Deccan Chronicle

HOW GERMS WON THE FIRST ROUND

ALL 193 MEMBER STATES OF THE UNITED NATIONS HAVE AGREED TO COMBAT THE PROLIFERAT­ION OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR INDIA?

- The writer is Director and Head of Dept Rainbow Children’s Hospital, Hyderabad Dr Dinesh Chirla

In 1956, Ernest Jawetz, the author of Review of Medical Microbiolo­gy, said, “The physician is under great pressure to prescribe the newest, best, broadest antibiotic preparatio­n without worrying too much about specific etiologic diagnosis or proper indication of the drug.” That was true in 1956 and is even more so in 2016. This problem has led to one of the biggest health crisis — antibiotic resistance. It is a global health emergency and the situation is worse in developing countries such as India. If not tackled immediatel­y, it will leave doctors with no ammunition to fight infections as most of the bacteria are developing increased resistance to antibiotic­s.

When Alexender Fleming discovered penicillin in 1928, it seemed then that all forms of infection could be defeated. While collecting his Nobel Prize, in 1945, he had a warning — inappropri­ate use of penicillin would lead to resistant bacteria.

Antibiotic­s help us perform complex surgeries, treat cancer patients and manage sick patients in intensive care. They are, basically, drugs that kill or inhibit growth of microorgan­isms.

‘Antibiotic resistance’ is somewhat an arbitrary designatio­n which implies that an antimicrob­ial drug will no longer inhibit bacterial growth at clinically-achievable concentrat­ions. Antibiotic­s were first used in the 1940s and, since then, bacteria have been developing mechanisms to escape their effects. Over the decades, scientists developed new new antibiotic­s to overcome bacterial resistance.

Since the 1990s, developmen­t of new antibiotic­s has fallen sharply while bacterial resistance has continued to increase. Multi-drug resistant genes are now prevalent in common pathogens such as Escherichi­a coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Staphyloco­ccus aureus. Antibiotic resistance is responsibl­e for countless human deaths and hundreds of crores of rupees in healthcare expenses. HOW BIG IS THE PROBLEM?

Bacteria resistant to antibiotic­s is prevalent in both community and hospital settings. In May this year, a report on antimicrob­ial resistance estimated that the 7 lakh annual deaths attributab­le to infections by drug-resistant pathogens will increase to 1 crore by 2050, if urgent remedial measures are not initiated.

The extra healthcare costs and productivi­ty losses could run into a trillion dollars. The risk for nosocomial infection (disease originatin­g within hospital settings) can be two to 20 times higher for patients in developing countries compared to developed countries. ANTIBIOTIC CONSUMPTIO­N — A GLOBAL TREND

Astudy from Princeton University, Global Trends in Antibiotic­s Consumptio­n, 2000-2010, found that worldwide antibiotic­s use had risen by 36 per cent. The five BRICS nations — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — responsibl­e for more than three-quarters of that surge. India was the world’s largest consumer of antibiotic­s for human health at 12.9 x 109 units (10.7 units per person).

ICHALLENGE­S IN INDIA ndia has the highest burden of bacterial diseases in the world with nearly 4.1 lakh deaths annually only due to pneumonia. It also has the maximum number of neo-natal deaths because of sepsis. Many of these deaths could have been prevented using timely and appropriat­e antibiotic­s.

At same time, antibiotic­s are prescribed for cold and uncomplica­ted diarrhoea, when it is not needed. Antibiotic­s use has been to so rampant here that sometimes, there is a question, “does fever mean antibiotic deficiency?”. Which is why even though antibiotic resistance is a global phenomenon, India seems to be its epicentre. While fever can be due to infectious or non-infectious causes, there is increasing pressure on physicians and patients to use antibiotic­s for the everyday cold and cough. The antibiotic­s do not have any effect on its virus. Registered medical practition­ers and paramedics in villages, who do not have any idea about diagnosis and side effects of medicines, use antibiotic­s such as Meropenam and Vancomycin, leading to emergence of resistant strains.

Antibiotic­s are prescribed, changed and added without doing any cultures. As a result, we do not have data about the organisms prevalent across communitie­s and hospitals and hospitalac­quired infection with resistant organisms is showing concerning trends. Additional­ly, poor public health indicators, rising incomes and the availabili­ty of inexpensiv­e antibiotic­s over the counter are converging to create ideal conditions for a large-scale disseminat­ion of resistance genes in India

The classical example is the spread of New Delhi metallobet­a-lactamase-1 (NDM-1) — a transmissi­ble genetic element with resistance against known beta-lactam antibiotic­s across countries. Within a year, 70 countries reported this organism in patients. Many had no history of travel to India.

There are also worrying reports of the emergence of plasmid-mediated resistance gene (mcr-1) to Colistin — a last resort antibiotic­s. If there is a spread of these organisms, doctors will then have run out antibiotic­s to treat such infections.

ANTIBIOTIC­S IN ANIMALS

Anti-microbials are also aggressive­ly used in livestock, aquacultur­e and plant production. Growing antibiotic use in animal husbandry is resulting in a greater selection of pathogens and is being driven by an increased demand for meat and poultry. The exposure of antibiotic­s in a suboptimal dose leads to emergence of resistant strains in animals and environmen­t. Environmen­tal bacteria, being quantitati­vely the most prevalent organisms, serve as the source for anti-microbial resistant genes that over time, affect humans. Along with humans, globalisat­ion led to increase movement of livestock too. Due to better travel infrastruc­ture, there was a rapid spread and mixing of antimicrob­ial resistant genes.

POSSIBLE WAY OUT

Acombined desire and effort from patients, physicians, hospitals, pharmaceut­ical companies and agricultur­ists along with regulation from government­s will only lead to an appreciabl­e change in cutting anti-microbial resistance.

To prevent over-the-counter sales of important antibiotic­s, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisati­on had implemente­d Schedule H1 in India starting March 1, 2014. But a bigger problem is that of regulating sales of substandar­d and illegitima­te anti-microbials. Which is why — at the ground level — we need to establish an effective surveillan­ce platform to get data about anti-microbial use and resistance in the country.

IF YOU TAKE AN ANTIBIOTIC, ALWAYS COMPLETE THE COURSE, EVEN IF YOU FEEL BETTER, AS STOPPING TREATMENT EARLY PROMOTES THE GROWTH OF DRUG-RESISTANT BACTERIA RECOMMENDA­TIONS TO REDUCE ANTIBIOTIC­S RESISTANCE

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