Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Faculty of Health Sciences, Rift Valley University, Adama, Oromia, Ethiopia.
PLoS One. 2021 May 14;16(5):e0251400. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251400. eCollection 2021.
Studies on antibiotic utilization trends are invaluable because they offer data for evaluation of impacts of antimicrobial stewardship policies. Such studies help determine correlations between the use of specific antibiotic classes and trends in emergence of resistance (resistance-epidemiology). This study aims to quantify the consumption systemic antibiotics (J01)-in defined daily doses (DDD) per 1000 inhabitants per day (DID)-in Ethiopia's public healthcare sector (2016-2020). By so doing, it attempts to capture the extent of population exposure to antibiotics in the country. Data were also compared with those from Norway to establish rough estimate of the country's status vis-à-vis some globally acknowledged better practices with regard to optimal use of antibiotics. Raw data obtained from registers of Ethiopian Pharmaceutical Supply Agency were converted into DDD, per the standard methodology recommended by WHO. To control for population size, antibiotics consumption data were presented as DID. Since official population census data for Ethiopia were not available for the study period, population projection data from the World Bank were used. Community-based consumption of systemic antibiotics increased from 11.02 DID in 2016 to 12.83 DID in 2020 in Ethiopia-an increase by 16.4%. Moreover, analysis of a log-linear regression model showed that the average growth rate in the community-based systemic antibiotics consumption per year between 2016 and 2020 was about 3.3% (R2 = 0.89). The highest percentage change in community-based systemic antibiotics consumption happened for glycopeptides (J01XA) and the fourth generation cephalosporins (J01DE)-1300% and 600% compared to the baseline year (2016), respectively. At product level, 9 antibiotics constituted the common domain in the list of medication cocktails in the drug utilization 90% (DU90%) for the study period. Community-based consumption of systemic antibiotics for Ethiopia and Norway showed opposite trends, calling for public health policy actions in Ethiopia.
抗生素利用趋势的研究具有重要价值,因为它们提供了评估抗菌药物管理政策影响的数据。这些研究有助于确定特定抗生素类别使用与耐药性出现之间的相关性(耐药性流行病学)。本研究旨在量化埃塞俄比亚公共医疗部门(2016-2020 年)以每 1000 居民每天定义日剂量(DDD)计算的系统抗生素(J01)消耗情况。通过这种方式,它试图捕捉该国人口接触抗生素的程度。还将数据与挪威进行了比较,以确定该国在某些全球公认的最佳抗生素使用实践方面的大致地位。从埃塞俄比亚药品供应机构的登记册中获得的原始数据按照世卫组织推荐的标准方法转换为 DDD。为了控制人口规模,抗生素消费数据以 DID 呈现。由于研究期间没有埃塞俄比亚的官方人口普查数据,因此使用了世界银行的人口预测数据。埃塞俄比亚社区使用的系统抗生素从 2016 年的 11.02 DID 增加到 2020 年的 12.83 DID,增加了 16.4%。此外,对数线性回归模型的分析表明,2016 年至 2020 年期间,社区系统抗生素消费的年平均增长率约为 3.3%(R2=0.89)。与基线年(2016 年)相比,社区系统抗生素消费变化最大的是糖肽(J01XA)和第四代头孢菌素(J01DE),分别为 1300%和 600%。在产品层面,9 种抗生素在研究期间药物利用 90%(DU90%)的药物组合清单中构成了共同领域。埃塞俄比亚和挪威的社区系统抗生素消费呈相反趋势,这需要埃塞俄比亚采取公共卫生政策行动。