey2, Julian Parkhill3, Paul Turner4, Direk Limmathurotsakul5, Pantelis Georgiou6, Alison Holmes7, Sharon J Peacock8.
Abstract
The scope and trajectory of today's escalating antimicrobial resistance (AMR) crisis is inadequately captured by existing surveillance systems, particularly those of lower income settings. AMR surveillance systems typically collate data from routine culture and susceptibility testing performed in diagnostic bacteriology laboratories to support healthcare. Limited access to high quality culture and susceptibility testing results in the dearth of AMR surveillance data, typical of many parts of the world where the infectious disease burden and antimicrobial need are high. Culture and susceptibility testing by traditional techniques is also slow, which limits its value in infection management. Here, we outline hurdles to effective resistance surveillance in many low-income settings and encourage an open attitude towards new and evolving technologies that, if adopted, could close resistance surveillance gaps. Emerging advancements in point-of-care testing, laboratory detection of resistance through or without culture, and in data handling, have the potential to generate resistance data from previously unrepresented locales while simultaneously supporting healthcare. Among them are microfluidic, nucleic acid amplification technology and next-generation sequencing approaches. Other low tech or as yet unidentified innovations could also rapidly accelerate AMR surveillance. Parallel advances in data handling further promise to significantly improve AMR surveillance, and new frameworks that can capture, collate and use alternate data formats may need to be developed. We outline the promise and limitations of such technologies, their potential to leapfrog surveillance over currently available, conventional technologies in use today and early steps that health systems could take towards preparing to adopt them. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: disease; disorder; epidemiology; health systems; medical microbiology; or injury; other diagnostic or tool; other infection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33268385 PMCID: PMC7712442 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Common antimicrobial surveillance hurdles in low-resource and remote settings
| The hurdle | Structure of the hurdle | Potential solutions |
| Access to testing | Difficulties in transporting patients and/or their specimens to laboratories Lack of a supply chain for diagnostic resources needed for conventional testing Absence of phlebotomy Pathogen is too fastidious to culture in a minimally equipped bacteriology lab (eg, Existing surveillance systems not set up to accept point-of-care results that may be relevant to resistance | Alternative or autonomous transportation systems Point of care/near patient technologies that is, GeneXpert, BioFire, loop-mediated isothermal amplification-based technologies, nanopore-based sequencing and point-of-care single nucleotide polymorphisms detection systems in development |
| Invasive sampling and associated biohazards | Absence of skilled healthcare workers that can retrieve specimens from normally sterile sites (Blood and CSF culture) High body fluid volumes required for some tests (eg, blood culture) Poor access to adequate biosafety resources and safe waste disposal | Automated devices that can safely and aseptically retrieve blood, and possibly other specimens Tests that allow interrogation of smaller or non-invasive samples Point-of-care technologies |
| Data-entry and handling | Paper records that cannot be queried or viewed from more than one location | Next generation LIMS systems with secure access via mobile devices Connectivity within local telecoms context |
| Extensive, non-integrated quality assurance requirements | High overhead costs for properly assured laboratory practice or low quality testing due to skipping essential quality assurance | Integrated quality assurance such as read quality analyses for WGS |
| In-lab processing time | Long incubation time makes direct benefits for testing patients requiring urgent care, or who cannot return to the laboratory for test results doubtful | Rapid nucleic acid-based testing Systems that accelerate pathogen growth or allow for its early detection Provision of intelligent data visualisation to guide empiric Rx/decision support/risk management |
| Subtyping | Subtyping is the most specialised part of testing needed for surveillance and therefore the least likely to be performed accurately. It is also typically the most expensive Many subtyping techniques are difficult or irreproducible and may not give the same results each time even when properly performed Subtyping methods differ from one species to another, so laboratories can often not house expertise and resources for typing a broad range of organisms Subtyping is essential for delineating some pathogens and for identifying outbreaks | Rapid WGS with microfluidic DNA preparation, which can provide fine subtyping information along with identification and susceptibility information at no extra cost. To reduce costs, other methods are often batched at the species level, leading to longer turn-around times. WGS is as effective without species batching |
| Quality assurance | Access to external quality assurance is difficult in many resource settings | Some aspects of WGS can be remotely assured Fully automated point-of-care devices |
| The cold-chain | Current testing requires a large number of different reagents requiring cold storage to be shipped to testing laboratories | Stable reagents that can be transported at ambient temperatures and humidity Unified testing methods such as WGS that allow the same reagents to be used for different organism types Lab-on-chip technology that circumvents these issues |
| Human resources | There is a shortage of qualified laboratory technicians and a wide range of skills is needed for broad surveillance | Tests that have broad range so that the same suite of skills can be applied to different pathogens Automated or kit-based testing requiring lower skill levels Tele-training and other training formats that permit on-the-job training for existing technicians |
| Infrastructure | Electricity, running water and internet access are often unavailable or only intermittently available at remote testing sites | Equipment that can run off-line for example, portable sequencers, foldoscopes and paperfuges Leapfrog energy and water solutions |
| Data sharing and connectivity | Personal data needs to be protected and be compliant with General Data Protection Regulation and pseudonymised before sharing. Robust protocols are not always in place | Standards followed. Data gathering systems from all diagnostics. Context appropriate connectivity via local telecom systems Easy-to-use data visualisation |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; LIMS, laboratory information management systems; WGS, whole-genome sequencing.
Figure 1Existing options for leapfrogging across the path from patient (1) to surveillance data (6) that traditionally includes manual health-worker collection of specimen and patient data (2), isolate recovery (3), identification (4) and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) (5), with incubation during steps 2 to 5, followed by data entry and processing (6). NAAT, nucleic acid amplification technology.