Lancet. 2024 Sep 28;404(10459):1199-1226. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(24)01867-1. Epub 2024 Sep 16.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses an important global health challenge in the 21st century. A previous study has quantified the global and regional burden of AMR for 2019, followed with additional publications that provided more detailed estimates for several WHO regions by country. To date, there have been no studies that produce comprehensive estimates of AMR burden across locations that encompass historical trends and future forecasts.
We estimated all-age and age-specific deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) attributable to and associated with bacterial AMR for 22 pathogens, 84 pathogen-drug combinations, and 11 infectious syndromes in 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2021. We collected and used multiple cause of death data, hospital discharge data, microbiology data, literature studies, single drug resistance profiles, pharmaceutical sales, antibiotic use surveys, mortality surveillance, linkage data, outpatient and inpatient insurance claims data, and previously published data, covering 520 million individual records or isolates and 19 513 study-location-years. We used statistical modelling to produce estimates of AMR burden for all locations, including those with no data. Our approach leverages the estimation of five broad component quantities: the number of deaths involving sepsis; the proportion of infectious deaths attributable to a given infectious syndrome; the proportion of infectious syndrome deaths attributable to a given pathogen; the percentage of a given pathogen resistant to an antibiotic of interest; and the excess risk of death or duration of an infection associated with this resistance. Using these components, we estimated disease burden attributable to and associated with AMR, which we define based on two counterfactuals; respectively, an alternative scenario in which all drug-resistant infections are replaced by drug-susceptible infections, and an alternative scenario in which all drug-resistant infections were replaced by no infection. Additionally, we produced global and regional forecasts of AMR burden until 2050 for three scenarios: a reference scenario that is a probabilistic forecast of the most likely future; a Gram-negative drug scenario that assumes future drug development that targets Gram-negative pathogens; and a better care scenario that assumes future improvements in health-care quality and access to appropriate antimicrobials. We present final estimates aggregated to the global, super-regional, and regional level.
In 2021, we estimated 4·71 million (95% UI 4·23-5·19) deaths were associated with bacterial AMR, including 1·14 million (1·00-1·28) deaths attributable to bacterial AMR. Trends in AMR mortality over the past 31 years varied substantially by age and location. From 1990 to 2021, deaths from AMR decreased by more than 50% among children younger than 5 years yet increased by over 80% for adults 70 years and older. AMR mortality decreased for children younger than 5 years in all super-regions, whereas AMR mortality in people 5 years and older increased in all super-regions. For both deaths associated with and deaths attributable to AMR, meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus increased the most globally (from 261 000 associated deaths [95% UI 150 000-372 000] and 57 200 attributable deaths [34 100-80 300] in 1990, to 550 000 associated deaths [500 000-600 000] and 130 000 attributable deaths [113 000-146 000] in 2021). Among Gram-negative bacteria, resistance to carbapenems increased more than any other antibiotic class, rising from 619 000 associated deaths (405 000-834 000) in 1990, to 1·03 million associated deaths (909 000-1·16 million) in 2021, and from 127 000 attributable deaths (82 100-171 000) in 1990, to 216 000 (168 000-264 000) attributable deaths in 2021. There was a notable decrease in non-COVID-related infectious disease in 2020 and 2021. Our forecasts show that an estimated 1·91 million (1·56-2·26) deaths attributable to AMR and 8·22 million (6·85-9·65) deaths associated with AMR could occur globally in 2050. Super-regions with the highest all-age AMR mortality rate in 2050 are forecasted to be south Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean. Increases in deaths attributable to AMR will be largest among those 70 years and older (65·9% [61·2-69·8] of all-age deaths attributable to AMR in 2050). In stark contrast to the strong increase in number of deaths due to AMR of 69·6% (51·5-89·2) from 2022 to 2050, the number of DALYs showed a much smaller increase of 9·4% (-6·9 to 29·0) to 46·5 million (37·7 to 57·3) in 2050. Under the better care scenario, across all age groups, 92·0 million deaths (82·8-102·0) could be cumulatively averted between 2025 and 2050, through better care of severe infections and improved access to antibiotics, and under the Gram-negative drug scenario, 11·1 million AMR deaths (9·08-13·2) could be averted through the development of a Gram-negative drug pipeline to prevent AMR deaths.
This study presents the first comprehensive assessment of the global burden of AMR from 1990 to 2021, with results forecasted until 2050. Evaluating changing trends in AMR mortality across time and location is necessary to understand how this important global health threat is developing and prepares us to make informed decisions regarding interventions. Our findings show the importance of infection prevention, as shown by the reduction of AMR deaths in those younger than 5 years. Simultaneously, our results underscore the concerning trend of AMR burden among those older than 70 years, alongside a rapidly ageing global community. The opposing trends in the burden of AMR deaths between younger and older individuals explains the moderate future increase in global number of DALYs versus number of deaths. Given the high variability of AMR burden by location and age, it is important that interventions combine infection prevention, vaccination, minimisation of inappropriate antibiotic use in farming and humans, and research into new antibiotics to mitigate the number of AMR deaths that are forecasted for 2050.
UK Department of Health and Social Care's Fleming Fund using UK aid, and the Wellcome Trust.
在 21 世纪,抗生素耐药性(AMR)是一个重要的全球健康挑战。之前的一项研究已经量化了 2019 年的全球和区域 AMR 负担,并提供了更多关于 2019 年的详细估计,涵盖了几个世界卫生组织区域的国家。迄今为止,还没有研究对涵盖历史趋势和未来预测的所有地点的 AMR 负担进行全面估计。
我们估计了 204 个国家和地区 22 种病原体、84 种病原体-药物组合和 11 种传染病综合征在 1990 年至 2021 年期间因细菌 AMR 导致的全年龄段和年龄特定死亡和残疾调整生命年(DALY)以及与 AMR 相关的死亡和 DALY。我们收集和使用了多种死因数据、住院数据、微生物学数据、文献研究、单一药物耐药谱、药物销售数据、抗生素使用调查、死亡率监测、关联数据、门诊和住院保险索赔数据以及之前发表的数据,涵盖了 5200 万个个体记录或分离株和 19513 个研究地点年。我们使用统计建模来生成所有地点的 AMR 负担估计,包括那些没有数据的地点。我们的方法利用了五个广泛的组成部分数量的估计:涉及败血症的死亡人数;特定传染病死亡归因于特定传染病综合征的比例;传染病综合征死亡归因于特定病原体的比例;对感兴趣的抗生素具有耐药性的特定病原体的百分比;以及与这种耐药性相关的死亡或感染持续时间的额外风险。使用这些组件,我们估计了 AMR 负担以及我们基于两个反事实来定义的 AMR 相关负担:分别是,所有耐药性感染都被药物敏感性感染替代的替代方案,以及所有耐药性感染都被无感染替代的替代方案。此外,我们对 2050 年之前的 AMR 负担进行了全球和区域预测,有三个情景:参考情景是最有可能的未来的概率预测;革兰氏阴性药物情景假设未来针对革兰氏阴性病原体的药物开发;以及更好的护理情景假设未来改善感染的护理质量和获得适当的抗生素。我们展示了最终汇总到全球、超区域和区域水平的估计。
2021 年,我们估计与细菌 AMR 相关的死亡有 471 万(95%UI 423-519),其中 114 万(100-128)归因于细菌 AMR。过去 31 年来 AMR 死亡率的趋势因年龄和地点而异。从 1990 年到 2021 年,5 岁以下儿童的 AMR 死亡率下降了 50%以上,而 70 岁及以上成年人的 AMR 死亡率则上升了 80%以上。所有超级区域的 5 岁以下儿童的 AMR 死亡率都有所下降,而所有超级区域 5 岁及以上人群的 AMR 死亡率都有所上升。与 AMR 相关的死亡和归因于 AMR 的死亡都呈上升趋势,耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(金黄色葡萄球菌)在全球范围内增幅最大(1990 年与 AMR 相关的死亡为 26.1 万(15 万至 37.2 万),归因于 AMR 的死亡为 5.72 万(3.41 万至 8.03 万),到 2021 年,与 AMR 相关的死亡为 55 万(500 万至 600 万),归因于 AMR 的死亡为 13 万(11.3 万至 14.6 万))。在革兰氏阴性细菌中,对碳青霉烯类抗生素的耐药性增加超过任何其他抗生素类别,从 1990 年与 AMR 相关的死亡 61.9 万(40.5 万至 83.4 万)增加到 2021 年的 103 万(909 万至 1160 万),归因于 AMR 的死亡从 12.7 万(8.21 万至 17.1 万)增加到 21.6 万(16.8 万至 26.4 万)。2020 年和 2021 年,非 COVID 相关传染病明显减少。我们的预测显示,2050 年全球可能有 191 万(156-226)归因于 AMR 的死亡和 822 万(685-965)与 AMR 相关的死亡。预计 2050 年,全年龄段 AMR 死亡率最高的超级区域将是南亚和拉丁美洲及加勒比地区。归因于 AMR 的死亡的增幅最大的是 70 岁及以上的人群(2050 年全年龄段归因于 AMR 的死亡中,65.9%(61.2-69.8))。与 AMR 相关的死亡人数将增加 69.6%(2022 年至 2050 年增加 51.5-89.2)形成鲜明对比的是,2050 年 DALY 仅增加了 9.4%(-6.9 至 29.0),至 4650 万(3770 万至 5730 万)。在更好的护理情景下,在所有年龄组中,通过更好地治疗严重感染和改善抗生素的可及性,2025 年至 2050 年期间可能会累计避免 920 万(828-1020)与 AMR 相关的死亡,而在革兰氏阴性药物情景下,通过开发预防 AMR 死亡的革兰氏阴性药物管道,可能会避免 1110 万 AMR 死亡(908-132)。
本研究首次对 1990 年至 2021 年期间的全球 AMR 负担进行了全面评估,并对 2050 年之前的结果进行了预测。评估随时间和地点变化的 AMR 死亡率趋势对于了解这一重要的全球健康威胁的发展情况以及为我们提供决策干预措施是必要的。我们的研究结果表明了感染预防的重要性,这一点在 5 岁以下儿童的 AMR 死亡人数减少中得到了体现。同时,我们的研究结果也突显了 70 岁以上人群中 AMR 负担的令人担忧的趋势,而与此同时,全球人口正在迅速老龄化。年轻和年长个体之间 AMR 死亡负担的相反趋势解释了全球 DALY 数量与死亡数量之间的适度未来增长。鉴于 AMR 负担在地点和年龄方面存在很大的差异,因此必须将感染预防、疫苗接种、减少农业和人类中抗生素的不合理使用以及新抗生素的研究结合起来,以减轻 2050 年预测的 AMR 死亡人数。
英国卫生部和社会关怀部的弗莱明基金利用英国援助,并得到了惠康信托基金会的支持。