Li Xuhui, Fan Hua, Zi Hao, Hu Hankun, Li Binghui, Huang Jiao, Luo Pengcheng, Zeng Xiantao
Center for Evidence-Based and Translational Medicine, Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan 430071, China.
Office of Research & Innovation, The First Affiliated Hospital, College of Clinical Medicine of Henan, University of Science and Technology, Luoyang 471000, China.
J Clin Med. 2022 May 17;11(10):2817. doi: 10.3390/jcm11102817.
There are still no detailed data about the burden of bacterial antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in urinary tract infections (UTI). Concrete knowledge of global and regional bacterial AMR data is crucial for developing informed programs and policies to control bacterial AMR and for prudent use of antibiotics to optimize antibiotic therapy in patients with UTI. This study aimed to provide comprehensive global and regional estimates for the AMR burden of UTI in 2019.
Data were obtained from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD), including death, disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs), year lived with disability (YLD), and years of life lost (YLL) for bacterial AMR in UTI for 7 GBD super-regions, 21 regions, 14 pathogens, 13 antibiotic classes, and 66 pathogen-antibiotic combinations in 2019. The estimates were based on two counterfactual scenarios: drug-susceptible infection and no infection.
Globally, there were 64.89 thousand deaths (95% uncertainty interval [UI]: 45.86-93.35) attributed to and 0.26 million deaths (95% UI: 0.18-0.36) associated with bacterial AMR in UTI in 2019. Among regions, the all-age death rates were higher in southern Latin America, tropical Latin America, and Europe and lower in sub-Saharan Africa. and accounted for more than 50% of deaths attributable to and associated with AMR, and resistance was high among multiple types of antibiotic class, including fluoroquinolones, carbapenems, and third-generation cephalosporins. There were 2 pathogen-drug combinations that caused more than 6000 resistance-attributable deaths: third-generation cephalosporin-resistant and fluoroquinolone-resistant .
AMR in UTI is an unignorable health problem, both for the management of urology disease and for global antibiotic resistance. Special tailored strategies, including enhanced surveillance and rational use of antibiotics, should be developed for different regions according to the region-specific pathogen-antibiotic situations and resources.
目前仍缺乏关于尿路感染(UTI)中细菌抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)负担的详细数据。了解全球和区域细菌AMR数据对于制定明智的控制细菌AMR计划和政策以及谨慎使用抗生素以优化UTI患者的抗生素治疗至关重要。本研究旨在提供2019年UTI中AMR负担的全面全球和区域估计。
数据来自全球疾病、伤害及风险因素研究(GBD),包括2019年7个GBD超级区域、21个区域、14种病原体、13类抗生素以及66种病原体-抗生素组合的UTI中细菌AMR的死亡、伤残调整生命年(DALY)、带病生存年数(YLD)和生命损失年数(YLL)。这些估计基于两种反事实情景:药物敏感感染和无感染。
2019年全球范围内,UTI中归因于细菌AMR的死亡有6.489万例(95%不确定区间[UI]:4.586 - 9.335万例),与细菌AMR相关的死亡有26万例(95% UI:18 - 36万例)。在各区域中,拉丁美洲南部、热带拉丁美洲和欧洲的全年龄死亡率较高,撒哈拉以南非洲较低。大肠埃希菌和肺炎克雷伯菌占归因于AMR和与AMR相关死亡的50%以上,并且在多种抗生素类别中耐药性较高,包括氟喹诺酮类、碳青霉烯类和第三代头孢菌素类。有2种病原体-药物组合导致超过6000例耐药性归因死亡:耐第三代头孢菌素的大肠埃希菌和耐氟喹诺酮的肺炎克雷伯菌。
UTI中的AMR无论是对于泌尿系统疾病的管理还是对于全球抗生素耐药性而言,都是一个不可忽视的健康问题。应根据不同区域特定的病原体-抗生素情况和资源,制定包括加强监测和合理使用抗生素在内的特殊针对性策略。