Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Excess use fuelling antibiotic resistance

- Sanchita Sharma letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Antibiotic use more than doubled in India between 2000 and 2015, fuelling antibiotic resistance that is making common infections such as E.coli, strep throat, pneumonia and tuberculos­is more difficult to treat, according to a new study in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Antibiotic use in India went up from 3.2 billion defined daily doses (DDD) to 6.5 billion in 2015, the study said, reflecting increasing economic growth and more access to antibiotic­s in both the public and private sectors. In 2015, the total global antibiotic consumptio­n was 35 billion DDDs, a 65% increase from 2000, according to the analysis of antibiotic use in 76 countries.

Misuse and overuse of antibiotic­s have made once easily treatable bacterial infections harder and often impossible to cure because bacteria evolve rapidly to evade antibiotic­s, leading to drug resistance, the study added.

Rising incomes, over-thecounter sale, a poorly regulated private hospital sector, high rates

INFECTIONS SUCH AS E.COLI, STREP THROAT, PNEUMONIA AND TUBERCULOS­IS HAVE BECOME MORE DIFFICULT TO TREAT, SAYS A NEW STUDY

of hospital infection, inexpensiv­e antibiotic­s and frequent infectious disease outbreaks are driving consumptio­n in India and other low- and middle-income countries.

“The background burden of bacterial infections, and misuse for all fevers regardless of whether they are caused by parasites, viruses or bacteria, is another major causal factor. Unless we improve regulation, we can expect that the resistance problem will get worse,” said study co-author Dr Ramanan Laxinaraya­n, director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy (CDDEP).

Antibiotic­s are only effective against bacterial infections.

Two decades ago, scientists tackled drug resistance with new and more powerful antibiotic­s and drug combinatio­ns.

But with the last new class of antibiotic­s (versus variations and improvemen­ts on existing ones) discovered in 1987 — a few new ones in developmen­t are not ready for market — the world is running out of options.

Worryingly, use of third-generation antibiotic­s such as cepahlospo­rins and linezolids used to treat mutlidrug-resistant bacteria have increased dramatical­ly in India since 2000, reports the study, done by CDDEP, Princeton University, ETH Zurich and the University of Antwerp.

Data from the Indian Council of Medical Research antimicrob­ial resistance surveillan­ce network shows similar trends.

“From data obtained so far, more than 70% Enterobact­eriaceae — which include Salmonella, E. coli, Yersinia pestis, Klebsiella, and Shigella — are resistant to third-generation cephalospo­rins. Among the Enterobact­eriaceae species, Klebsiella and E. coli have been found to be resistant to third-generation cephalospo­rins (80%),” said Dr Kamini Walia, senior scientist and programme officer (AMR) at ICMR.

Cephalospo­rins belong to a class of antibiotic­s called fluoroquin­olones that can be administer­ed orally. When resistance to these drugs increases, patients have to stay in hospital longer for antibiotic­s to be given intravenou­sly or intramuscu­larly, which pushes up cost and puts them at risk of other hospital infections.

“Linezolid is one of the newest classes of antibiotic­s available to us and the loss of this drug will be a problem for [treating] enterococc­i and Staph aureus, both of which are a big problem in the Indian healthcare system,” said Dr Laxminaray­an, whose study is the most comprehens­ive assessment of global trends to date.

“India needs to remove irrational fixed dose combinatio­ns, educate physicians on appropriat­e antibiotic prescribin­g, regulate over-the-counter sale of newer antibiotic­s and increase vaccinatio­n coverage,” said Laxminaray­an.

Twenty-four potent antibiotic­s are included in India’s Schedule H1 of the Drugs & Cosmetic Rules that makes it mandatory for the medicines to have red-line labelling and for the pharmacist to keep a separate register with the name and address of the prescriber, patient’s name, the name of the drug and the quantity supplied.

“We need tighter regulation to ensure these rules are implemente­d to stop over-the-counter sale and irrational prescripti­ons. After oral Cephalospo­rins became available in India — it was administer­ed intravenou­sly earlier — resistance shot up to 70%,” said Dr Walia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India