The Jerusalem Post

Drug companies told to do more to tackle ‘superbug’ crisis

- • By BEN HIRSCHLER

LONDON (Reuters) – Drugmakers’ response to the threat posed by “superbugs” remains patchy even after years of warnings, according to the first analysis of individual companies’ efforts to tackle the antibiotic-resistance crisis.

The rise of drug-resistant bacteria is a growing threat to modern medicine with the emergence of infections resistant to even last-resort antibiotic­s – a situation made worse in recent years by overuse of antibiotic­s and cutbacks in drug research.

New analysis by the nonprofit Access to Medicine Foundation (AMF), published on Tuesday, found that GlaxoSmith­Kline and Johnson & Johnson were doing more than most among large research-based pharmaceut­ical companies to tackle the problem, while Mylan led the way among generic drugmakers and Entasis was top among biotechs.

Overall, GSK led the field with 55 antimicrob­ial pipeline projects, including 13 vaccines.

But action taken by such companies is only the start of what could be done to address the problem, which former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill in 2014 estimated could cause 10 million deaths a year worldwide by 2050.

“The whole of modern medicine depends on being able to control and treat infections,” said Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust charity. “Perhaps the most exciting area of medicine at the moment, immunother­apies for cancer, is impossible unless you can control infection.”

While more experiment­al antibiotic­s are now moving through developmen­t than a few years ago, the number is still down compared with the 1980s and 1990s. And a lot more work needs to be done to ensure appropriat­e use of medicines – both new ones and the thousands of tons of older pills churned out each year by generic companies.

“There’s definitely more that all companies can do,” said Jayasree Iyer, executive director of AMF, which published the analysis at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos. “We need to strengthen the research and developmen­t pipeline. And when new products reach the market, we need to ensure that they are used in a conservati­ve way so that misuse and overuse is limited.”

There are now 28 experiment­al antibiotic­s in latestage developmen­t against critical pathogens. But only two of these are supported by plans to ensure they can be both made accessible and used wisely if they reach the market.

The AMF said four companies – GSK, Shionogi, Pfizer and Novartis – had taken steps to separate sales representa­tives’ bonuses from the volume of antibiotic­s sold, but much more needed to be done across the industry to counter overuse.

Another under-recognized problem is the pollution – due to lax oversight of wastewater runoff – caused by mass production of antibiotic­s.

In India’s Hyderabad region, for example, the presence of hundreds of drug factories and inadequate water treatment has left lakes and rivers laced with antibiotic­s, making the area a giant Petri dish for antimicrob­ial resistance.

The AMF urged multinatio­nal drugmakers to do more to ensure that their suppliers of bulk antibiotic ingredient­s were complying with rigorous wastewater standards.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? E. COLI BACTERIA colonies grown on a Hektoen enteric (HE) agar plate are seen in a microscopi­c image courtesy of the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
(Reuters) E. COLI BACTERIA colonies grown on a Hektoen enteric (HE) agar plate are seen in a microscopi­c image courtesy of the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

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