The Citizen (KZN)

Deadly antibiotic­s shortage

USING SUBOPTIMAL ALTERNATIV­ES CREATES SUPERBUGS

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Shortages of some life-saving antibiotic­s are putting growing numbers of patients at risk and fuelling the evolution of superbugs that do not respond to modern medicines, according to a new report yesterday.

The nonprofit Access to Medicine Foundation (AMF) said there was an emerging crisis in the global anti-infectives market as fragile drug supply chains, which rely on just a few big suppliers, come close to collapse.

The result is shortages of products like piperacill­in-tazobactam, an antibiotic combinatio­n used intravenou­sly in intensive care, which has been in tight supply since a 2016 explosion at a Chinese pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s factory.

Another antibiotic, benzathine penicillin G (BPG), may be short in at least 39 countries, including Germany and Brazil. BPG is a key drug for preventing transmissi­on of syphilis from mother to child and the shortage frustrated Brazil’s efforts to bring a disease outbreak under control between 2012 and 2015. BPG is also used to fight rheumatic heart disease.

In absence of the right drugs, patients may take less effective or poor-quality medicines that increase the risk of antimicrob­ial resistance developing. “Things are getting worse because the market is not fixing the problem, despite the expansion in the need for such specialist antibiotic­s,” said AMF executive director Jayasree Iyer.

Global demand for antibiotic­s has grown by two-thirds since 2000, driven by population growth and the need for medicines to fight infectious diseases in low- and middle-income countries. Most antibiotic­s are cheap, off-patent generic medicines, but that means they have very low profit margins, particular­ly compared to modern drugs for diseases like cancer, offering manufactur­ers little incentive to invest in new production facilities.

The rise in shortages has gone hand in hand with a wave of consolidat­ion among the companies making generic drugs, which range from global pharmaceut­ical giants to smaller firms in countries such as India, reducing the number of suppliers making individual product lines.

But antibiotic shortages can have especially dire consequenc­es, since doctors have to resort to suboptimal treatments that are less efficient at killing specific pathogens, leading to the rise of resistant bacteria or so-called superbugs. An estimated 70% of bacteria are already resistant to at least one antibiotic that is commonly used to treat them, making the evolution of such superbugs one of the biggest threats facing medicine today. –

 ?? Picture: iStock ?? SHORTFALL. The market is not fixing the problem, says Access to Medicine Foundation.
Picture: iStock SHORTFALL. The market is not fixing the problem, says Access to Medicine Foundation.

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