The number of lives lost to infections that are resistant to the medications intended to treat them could increase nearly 70 per cent globally by 2050, a new study projects — further showing the burden of the ongoing superbug crisis.
Cumulatively, from 2025 to 2050, more than 39 million deaths across the world could be directly attributable to antimicrobial resistance, or AMR, according to the study published in The Lancet.
Antimicrobial resistance happens when pathogens such as bacteria and fungi develop the ability to evade the medications used to kill them.
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The World Health Organisation has called AMR “one of the top global public health and development threats” driven by the misuse and overuse of antimicrobial medications in humans, animals and plants, which can help pathogens develop a resistance to them.
The new study reveals when it comes to the prevalence of AMR and its effects, “we expect it to get worse,” lead author Dr Chris Murray, who is the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation director, said.
“We need appropriate attention on new antibiotics and antibiotic stewardship so that we can address what is really quite a large problem,” he said.
Melbourne’s RMIT University immunology and gut health expert Professor Rajaraman Eri said the rise of antimicrobial resistance could potentially reverse “decades of medical progress”.
He said an upcoming UN General Assembly discussing the impacts of AMR reflects just how urgent the issue is.
“While political will and measurable targets, which will be the focus of the meeting, are important, there are some critical actions needed to effectively address the challenges of antimicrobial resistance,” Eri said.
These actions include surveillance systems that track resistance patterns, new antibiotics and funding for infection prevention and control measures in middle and low-income countries.
“Antimicrobial resistance is often called the ‘silent epidemic’ but it could be silenced with global co-operation,” Eri said.
The UN meeting will take place on September 26.
According to The World Health Organisation, AMR contributes to five million deaths every year.
Its economic cost will also be substantial, with AMR predicted to globally cost about $A5 trillion a year by 2030.
Older adults bear the burden
The study researchers — from the Global Research on Antimicrobial Resistance Project, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation and other institutions — estimated deaths and illnesses attributable to versus associated with antimicrobial resistance for 22 pathogens, 84 pathogen-drug combinations and 11 infections across 204 countries and territories from 1990 through 2021.
A death attributable to antimicrobial resistance was directly caused by it, while a death associated with AMR may have another cause that was exacerbated by the antimicrobial resistance.
About 520 million individual records were part of the data used to make those estimates.
The researchers found from 1990 to 2021, deaths from AMR fell more than 50 per cent among children younger than five but increased more than 80 per cent among adults 70 and older — trends that are forecast to continue.
It was surprising to see those patterns emerge, Murray said.
“We had these two opposite trends going on: a decline in AMR deaths under age 15, mostly due to vaccination, water and sanitation programs, some treatment programs, and the success of those,” Murray said.
“And at the same time, there’s this steady increase in the number of deaths over age 50.”
He said, as the world ages, older adults can be more susceptible to severe infection.
The researchers found the pathogen-drug combination that had the largest increase in causing the most burden among all age groups was methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.
For this combination — the antibiotic methicillin and the bacteria S. aureus — the number of attributable deaths nearly doubled from 57,200 in 1990 to 130,000 in 2021.
Using statistical modelling, the researchers also produced estimates of deaths and illnesses attributable to AMR by 2050 in three scenarios: if the current climate continues, if new potent antibiotic drugs are developed to target resistant pathogens, and if the world has improved quality of health care for infections and better access to antibiotics.
The forecasts show deaths from antimicrobial resistance will increase by 2050 if measures are not in place to improve access to quality care, powerful antibiotics and other resources to reduce and treat infections.
The researchers estimated that, in 2050, the number of global deaths attributable to antimicrobial resistance could reach 1.9 million, and those associated with antimicrobial resistance could reach 8.2 million.
‘There is possible hope on the horizon’
The “innovative and collaborative” approach to this study provides a “comprehensive assessment” of antimicrobial resistance and its potential burden on the world, Samuel Kariuki of the Kenya Medical Research Institute wrote in a commentary that accompanied the new study in The Lancet.
Yet he warned that the forecast models do not consider the emergence of new superbugs “and might lead to underestimation if new pathogens arise”.
Overall, “these data should drive investments and targeted action” toward addressing the growing challenge of antimicrobial resistance in all regions of the world, Kariuki wrote.
The new paper represents decades of research on the global burden of antimicrobial resistance, said Doctor Steffanie Strathdee, associate dean of global health sciences and distinguished professor at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, who was not involved in the study.
A firsthand account of AMR
Strathdee saw firsthand the effects that antimicrobial resistance can have on health when her husband nearly died from a superbug infection.
“I’m somebody who’s lived with antimicrobial resistance affecting my family for the last eight years. My husband nearly died from a superbug infection. It’s actually one of the infections that’s highlighted in this paper,” said Strathdee, who serves as co-director of the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics at UC San Diego.
During a Thanksgiving cruise on the Nile in 2015, Strathdee’s husband, Tom Patterson, suddenly developed severe stomach cramps.
When a clinic in Egypt failed to help his worsening symptoms, Patterson was flown to Germany, where doctors discovered a grapefruit-size abdominal abscess filled with Acinetobacter baumannii, a virulent bacterium resistant to nearly all antibiotics.
The annual number of people dying from gram-negative bacteria, such as A. baumannii, that are resistant to carbapenem — a class of last-resort antibiotics used to treat severe bacterial infections — rose 89,200 from 1990 to 2021, more than any antibiotic class over that period, according to the new study.
“That’s one of the urgent priority pathogens, which is one of these gram-negative bacteria,” Strathdee said.
“And my husband, when he fell ill from this, he was 69. So he’s exactly at the age that this paper is highlighting, that older people are going to be affected by this more in the future, because our population is ageing and people have comorbidities, like diabetes, like my husband has.”
Strathdee’s husband recovered after treatment with phages, or viruses that selectively target and kill bacteria and that can be used as a treatment approach for antimicrobial-resistant bacterial infections.
“The most important alternative to antibiotics is phage therapy, or bacteriophage therapy, and that’s what saved my husband’s life,” Strathdee said.
“Phage can be used very effectively with antibiotics to reduce the amount of antibiotics that are needed, and they can even be used potentially in livestock and in farming.”
The new study gives Strathdee hope the world can reduce the potential burden of antimicrobial resistance.
That would require improving access to antibiotics and newer antimicrobial medications, vaccines, clean water and other aspects of quality health care around the world, she said, while reducing the use of antibiotics in livestock, food production and the environment, which can breed more resistance.
“There is possible hope on the horizon,” Strathdee said.
“If we were to scale up these interventions, we could dramatically reduce the number of deaths in the future.”