Kane Republican

COVID-19 Reverses Progress in Fight Against Antimicrob­ial Resistance in U.S. Hospitaliz­ation related infections grew 15% from 2019 to 2020

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The COVID-19 pandemic pushed back years of progress made combating antimicrob­ial resistance (AR) in the United States. The report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), COVID-19: U.S. Impact on Antimicrob­ial Resistance, Special Report 2022, concludes that the threat of antimicrob­ial-resistant infections is not only still present but has gotten worse—with resistant hospital-onset infections and deaths both increasing at least 15% during the first year of the pandemic.

“This setback can and must be temporary. The COVID-19 pandemic has unmistakab­ly shown us that antimicrob­ial resistance will not stop if we let down our guard; there is no time to waste,” said Michael Craig, MPP, Director of CDC’S Antibiotic Resistance Coordinati­on & Strategy Unit. “The best way to avert a pandemic caused by an antimicrob­ial-resistant pathogen is to identify gaps and invest in prevention to keep our nation safe.”

In the report, CDC analyzed the state of antimicrob­ial resistance in the United States immediatel­y following the 2020 peaks of the COVID-19 pandemic. The data show an alarming increase in resistant infections starting during hospitaliz­ation, growing an overall 15% from 2019 to 2020 among seven pathogens. Increases in specific pathogens included:

• carbapenem-resistant – 78% increase in infections,

• multidrug-resistant

– 32% increase in infections,

• vancomycin-resistant (VRE) – 14% increase in infections, and

• methicilli­n-resistant

(MRSA) – 13% increase in infections.

Antifungal-resistant threats rose in 2020, too, including increased 60% overall—and species (excluding with a 26% increase in infections in hospitals. By comparison, in a 2019 report, significan­t national reductions in hospitals were celebrated, where antimicrob­ial-resistant infections fell by 27% 2012 to 2017; data show these reductions continued in hospitals until the pandemic began.

is the only healthcare­associated pathogen to improve in 2020, likely driven in part by changes in healthcare­seeking behavior.

In U.S. hospitals, CDC data show significan­t surges in antibiotic use and difficulty in following infection prevention and control guidance, which are key to preventing antimicrob­ial-resistant infections and their spread. During the pandemic, hospitals experience­d personal protective equipment supply challenges, staffing shortages, and longer patient stays. Hospitals also treated sicker patients who required more frequent and longer use of medical devices like catheters and ventilator­s. The impact of the pandemic likely resulted in an increase of healthcare-associated, antimicrob­ial-resistant infections.

During the first year of the pandemic, more than 29,400 people died from antimicrob­ial-resistant infections commonly associated with healthcare. Of these, nearly 40% got the infection while they were in the hospital. The total national burden of deaths from AR may be much higher, but data gaps caused by the pandemic hinder that analysis. CDC has limited data for the spread of antimicrob­ial-resistant infections in the community; many clinics and healthcare facilities had limited services, served fewer patients, or closed their doors entirely in the face of challenges from COVID-19. Data are unavailabl­e or delayed for nine of the 18 pathogens listed in CDC’S 2019 Antibiotic Resistance Threats Reports.

In the 2019 report, the last year comprehens­ive healthcare and community data were available to calculate, CDC estimated that more than 2.8 million antimicrob­ial-resistant infections occur in the U.S. each year, with more than 35,000 people dying as a result.

Historic progress made in antibiotic prescribin­g was reversed as well during the pandemic. Antibiotic­s were often the first option given to treat those who presented with pneumonia-like symptoms of fever and shortness of breath even though this often represente­d the viral illness of COVID-19, for which antibiotic­s are not effective. From March 2020 to October 2020, almost 80% of patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 received an antibiotic. While some of this prescribin­g can be appropriat­e when risks for related bacterial or fungal infections are unknown, this high level of prescribin­g can also put patients at risk for side effects and create a pathway for resistance to develop and spread.

Despite the pandemic, in 2020, more than 90% of U.S. hospitals had an antibiotic stewardshi­p program aligned with CDC’S Core Elements of Hospital Antibiotic Stewardshi­p—which may have contribute­d to the reduction in

infections. During the pandemic, many antimicrob­ial resistance programs contribute­d to stopping the spread of COVID-19. For example, CDC’S AR Solutions Initiative provided infection control expertise to healthcare facilities, many of them nursing homes, to perform more than 14,000 outbreak consultati­ons; CDC’S AR Lab Network sequenced more than 4,700 SARCOV-2 genomes; and CDC’S NHSN, which drives patient safety programs by tracking antimicrob­ial-resistant infections and antibiotic use in healthcare, provided added capabiliti­es to support COVID-19 data collection in hospitals and nursing homes.

“We need to emphasize and expand the implementa­tion of the effective prevention strategies that are already in CDC’S toolbox to all healthcare facilities,” said Denise

Cardo, MD, Director of CDC’S Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion. “The 2021 launch of the Global AR Lab and Response Network and the Global

Action in Healthcare Network is an example of how aggressive­ly CDC is moving to combat antimicrob­ial resistance not only in the U.S., but in nearly 50 countries across the world. We made significan­t progress before the pandemic, and I’m confident that we will make significan­t progress going forward.”

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