Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity, School of Medical Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Clin Microbiol Rev. 2021 Feb 10;34(2). doi: 10.1128/CMR.00224-20. Print 2021 Mar 17.
Influenza poses a significant burden on society and health care systems. Although antivirals are an integral tool in effective influenza management, the potential for the emergence of antiviral-resistant viruses can lead to uncertainty and hesitation among front-line prescribers and policy makers. Here, we provide an overview of influenza antiviral resistance in context, exploring the key concepts underlying its development and clinical impact. Due to the acute nature of influenza in immunocompetent patients, resistant viruses that develop during antiviral treatment of a single patient ("treatment-emergent resistance") are usually cleared in a relatively short time, with no impact on future antiviral efficacy. In addition, although available data are limited by small numbers of patients, they show that antiviral treatment still provides clinical benefit to the patient within whom resistance emerges. In contrast, the sustained community transmission of resistant variants in the absence of treatment ("acquired resistance") is of greater concern and can potentially render front-line antivirals ineffective. Importantly, however, resistant viruses are usually associated with reduced fitness such that their widespread transmission is relatively rare. Influenza antivirals are an essential part of effective influenza management due to their ability to reduce the risk of complications and death in infected patients. Although antiviral resistance should be taken seriously and requires continuous careful monitoring, it is not comparable to antibiotic resistance in bacteria, which can become permanent and widespread, with far-reaching medical consequences. The benefits of antiviral treatment far outweigh concerns of potential resistance, which in the vast majority of cases does not have a significant clinical impact.
流感对社会和医疗保健系统造成了重大负担。虽然抗病毒药物是有效流感管理的重要工具,但抗病毒耐药病毒的出现可能会导致一线处方者和政策制定者的不确定性和犹豫。在这里,我们在上下文中概述了流感抗病毒耐药性,探讨了其发展和临床影响的关键概念。由于免疫功能正常的患者流感的急性性质,在单一患者的抗病毒治疗过程中出现的耐药病毒(“治疗中出现的耐药性”)通常会在相对较短的时间内清除,不会对未来的抗病毒疗效产生影响。此外,尽管可用数据受到患者数量有限的限制,但它们表明抗病毒治疗仍然为出现耐药性的患者提供了临床获益。相比之下,在没有治疗的情况下,耐药变异体在社区中的持续传播(“获得性耐药性”)更令人担忧,并且可能使一线抗病毒药物无效。然而,重要的是,耐药病毒通常与降低的适应性相关,因此它们的广泛传播相对较少见。流感抗病毒药物是有效流感管理的重要组成部分,因为它们能够降低感染患者发生并发症和死亡的风险。虽然应该认真对待抗病毒耐药性并需要持续进行仔细监测,但它与细菌中的抗生素耐药性不可相提并论,后者可能会变得永久且广泛存在,并产生深远的医疗后果。抗病毒治疗的益处远远超过了对潜在耐药性的担忧,在绝大多数情况下,耐药性并没有显著的临床影响。