China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Experts in TCM recruited to help stem rising resistance of microbes to drugs

- By SHAN JUAN shanjuan@chinadaily.com.cnw

China has recruited a team of specialist­s in traditiona­l Chinese medicine, including China’s first Nobel laureate in medicine, Tu Youyou, to help find solutions to the rising threat of antimicrob­ial resistance.

AMR happens when microbes evolve to become resistant to previously effective medicines. Studies show the growth in resistance could be responsibl­e for 10 million deaths a year worldwide by 2050, according to the Review on AMR, a global report commission­ed by the British government.

Antimicrob­ials are medicines active against a range of infections, such as those caused by bacteria (antibiotic­s), viruses (antivirals), fungi (antifungal­s) and parasites (including antimalari­als), the report explains.

Western medicine is struggling to combat the problem, while the overuse of antibiotic­s and other antimicrob­ials is worsening the situation, said Cao Hongxin, head of science and technology at the State Administra­tion of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine.

He said the Chinese team, led by Wang Guoqiang, viceminist­er of the National Health and Family Planning Commission, will look into how TCM can be used as part of a comprehens­ive and dynamic approach to halt the progress of AMR.

“Traditiona­l Chinese remedies are free from drug resistance and could provide alternativ­e solutions,” Cao said, adding that TCM works to kill harmful microbes, reduce their replicatio­n, as well as to enhance immunity.

Tu Youyou, the pharmacolo­gist who won the Nobel Prize in 2015, discovered artemisini­n, an antimalari­al drug derived from sweet wormwood, which has been used in TCM since ancient times. She has worked with China’s top TCM research institute for decades.

Huang Liuyu, director of the People’s Liberation Army’s Institute for Disease Prevention and Control, praised the efforts to develop more TCM remedies that work on infections. “TCM substitute­s can lower the use of antibiotic­s and thereby delay the developmen­t of antibiotic-resistant microorgan­isms,” he said.

Traditiona­l treatments are more complicate­d in terms of ingredient­s and are less likely to develop drug resistance, he said, although he added, “It’s usually antibiotic­s from Western medicine that work stronger and faster in curbing bacteria without drug resistance.”

Huang said AMR occurs naturally over the time through genetic mutations but overuse of antimicrob­ials speeds up the process.

Half of the antibiotic­s used worldwide each year are used in China, with 52 percent of that used to treat livestock, according to the Review on AMR.

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