Understanding the mechanisms and drivers of antimicrobial resistance
File(s)Understanding the Mechanisms and Drivers of AMR.docx (1.1 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
To combat the threat to human health and biosecurity from antimicrobial resistance, an understanding of its mechanisms and drivers is needed. Emergence of antimicrobial resistance in microorganisms is a natural phenomenon, yet antimicrobial resistance selection has been driven by antimicrobial exposure in health care, agriculture, and the environment. Onward transmission is affected by standards of infection control, sanitation, access to clean water, access to assured quality antimicrobials and diagnostics, travel, and migration. Strategies to reduce antimicrobial resistance by removing antimicrobial selective pressure alone rely upon resistance imparting a fitness cost, an effect not always apparent. Minimising resistance should therefore be considered comprehensively, by resistance mechanism, microorganism, antimicrobial drug, host, and context; parallel to new drug discovery, broad ranging, multidisciplinary research is needed across these five levels, interlinked across the health-care, agriculture, and environment sectors. Intelligent, integrated approaches, mindful of potential unintended results, are needed to ensure sustained, worldwide access to effective antimicrobials.
Date Issued
2015-11-18
Date Acceptance
2015-11-18
Citation
Lancet, 2015, 387 (10014), pp.176-187
ISSN
1474-547X
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
176
End Page
187
Journal / Book Title
Lancet
Volume
387
Issue
10014
Copyright Statement
© 2015, Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Sponsor
National Institute for Health Research
National Institute of Health Research Imperial Biomedical Research Centre
Grant Number
HPRU-2012-10047
WMNF_P46472
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Medicine, General & Internal
General & Internal Medicine
SPECTRUM-BETA-LACTAMASE
ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANCE
ESCHERICHIA-COLI
DRUG-RESISTANCE
STAPHYLOCOCCUS-AUREUS
KLEBSIELLA-PNEUMONIAE
GLOBAL SPREAD
CLOSTRIDIUM-DIFFICILE
NEISSERIA-GONORRHOEAE
NON-SUSCEPTIBILITY
Agriculture
Animal Husbandry
Animals
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Bacterial Infections
Drug Resistance, Microbial
Environment
Health Policy
Humans
Inappropriate Prescribing
Vaccination
11 Medical And Health Sciences
Publication Status
Published