Department of Tropical Disease Biology, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK.
Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Clinical Research Programme, Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, College of Medicine, P.O. Box 30096 Chichiri, Blantyre 3, Malawi.
Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 2024 Aug 5;118(8):498-504. doi: 10.1093/trstmh/trae035.
One Health surveillance involves the analysis of human, animal and environmental samples, recognising their interconnectedness in health systems. Such considerations are crucial to investigate the transmission of many pathogens, including drug-resistant bacteria and parasites. The highest rates of antimicrobial resistance (AMR)-associated deaths are observed in sub-Saharan Africa, where concurrently the waterborne parasitic disease schistosomiasis can be highly endemic in both humans and animals. Although there is growing acknowledgment of significant interactions between bacteria and parasites, knowledge of relationships between schistosomes, microbes and AMR remains inadequate. In addition, newly emergent research has revealed the previously underappreciated roles of animals and the environment in both AMR and schistosomiasis transmission. We consider shared environmental drivers and colonisation linkage in this narrative review, with a focus on extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-mediated resistance among bacteria from the Enterobacteriaceae family, which is exceedingly prevalent and responsible for a high burden of AMR-associated deaths. Then we examine novel findings from Malawi, where the landscapes of AMR and schistosomiasis are rapidly evolving, and make comparisons to other geographic areas with similar co-infection epidemiology. We identify several knowledge gaps that could be addressed in future research, including the need to characterise the impact of intestinal schistosomiasis and freshwater contact on intestinal AMR colonisation, before proposing a rationale for connecting AMR surveillance and schistosomiasis research within a One Health framework.
One Health 监测涉及人类、动物和环境样本的分析,认识到它们在卫生系统中的相互联系。这些考虑因素对于研究许多病原体的传播至关重要,包括耐药细菌和寄生虫。抗微生物药物耐药性(AMR)相关死亡率最高的地区是撒哈拉以南非洲,同时在该地区,人类和动物都可能高度流行水源性寄生虫病血吸虫病。尽管人们越来越认识到细菌和寄生虫之间存在重大相互作用,但对血吸虫、微生物和 AMR 之间的关系的了解仍然不足。此外,新出现的研究揭示了动物和环境在 AMR 和血吸虫病传播中以前被低估的作用。在本叙述性评论中,我们考虑了共同的环境驱动因素和定植联系,重点是肠杆菌科细菌中广泛存在的、介导的超广谱β-内酰胺酶耐药性,这种耐药性极其普遍,是导致 AMR 相关死亡的高负担的主要原因。然后,我们检查了马拉维的新发现,那里的 AMR 和血吸虫病的情况正在迅速演变,并与其他具有类似共同感染流行病学的地理区域进行了比较。我们确定了一些未来研究中可以解决的知识空白,包括需要描述肠道血吸虫病和接触淡水对肠道 AMR 定植的影响,然后再提出在 One Health 框架内将 AMR 监测和血吸虫病研究联系起来的理由。