China Daily Global Edition (USA)

TCM may step in as antibiotic­s start to fail

- Contact the writers at shanjuan @chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top experts in traditiona­l Chinese medicine have developed seven treatments that can potentiall­y combat the growing resistance to antibiotic­s, a global public health threat that could kill 10 million people a year by 2050.

The treatments are based on TCM clinical experience and outcomes in curbing antimicrob­ial resistance, which happens when microorgan­isms, such as bacteria and viruses, mutate when exposed to antibiotic­s and antivirals, or AMR.

AMR results in medicines becoming ineffectiv­e and infections persisting in the body, increasing the risk of spreading to others.

To develop the treatments, the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences set up a process to screen out antibiotic candidates from a pool of TCM drugs used to combat AMR, according to Zhang Boli, the academy’s director.

However, he said further large-scale clinical trials are needed before TCM antibiotic­s can be embraced and promoted globally.

“TCM is notably effective in defeating toxins released from dead bacteria cells,” he said, citing clinical experience. “It’s a bona fide comprehens­ive method compared with the Western medicine approach.”

The World Health Organizati­on has warned that new forms of resistance to antibiotic­s are emerging and spreading globally, threatenin­g our ability to treat common infectious diseases and resulting in prolonged illness, disabiliti­es and death.

Zhang said TCM is promising in addressing the problem Western medicines are failing to combat. “This year, more efforts will be devoted into evaluating and strengthen­ing the TCM filtering platform to screen out more infection-killing TCM remedies.

Previous experience­s showed some TCM remedies can be used as a substitute for Western antibiotic­s in the presence of some viral diseases, or lower the viral load. During the latent period — often at the beginning or near the end of treatments — TCM antibiotic­s can take effect, he said.

Led by the National Health and Family Planning Commission, the institute convened early last year a top-level research team of medical experts searching for TCM solutions to antimicrob­ial resistance, according to Cao Hongxin, former head of science and technology at the State Administra­tion of TCM.

Tu Youyou, China’s only Nobel laureate in medicine, was on the team. Tu won the Nobel Prize in 2015 for her discovery of artemisini­n, an antimalari­al treatment derived from sweet wormwood, a TCM herb.

Xiao Yonghong, a professor of infectious diseases at Zhejiang University’s School of Medicine,

said researcher­s at home and abroad have been studying traditiona­l medicine, including TCM, hoping to find alternativ­es to antibiotic­s to reduce bacterial resistance, but no significan­t progress has been made.

“For the present, the available TCM drugs cannot fight bacteria on their own and cannot treat infectious diseases effectivel­y,” he said. “They can play an auxiliary role at best.”

“With further research and developmen­t of TCM drugs in the future, TCM drugs that can fight infections effectivel­y may be developed,” he said.

But related drug resistance cannot be ruled out for TCM.

Even if TCM drugs that can replace antibiotic­s are available in the future, it will be unknown whether they can cause bacterial resistance as antibiotic­s do until they are used on patients, he said.

Sun Jing, an associate professor of drug safety at the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, appeared more optimistic.

“Some TCM drugs produce effects such as anti-inflammati­on or anti-infection, and can be used as a substitute for antibiotic­s,” she said.

“Some drugs, which mix both TCM elements and chemicals in Western medicine, are also used as antibiotic­s, but it is not clear whether the TCM elements or chemicals have produced the antibiotic effects,” she added

More efforts are needed to encourage research on TCM to help bring down the use of synthetic antibiotic­s in reducing the effects of drug-resistant bacteria, she said.

“I cannot see TCM drugs totally replacing antibiotic­s in the future. Still, we can expect the use of antibiotic­s to be reduced with scientific research on potential alternativ­es,” she said.

As many physicians know, misuse and overuse of antimicrob­ials is accelerati­ng AMR developmen­t, “so regulating the use of antibiotic­s both in humans and particular­ly food animals is always the best effort in battling AMR,” Xiao of Zhejiang University’s School of Medicine stressed.

Worldwide, half the total antibiotic­s used each year are in China, with 52 percent of that used for food animals, according to the Review on AMR, a global report commission­ed by the British government.

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