University of Szeged, Faculty of Pharmacy, Institute of Clinical Pharmacy, Szeged, Hungary.
University of Szeged, Albert-Szent Györgyi Medical Centre, Central Pharmacy, Szeged, Hungary.
Euro Surveill. 2022 Oct;27(41). doi: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2022.27.41.2101058.
BackgroundIn 2019, the World Health Organization published the 21st Model list of Essential Medicines and updated the Access, Watch Reserve (AWaRe) antibiotics classification to improve metrics and indicators for antibiotic stewardship activities. Reserve antibiotics are regarded as last-resort treatment options.AimWe investigated hospital-sector consumption quantities and trends of Reserve group antibiotics in European Union/European Economic Area countries and the United Kingdom (EU/EEA/UK).MethodsHospital-sector antimicrobial consumption data for 2010-2018 were obtained from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Antibacterials' consumption for systemic use (Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical classification (ATC) group J01) were included in the analysis and expressed as defined daily doses (DDD) per 1,000 inhabitants per day. We defined reserve antibiotics as per AWaRe classification and applied linear regression to analyse trends in consumption of reserve antibiotics throughout the study period.ResultsEU/EEA/UK average hospital-sector reserve-antibiotic consumption increased from 0.017 to 0.050 DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day over the study period (p = 0.002). This significant increase concerned 15 countries. In 2018, four antibiotics (tigecycline, colistin, linezolid and daptomycin) constituted 91% of the consumption. Both absolute and relative (% of total hospital sector) consumption of reserve antibiotics varied considerably (up to 42-fold) between countries (from 0.004 to 0.155 DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day and from 0.2% to 9.3%, respectively).ConclusionAn increasing trend in reserve antibiotic consumption was found in Europe. The substantial variation between countries may reflect the burden of infection with multidrug-resistant bacteria. Our results could guide national actions or optimisation of reserve antibiotic use.
2019 年,世界卫生组织发布了第 21 版基本药物清单,并更新了获取、观察储备(AWaRe)抗生素分类,以改进抗生素管理活动的衡量指标和指标。储备抗生素被视为最后手段的治疗选择。
我们调查了欧盟/欧洲经济区国家和英国(欧盟/欧洲经济区/英国)医院部门消耗的储备组抗生素的数量和趋势。
从欧洲疾病预防控制中心获得了 2010-2018 年医院部门抗菌药物使用数据。纳入分析的全身性抗菌药物(解剖治疗化学分类(ATC)组 J01)的使用量表示为每 1000 居民每天的定义日剂量(DDD)。我们根据 AWaRe 分类定义了储备抗生素,并应用线性回归分析了整个研究期间储备抗生素使用量的趋势。
在研究期间,欧盟/欧洲经济区/英国医院部门储备抗生素的平均使用量从 0.017 增加到 0.050 DDD/1000 居民/天(p=0.002)。这一显著增长涉及 15 个国家。2018 年,有 4 种抗生素(替加环素、黏菌素、利奈唑胺和达托霉素)占总消耗量的 91%。储备抗生素的绝对和相对(占医院部门总量的%)消耗量在各国之间差异很大(高达 42 倍)(0.004 至 0.155 DDD/1000 居民/天和 0.2%至 9.3%)。
在欧洲发现储备抗生素的使用呈上升趋势。各国之间的巨大差异可能反映了耐多药细菌感染的负担。我们的研究结果可以指导国家行动或优化储备抗生素的使用。