Talbot George H, Bradley John, Edwards John E, Gilbert David, Scheld Michael, Bartlett John G
Talbot Advisors, Wayne, Pennsylvania, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2006 Mar 1;42(5):657-68. doi: 10.1086/499819. Epub 2005 Jan 25.
The Antimicrobial Availability Task Force (AATF) of the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) has viewed with concern the decreasing investment by major pharmaceutical companies in antimicrobial research and development. Although smaller companies are stepping forward to address this gap, their success is uncertain. The IDSA proposed legislative and other federal solutions to this emerging public health problem in its July 2004 policy report "Bad Bugs, No Drugs: As Antibiotic R&D Stagnates, a Public Health Crisis Brews." At this time, the legislative response cannot be predicted. To emphasize further the urgency of the problem for the benefit of legislators and policy makers and to capture the ongoing frustration our clinician colleagues experience in their frequent return to an inadequate medicine cabinet, the AATF has prepared this review to highlight pathogens that are frequently resistant to licensed antimicrobials and for which few, if any, potentially effective drugs are identifiable in the late-stage development pipeline.
美国传染病学会(IDSA)的抗菌药物可及性特别工作组(AATF)对大型制药公司在抗菌药物研发方面投资的减少表示关切。尽管一些小公司正挺身而出填补这一空白,但其成功与否尚不确定。IDSA在其2004年7月的政策报告《有害病菌,无药可用:随着抗生素研发停滞,一场公共卫生危机正在酝酿》中针对这一新兴的公共卫生问题提出了立法及其他联邦层面的解决方案。目前,立法方面的回应尚难预测。为了向立法者和政策制定者进一步强调该问题的紧迫性,并反映我们的临床医生同事在频繁面对药物匮乏的药柜时持续的挫败感,AATF编写了本综述,以突出那些对已获许可的抗菌药物频繁耐药、且在后期研发管线中几乎找不到潜在有效药物(即便有也寥寥无几)的病原体。