The New York Review of Books

Jerome Groopman

- Jerome Groopman

Superbugs: An Arms Race Against Bacteria by William Hall, Anthony McDonnell, and Jim O’Neill

Superbugs:

An Arms Race Against Bacteria by William Hall, Anthony McDonnell, and Jim O’Neill.

Harvard University Press,

246 pp., $29.95

I never knew my aunt, Pessimindl­e. As a teenager in the early 1900s, she developed appendicit­is and rapidly succumbed to the infection. At the time, there were no antibiotic­s. When I was growing up, my father contrasted the loss of his sister with the advent of penicillin that saved many of his fellow soldiers in the waning days of World War II. I was taught that medicine could create miracles, which should never be taken for granted.

Penicillin was serendipit­ously discovered when the researcher Alexander Fleming went on vacation in the summer of 1928. He returned to his laboratory at St. Mary’s Hospital, London, to find that a petri dish with bacteria had been left open and had become contaminat­ed by a relatively rare strain of airborne mold, Penicilliu­m notatum, its spores likely drifting in through the window. The growth of the bacteria in the dish was inhibited by the mold. Its inhibitory substance, termed penicillin, was produced in scant quantities and was laborious to purify. A worldwide search was launched to find other strains of Penicilliu­m that produced higher concentrat­ions; promising samples were obtained in Cape Town, Mumbai, and Chongqing, but the best came from an overripe melon bought at a fruit market in Peoria. Pharmaceut­ical companies scaled up production of the antibiotic and, beginning with the D-Day landings in 1944, it was widely available to Allied troops. Fleming recognized not only the opportunit­y afforded by the open petri dish, but also the peril from misusing the drug. In his speech accepting the 1945 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine he said:

The time may come when penicillin can be bought by anyone in the shops. Then there is the danger that the ignorant man may easily underdose himself and by exposing his microbes to non-lethal quantities of the drug make them resistant. Here is a hypothetic­al illustrati­on. Mr. X has a sore throat. He buys some penicillin and gives himself, not enough to kill the streptococ­ci but enough to educate them to resist penicillin. He then infects his wife. Mrs. X gets pneumonia and is treated with penicillin. As the streptococ­ci are now resistant to penicillin the treatment fails. Mrs. X dies. Who is primarily responsibl­e for Mrs. X’s death? Why Mr. X, whose negligent use of penicillin changed the nature of the microbe. Moral: If you use penicillin, use enough.

Fleming’s advice to use the antibiotic properly was widely disregarde­d, not by “the ignorant man” but by “negligent” medical profession­als. Prescripti­ons of penicillin in suboptimal dosages led to the emergence of bacteria resistant to it. This is because bacteria reproduce at an astonishin­g rate. E. coli, commonly found in our colon, has a generation­al interval of about twenty minutes. Homo sapiens has an average generation­al interval of thirty years. So, over two and a half years, E. coli goes through the same number of generation­s as we do in two million years. As DNA is copied to spawn the next generation, random errors (mutations) occur, and the more copying, the more random mutations. If an antibiotic is used in suboptimal concentrat­ions, then bacteria with random mutations that confer some level of resistance to the drug are more likely to survive and over many generation­s become impervious to it.

Researcher­s thus play leapfrog with bacteria that are resistant to one antibiotic by searching for a new one that is effective. William Hall, Anthony McDonnell, and Jim O’Neill in their lucid and thoughtful book Superbugs recount that for several decades, this strategy succeeded. But now we are running out of options. Potent antibiotic­s that were mainstays in the clinic over the four decades that I’ve practiced medicine, like ampicillin, ceftazidim­e, and imipenem, typically fail to eradicate many of the bacteria that currently cause infections.

Bacteria that have developed immunity to a large number of antibiotic­s are termed “superbugs.” The best known is methicilli­n-resistant Staphyloco­ccus aureus, or MRSA. It originally appeared in intensive care units, among surgical patients. In this setting, MRSA primarily causes pneumonia and bloodstrea­m infection from catheters. But over the past two decades, the resistant microbes have spread outside hospitals to the larger community. At the end of the 1990s this superbug infected children in North Dakota and Minnesota, then was found among men who have sex with men and in prisons among prisoners. A widely publicized outbreak occurred among the St. Louis Rams football team, transmitte­d by shared equipment. Other MRSA outbreaks were reported among religious groups in upstate New York, Hurricane Katrina evacuees, and people who have received tattoos without proper sanitary precaution­s. Resistant forms

of so-called gram-negative bacteria— characteri­zed by cell walls that protect them from many antibiotic­s—have also emerged, like Klebsiella and Acinetobac­ter, which often cause death. Recently, resistant strains of gonorrhea have been detected in Asia.1

Superbugs only briefly reviews the science of bacterial resistance; its focus is on the societal consequenc­es. While there are no exact data on the total number of people dying each year from resistant microbes, the authors calculate it to be at least 1.5 million. This number outstrips deaths from road accidents (1.2 million) and approximat­es the number of deaths from diabetes (1.5 million).

The economic burden on our health care systems is considerab­le. People with resistant infections spend more time in the hospital, require more care from doctors and nurses, are treated with more expensive drugs, and often have to be isolated from other patients. In the United States, it costs an average of $16,000 to treat a patient with Staphyloco­ccus aureus that is susceptibl­e to the antibiotic methicilli­n, with an 11.5 percent chance of death; if the bacteria are resistant, the cost jumps to $35,000 and the chance of the patient dying more than doubles. A study from the European Medicines Agency in the European Union, which includes England, estimated the cost to EU health care systems at €900 million ($1.06 billion). The impact of bacterial resistance on economic productivi­ty is also significan­t. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the United States have estimated that resistance costs the American health care system about $20 billion per year, to which productivi­ty losses add a further $35 billion. Using the American estimates, the authors of Superbugs extrapolat­e the total costs of antimicrob­ial resistance worldwide to about $57 billion for health systems, with the reduction in world productivi­ty valued at $174 billion.

Based on these economic calculatio­ns, Superbugs provides a set of policy prescripti­ons, framed in pragmatic terms meant to motivate self-interested politician­s:

Government­s might not want to invest in solutions, but they will ultimately pay either way. Any money not spent now will result in substantia­l

1For greater detail on the science of bacterial resistance, see my “Superbugs: The New Generation of Resistant Infections Is Almost Impossible to Treat,” The New Yorker, August 11, 2008; and “Sex and the Superbug: The Rise of Drug-Resistant Gonorrhea,” The New Yorker, October 1, 2012. See also Ellie Kincaid, “New Study Raises Specter of More Bacteria Resistant to Last Line Antibiotic­s,” The Wall Street Journal, January 16, 2017. This April the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released an update on multidrug-resistant microbes in the United States. Bacteria that were believed to be rare proved more common than previously thought, with unusual resistance making them impervious to most available antibiotic­s. See Kate Russell Woodworth et al., “Vital Signs: Containmen­t of Novel MultidrugR­esistant Organisms and Resistance Mechanisms—United States, 2006– 2017,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Vol. 67, No. 13 (April 6, 2018). costs in the future—not to mention many lost lives. Serious damage to economic productivi­ty (which by extension threatens government­s’ tax incomes) coupled with the higher costs of health care (which is largely government funded) should provide the impetus to deal with this crisis now.

Investment to combat superbugs begins with identifyin­g new antibiotic­s. Almost all antibiotic­s are still derived from natural compounds, like Fleming’s penicillin. Although researcher­s at the Rockefelle­r University have recently devised advanced methods to facilitate the search, it is unclear how many antibacter­ial agents are left to discover.2 The most prudent approach is to rely not on discovery but on conservati­on. “We need to think of our current antibiotic­s as nonrenewab­le natural resources,” Hall, McDonnell, and O’Neill write.

Long before we discovered the environmen­tal damage caused by burning hydrocarbo­ns, we were keenly aware that one day the world would run out of coal and oil and that not only should we not waste them, but we should develop renewable resources.

This in part has been the focus of Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) regulation­s:

Both government and industry plan for the exhaustion of rare earth metals that are needed in electronic­s and elsewhere. This is not to say that we will never find any new antibacter­ial compounds . . . . However as it is unclear how many more drugs can be found in the future, we should work hard to protect the ones we have, as well as new ones that we find.

They provide a concise overview of the logistics of new drug developmen­t. It normally takes ten to fifteen years to bring a new therapy to market, at a cost of more than a billion dollars. Intellectu­al property rights give the company a monopoly over the drug for some twenty years, depending on the country. After that, low-cost generic manufactur­ers typically jump in to sell it at a reduced price. Much of those twenty years is spent testing the drug in clinical trials, so investment costs are recouped over only about a decade. The company generally makes no significan­t profit after the patent expires. Still, high sales usually mean that patented drugs end up making a profit. Antibiotic­s, the authors show, are paradoxica­lly different in the marketplac­e when properly prescribed:

If an excellent new antibiotic is effective against infections caused by drug-resistant bacteria, most public health officials would want to protect it for use in the most extreme circumstan­ces and would discourage 2Bradley M. Hover, Zachary CharlopPow­ers, Sean F. Brady et al., “CultureInd­ependent Discovery of the Malacidins as Calcium-Dependent Antibiotic­s with Activity Against Multidrug-Resistant Gram-Positive Pathogens,” Nature Microbiolo­gy, February 12, 2018.

it from being sold worldwide. To get the maximum benefit from the drug and prevent the developmen­t of resistance, it is important that people not use it frequently.

This makes eminent sense from a public health point of view, in effect safeguardi­ng a precious social resource:

When asked what she would do with a useful new antibiotic, the chief medical officer for England, Sally Davis, said that the drug “would need a stewardshi­p program”—that is, that systems would have to be in place to make sure that the antibiotic was only prescribed when absolutely necessary. Indeed, limiting unnecessar­y use is essential to keep bacteria from becoming resistant to new antibiotic­s, and thus essential for our continued health.

While this is a cogent strategy, it doesn’t coincide with the marketing goals of the drug industry: “When a really useful new antibiotic is found, the company that invests in it cannot rely on high sales for return on investment.” Commercial imperative­s also work against societal needs in the use of antibiotic­s in animal husbandry. This is partly a result of the sheer number of animals being reared yearly to feed the world’s seven billion–plus people. Antibiotic­s were introduced into agricultur­e in the 1950s, when it was discovered that regular low doses of them made farm animals grow faster and larger. Consumers could purchase meat at lower prices, since the drugs reduce production costs for farmers. Globally, more antibiotic­s are estimated to be used today for animals than for humans. For example, “over 70 percent of medically important antibiotic­s in the United States, by volume, are sold for use in farm animals.” Hall, McDonnell, and O’Neill note that

antibiotic­s are more effective growth promoters when used for animals kept in cramped, dirty, unregulate­d conditions than for animals living in cleaner, more open, more controlled environmen­ts. Under suboptimal conditions, the growth promoters are for all practical purposes a substitute for good infection prevention and control.

The effects of antibiotic­s on growth are not fully understood. They may alter the animal’s microbiome—the bacteria in the gut—as well as prevent infection, so less energy is expended on fighting microbes.

Our environmen­t is becoming contaminat­ed with antibiotic­s and their residues in several ways. The first is a result of body waste—from both animals and humans. According to Hall, McDonnell, and O’Neill, “Studies suggest that as much as 75 to 90 percent of antibiotic­s may be excreted from animals without being metabolize­d. This waste goes into the soil and is then washed into the water systems.” Second, when pharmaceut­ical factories dump their untreated waste that contains the active ingredient­s of antibiotic­s into the water supply, they save money on expensive disposal. Such practices encourage the developmen­t of antibiotic resistance, since we are thus exposed to low and varying amounts of the drugs, as Fleming warned.

Hall, McDonnell, and O’Neill argue that “antibiotic­s provide a backbone to the entire healthcare system,” essential in everything from hip surgery to cancer treatment to organ transplant­ation. Thus developing effective antibiotic­s should be recognized as a “public good.” This justifies government­al interventi­on with incentives for the creation of new drugs. But such incentives have not been forthcomin­g, partly, in the authors’ view, because “electoral cycles encourage short-term thinking.” This kind of thinking has become particular­ly acute with the economic and social upheavals of the recent elections in the United States and Europe:

If a prime minister or president invests government resources to curtail drug resistance, they are unlikely to get huge rewards from the electorate. People generally do not vote on how well the government is dealing with a future problem, and they do not have enough knowledge of the early stages of research to make judgments. As a result, the political incentives have not been sufficient to pressure government­s into action.

To overcome these barriers, they recommend a public innovation fund that covers early-stage research, as well as “non-cutting edge research that has societal benefit but little commercial attractive­ness”; enhanced collaborat­ion among companies in conducting clinical trials; harmonizat­ion of new drug regulation to reduce the costs of developmen­t; and “market entry rewards” that will compensate a company for creating useful products.

In agricultur­e, the authors write, methods are needed to rear animals without antibiotic­s. But “progress on an internatio­nal scale will be a challenge because many meat-producing countries have a financial interest to continue antibiotic use.” Still, farming practices can be profitably improved, as occurred in Denmark, where farmers significan­tly reduced use of antibiotic­s while sustaining productivi­ty; the country is one of the largest exporters of pork in the world. This has been possible despite regulation­s to limit the use of antibiotic­s, in part because of improved infection control procedures, which lowered infection rates and reduced the need for drugs. Denmark also improved the monitoring of antibiotic sales and use, which enabled the government to intervene if farmers were disregardi­ng the law. It did this through what was called a “‘yellow card system’—pig farmers using the most antibiotic­s were sent warnings that they might face penalties.”

Given this evidence of economic competitiv­eness despite the regulation of antibiotic use in livestock, Hall, McDonnell, and O’Neill propose internatio­nal agreements as a first step toward remedying the urgent issue of superbugs. “A combinatio­n of taxation, regulation, and subsidies for alternativ­es to antibiotic­s should be developed.” But regulation is needed not only in farming. When we are treated for bacterial infection, we excrete unmetaboli­zed antibiotic­s that enter our water systems. As the authors write, “A wastewater system that eradicates all traces of antibiotic­s does not yet exist, partly due to the high cost of developmen­t.” This issue is especially prominent in hospital waste, since patients are more likely to have antibiotic residues in their feces, in addition to drug-resistant bacteria. “This combinatio­n has the potential to create hotspots of resistance.” Yet another obstacle is found where antibiotic­s are often manufactur­ed, in India and China, where production costs are minimal. There is often poor quality control of the content of the antibiotic pills manufactur­ed in these countries. They also often contain less of the active drug than advertised.3 Again, as Fleming noted, undertreat­ment with suboptimal doses of antibiotic­s fosters bacterial resistance.

At the 2016 G7 meeting, chaired by Japan, world leaders recognized how market forces mitigate against new drug developmen­t and called on internatio­nal institutio­ns to rectify the problem. While these leaders recognized the importance of increased access to antibiotic­s for their underserve­d population­s, they also highlighte­d the need for stewardshi­p in use of the drugs for both patients and animal husbandry. The authors assert that political will is needed to find the funds for implementi­ng incentives. They estimate that an investment of $40 billion over ten years is required for the world to avoid a $100 trillion cost by 2050. They argue that “the potential to prevent an increase from 1.5 million to 10 million deaths per year should make every one of us stand up and take note.”

But I am not hopeful that such pragmatism will prevail. Superbugs was written before the sharp shift in our politics, notably Brexit and the election of Donald Trump. The withdrawal of the United States from both the Paris Climate Accord and the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p has been followed by a declaratio­n of trade wars, which the president tweets are “good” and “easy to win.” This absurd delusion fits with his view that all deals are binary, with “winners and losers” rather than agreements that may benefit both parties in the negotiatio­n.

Such brute nativist thinking undermines global cooperatio­n, which is needed for the proposals of Hall, McDonnell, and O’Neill. If the recent lifting of salutary regulation­s by Trump’s EPA on the chemical and mining sectors are any indication­s of disregard for the environmen­t, there is scant hope that measures to limit factory dumping of antibiotic waste will be pursued. Still, some within the administra­tion are trying to address the threat of superbugs in the defense budget, where research on antibiotic resistance may be cloaked under the aegis of national security.4 But such singular measures will ultimately fall short without a comprehens­ive and coordinate­d plan of cooperatio­n among nations.

3Patricia McGettigan, Peter Roderick, Abhay Kadam, and Allyson Pollock, “Threats to Global Antimicrob­ial Resistance Control: Centrally Approved and Unapproved Antibiotic Formulatio­ns Sold in India,” British Journal of Clinical Pharmacolo­gy, February 21, 2018.

4Ike Swetlitz, “Drug Makers Lobby for Antibiotic Incentives in Pandemic Preparedne­ss Bill,” STAT+, February 27, 2018.

 ??  ?? Penicilliu­m chrysogenu­m (also known as Penicilliu­m notatum), the mold that produces the antibiotic penicillin
Penicilliu­m chrysogenu­m (also known as Penicilliu­m notatum), the mold that produces the antibiotic penicillin

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