Gulf Today

A global effort to fight antibiotic resistance

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In the years since, the journal has become a source of solace for Shader Smith as she has travelled the globe speaking about the growing threat of antimicrob­ial resistance

In November 2017, days after her daughter Mallory Smith died from a drug-resistant infection at the age of 25, Diane Shader Smith typed a password into Mallory’s laptop. Her daughter gave it to her before undergoing double-lung transplant surgery, with instructio­ns to share any writing that could help others if she didn’t survive. The transplant was successful, but Burkholder­ia cepacia — an antibiotic-resistant bacterial strain that first colonised her system when she was 12 — took hold. After a lifetime with cystic fibrosis, and 13 years battling an unconquera­ble infection, Mallory’s body could take no more. In the haze of grief and pain, Shader Smith found herself looking through 2,500 pages of a journal her daughter had kept since high school. It chronicled Mallory’s hopes and triumphs as an ebullient, athletic student at Beverly Hills High School and Stanford University, and her private despair as bacteria ravaged her systems and sapped her considerab­le strength.

In the years since, the journal has become a source of solace for Shader Smith as she has travelled the globe speaking about the growing threat of antimicrob­ial resistance. It is also now the inspiratio­n for two new projects she hopes will spark greater understand­ing of the public health crisis that ended her daughter’s life prematurel­y and could claim millions more. On Tuesday, Random House published “Diary of a Dying Girl,” a selection of Mallory’s journal entries.

The same day saw the launch of the Global

AMR Diary, a website collecting the worldwide stories of people battling pathogens that can’t be defeated by our current pharmaceut­ical arsenal. An estimated 35,000 people die in the US each year from drug-resistant infections, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Worldwide, antimicrob­ial resistance kills an estimated 1.27 million people directly every year and contribute­s to the deaths of millions more.

Despite the mounting toll — and the prospect of an eventual surge in superbug fatalities — the developmen­t of new antibiotic­s has stagnated. Shader Smith is acutely aware of what we stand to lose when medicine can no longer save us. “I don’t want to live in a post-antibiotic world,” Shader Smith said. “Until people understand what’s at stake, they’re not going to care. My daughter died from this. So I care deeply.”

Over the last 50 years, opportunis­tic pathogens have evolved defences faster than humans can develop drugs to combat them. Misuse of antibiotic­s has played a large part in this imbalance. Bugs that survive antibiotic exposure pass on their resistant traits, leading to hardier strains.

Crucial as they are, antibiotic­s don’t have the same financial incentives for developers that other drugs do. They aren’t meant to be taken over the long term, as are medication­s for chronic conditions such as diabetes or high blood pressure. The most powerful ones have to be used as rarely as possible, to give bacteria fewer opportunit­ies to develop resistance­s.

“The public does not understand (the) scope of the problem. Antimicrob­ial resistance truly is one of the leading public health threats of our time,” said Emily Wheeler, director of infectious disease policy at the Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on. “The pipeline for antibiotic­s today is already inadequate to address the threats that we know about, without even considerin­g the continuous evolution of these bugs as the years go on.”

Despite the global nature of the threat, Shader Smith said, the response from public health officials is curiously disjointed. For one, no one can agree on a single name for the problem, she said. Different agencies address the issue with an “alphabet soup” of acronyms: the World Health Organizati­on uses AMR as shorthand for antimicrob­ial resistance, while the CDC prefers AR. Medical journals, doctors and the media refer alternatel­y to multidrug resistance (MDR), drug-resistant infections (DRI) and superbugs.

“It doesn’t matter what you call it. We just have to all call it the same thing,” said Shader Smith, who works as a publicist and marketing consultant. Since Mallory’s death, Shader Smith has made it her mission to get the people and organisati­ons working on antimicrob­ial resistance to talk to one another. For the Global AMR Diary, she enlisted the help of a dozen agencies working on the issue, including the CDC, WHO, the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (the European Union’s equivalent of the

CDC), the Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on and others. Antimicrob­ial resistance can “feel abstract given the scale of the problem,” said John Alter, head of external affairs of the AMR Action Fund, one of the organisati­ons involved with the project. “To know there are millions of families at this very moment going through struggles similar to what Mallory experience­d is simply unacceptab­le,” he said.

“Not only does this firsthand experience help others who might be going through something similar, but it also reminds those tasked with creating solutions and care who they are working for. They aren’t just test tubes or charts,” said Thomas Heymann, chief executive of Sepsis Alliance, another contributo­r. The stories in the online diary are often harrowing. A 25-year-old pharmacist in Athens had to put her cancer treatment on hold when an extremely resistant strain of Klebsiella attacked. A veterinari­an in Kenya suffered permanent disability after contractin­g resistant bacteria after hip surgery. Around the world, routine outpatient procedures and illnesses have rapidly become life-threatenin­g when opportunis­tic bugs take hold.

Mallory was 12 when her doctor called to confirm that her cultures were positive for an extremely resistant strain of cepacia, a form of bacteria found widely in soil and water. The pathogen can be deadly to people with underlying conditions such as cystic fibrosis, a genetic disorder that impairs the cells’ ability to effectivel­y flush mucus from the lungs and other body systems. Life expectanci­es for people with cystic fibrosis have grown since Mallory’s diagnosis in 1995, with many people of them living into their 40s and beyond. The cepacia curtailed that possibilit­y for her. “This is all we’re ever going to have,” Mallory wrote in June 2011, at the end of her freshman year at Stanford, “so if you’re not actively pursuing happiness then you’re insane. And I don’t think I would have this perspectiv­e if I didn’t have resistant bacteria that will likely kill me.”

Mallory’s intuition that her journal could be valuable to others was prescient. “People can easily understand and relate to actual experience­s,” said Michael Craig, director of the CDC’S Antimicrob­ial Resistance Coordinati­on and Strategy Unit. “The Global AMR Diary takes this approach and expands on it with a global lens — increasing the potential to get these critical messages to more people around the world.”

An earlier version of Mallory’s diaries was published in 2019 as “Salt in My Soul: An Unfinished Life.” The new book includes entries that Shader Smith said she wasn’t ready to grapple with in the immediate aftermath of Mallory’s passing: ones addressing depression and private despair, concerns about relationsh­ips and body image issues complicate­d by chronic illness. It also includes a coda about phage therapy, a promising advance against AMR.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? Diane Shader Smith, holding a picture of her daughter Mallory, has spent the six years since her death travelling the world and speaking about the dangers of antimicrob­ial resistance.
Tribune News Service Diane Shader Smith, holding a picture of her daughter Mallory, has spent the six years since her death travelling the world and speaking about the dangers of antimicrob­ial resistance.

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