Fuhrmeister Erica R, Larson Jennifer R, Kleinschmit Adam J, Kirby James E, Pickering Amy J, Bascom-Slack Carol A
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts University School of Engineering, Medford, MA, United States.
Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Capital University, Columbus, OH, United States.
Front Microbiol. 2021 Jan 22;12:577821. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.577821. eCollection 2021.
Emerging resistance to all classes of antimicrobials is one of the defining crises of the 21st century. Many advances in modern medicine, such as routine surgeries, are predicated on sustaining patients with antimicrobials during a period when their immune systems alone cannot clear infection. The development of new antimicrobials has not kept pace with the antimicrobial resistance (AR) threat. AR bacteria have been documented in various environments, such as drinking and surface water, food, sewage, and soil, yet surveillance and sampling has largely been from infected patients. The prevalence and diversity of AR bacteria in the environment, and the risks they pose to humans are not well understood. There is consensus that environmental surveillance is an important first step in forecasting and targeting efforts to prevent spread and transmission of AR microbes. However, efforts to date have been limited. The Prevalence of Antibiotic Resistance in the Environment (PARE) is a classroom-based project that engages students around the globe in systematic environmental AR surveillance with the goal of identifying areas where prevalence is high. The format of PARE, designed as short classroom research modules, lowers common barriers for institutional participation in course-based research. PARE brings real-world microbiology into the classroom by educating students about the pressing public health issue of AR, while empowering them to be partners in the solution. In turn, the PARE project provides impactful data to inform our understanding of the spread of AR in the environment through global real-time surveillance.
对各类抗菌药物产生的新耐药性是21世纪标志性危机之一。现代医学的许多进步,如常规手术,都依赖于在患者免疫系统自身无法清除感染的时期,使用抗菌药物维持患者生命。新型抗菌药物的研发未能跟上抗菌药物耐药性(AR)威胁的步伐。在各种环境中,如饮用水、地表水、食物、污水和土壤中,都已发现AR细菌,但监测和采样大多来自受感染患者。环境中AR细菌的流行情况和多样性,以及它们对人类构成的风险尚未得到充分了解。人们一致认为,环境监测是预测和确定预防AR微生物传播和扩散工作目标的重要第一步。然而,迄今为止所做的努力有限。环境中抗生素耐药性的流行情况(PARE)是一个基于课堂的项目,让全球各地的学生参与系统的环境AR监测,目标是确定耐药性高发地区。PARE的形式设计为简短的课堂研究模块,降低了机构参与基于课程的研究的常见障碍。PARE通过让学生了解AR这一紧迫的公共卫生问题,将现实世界的微生物学带入课堂,同时使他们成为解决问题的合作伙伴。反过来,PARE项目通过全球实时监测提供有影响力的数据,增进我们对AR在环境中传播情况的了解。