Estimates of antibiotic resistance in Italy and Western Europe in 2019: a MICROBE-based comparative analysis.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Giulia Zamagni, Silvia Forni, Ivo Iavicoli, Stefano Guicciardi, Danilo Buonsenso, Pietro Ferrara, Maia De Luca, Davide Golinelli, Francesco Sanmarchi, Giulia Collatuzzo, Fabrizio Gemmi, Mohsen Naghavi, Michela Sabbatucci, Lorenzo Monasta
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First, among the 12 groups of infectious syndromes from the Global Burden of Diseases (GBD) study 2019, the most impacting in terms of deaths and DALYs were ranked based on the magnitude of rates, and the corresponding ABR-associated burden was reported. Then, the burden of the leading pathogens (bacteria, viruses, fungi, and polymicrobial infections) for all infectious syndromes was compared between the two areas. Death and DALY rates associated with ABR were reported for each bacterium, together with the percentage of ABR-attributable burden. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: antimicrobial resistance (AMR) will cause 10 million deaths per year worldwide by 2050, with economic costs of up to 100 trillion dollars. Antibiotic resistance (ABR) constitutes the majority of this health threat. Globally, 1.27 million people died in 2019 as a direct result of ABR. One in 5 deaths occurred in children under five, and 6 bacterial pathogens accounted for more than 70% of ABR-associated deaths.

Objectives: to compare ABR estimates in terms of death and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) in 2019 in Italy and in Western Europe (WE) by grading the infectious syndromes and the bacterial pathogens involved, with the aim to identify the most urgent healthcare needs in Italy.

Design: the estimates of the burden of ABR in 2019 in WE and Italy, extracted from the Measuring Infectious Causes and Resistance Outcomes for Burden Estimation (MICROBE) tool by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME; Seattle, USA), reported deaths and DALYs associated with 33 bacterial pathogens across 12 infectious syndromes, as well as deaths and DALYs associated with and attributable to ABR for 23 bacteria and 86 pathogen-drug combinations. The comparison between WE and Italy was performed in steps. First, among the 12 groups of infectious syndromes from the Global Burden of Diseases (GBD) study 2019, the most impacting in terms of deaths and DALYs were ranked based on the magnitude of rates, and the corresponding ABR-associated burden was reported. Then, the burden of the leading pathogens (bacteria, viruses, fungi, and polymicrobial infections) for all infectious syndromes was compared between the two areas. Death and DALY rates associated with ABR were reported for each bacterium, together with the percentage of ABR-attributable burden. Although it is known that Italy is one of the WE countries with the largest share of elderly, crude rates were reported instead of age-standardized rates, in order to quantify the actual burden of ABR in the two areas.

Setting and participants: Italy and Western Europe.

Main outcomes measures: death and DALYs rates per 100,000 inhabitants.

Results: the largest difference between ABR-associated death rates in the two areas was found for bloodstream infections (25.2 and 18.8 per 100,000 in Italy and WE, respectively), followed by peritoneal and abdominal infections (15.1 and 12.2 in Italy and WE, respectively). However, the percentages of deaths and DALYs attributable to ABR were always higher in Italy for all the infections considered. Regarding pathogens, Escherichia coli accounted for the greatest burden associated to ABR, in terms of both deaths and DALYs, in both areas. The highest ABR-attributable percentage of deaths was found for Acinetobacter baumannii (28.4% in WE and 31.9% in Italy), accounting also for the highest percentage of ABR-attributable DALYs (28.4% in WE and 31.7% in Italy). The pathogen-drug combination with the highest burden associated with AMR was Escherichia coli-Aminopenicillin, while the greatest AMR-attributable burden was found for Staphylococcus aureus-Methicillin (MRSA). On average, 55.4% of Escherichia coli was resistant to Aminopenicillin in WE, with Italy ranking third (67.6%). Nordic countries showed smaller values, with Sweden in last place (32.8%). The average percentage of MRSA in WE was 16%, with Italy exceeding it by more than 13 pointsConclusions: despite similar sepsis mortality rates in Italy and other WE countries, the proportion of ABR-associated and attributable deaths was higher in Italy. Targeted strategies aimed at reducing the circulation of bacteria and resistant microorganisms together with other interventions could lead to an overall reduction in deaths associated with ABR.

2019 年意大利和西欧抗生素耐药性估计:基于 MICROBE 的比较分析。
背景:到 2050 年,抗生素耐药性(AMR)每年将导致全球 1000 万人死亡,经济损失高达 100 万亿美元。抗生素耐药性(ABR)构成了这一健康威胁的大部分。2019 年,全球有 127 万人直接死于 ABR。目标:通过对感染综合征和所涉及的细菌病原体进行分级,比较 2019 年意大利和西欧(WE)在死亡和残疾调整生命年(DALYs)方面的 ABR 估计值,以确定意大利最迫切的医疗保健需求。设计:对2019年西欧和意大利ABR负担的估计值提取自卫生计量与评价研究所(IHME;美国西雅图)的 "用于负担估计的传染病因和耐药性结果测量(MICROBE)"工具,该工具报告了与12种传染综合征中33种细菌病原体相关的死亡人数和残疾调整寿命年数,以及与23种细菌和86种病原体-药物组合相关并可归因于ABR的死亡人数和残疾调整寿命年数。西欧和意大利之间的比较分步进行。首先,在 "2019 年全球疾病负担(GBD)研究 "的 12 组感染性综合征中,根据发病率的大小对死亡人数和残疾调整寿命年数影响最大的综合征进行排序,并报告相应的 ABR 相关负担。然后,比较了两个地区的主要病原体(细菌、病毒、真菌和多微生物感染)对所有感染综合征造成的负担。报告了每种细菌与 ABR 相关的死亡率和残疾调整寿命年数,以及可归因于 ABR 的负担百分比。尽管众所周知意大利是西欧国家中老年人比例最高的国家之一,但为了量化两个地区 ABR 的实际负担,我们报告了粗死亡率而非年龄标准化死亡率:结果:两个地区 ABR 相关死亡率差异最大的是血流感染(意大利和西欧分别为每 10 万人 25.2 例和 18.8 例),其次是腹膜和腹腔感染(意大利和西欧分别为每 10 万人 15.1 例和 12.2 例)。然而,在所有考虑的感染中,意大利因 ABR 导致的死亡和残疾调整寿命年数百分比始终较高。就病原体而言,就死亡人数和残疾调整寿命年数而言,大肠埃希氏菌在两个地区均占 ABR 相关负担的最大部分。鲍曼不动杆菌造成的 ABR 相关死亡百分比最高(西欧为 28.4%,意大利为 31.9%),也占 ABR 相关残疾调整寿命年数的最高百分比(西欧为 28.4%,意大利为 31.7%)。与AMR相关的负担最高的病原体-药物组合是大肠杆菌-氨基青霉素,而金黄色葡萄球菌-甲氧西林(MRSA)的AMR可归因负担最大。在 WE 中,平均 55.4% 的大肠埃希菌对氨基青霉素具有耐药性,意大利排名第三(67.6%)。北欧国家的数值较小,瑞典排名最后(32.8%)。结论:尽管意大利和其他西欧国家的败血症死亡率相似,但意大利的 ABR 相关和可归因死亡比例更高。旨在减少细菌和耐药微生物循环的针对性策略以及其他干预措施可全面减少 ABR 相关死亡人数。
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来源期刊
Epidemiologia & Prevenzione
Epidemiologia & Prevenzione 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Epidemiologia & Prevenzione, oggi organo della Associazione italiana di epidemiologia, raccoglie buona parte delle migliori e originali esperienze italiane di ricerca epidemiologica e di studio degli interventi per la prevenzione e la sanità pubblica. La rivista – indicizzata su Medline e dotata di Impact Factor – è un canale importante anche per la segnalazione al pubblico internazionale di contributi che altrimenti circolerebbero soltanto in Italia. E&P in questi decenni ha svolto una funzione di riferimento per la sanità pubblica ma anche per i cittadini e le loro diverse forme di aggregazione. Il principio che l’ha ispirata era, e rimane, che l’epidemiologia ha senso se è funzionale alla prevenzione e alla sanità pubblica e che la prevenzione ha ben poche possibilità di realizzarsi se non si fonda su valide basi scientifiche e se non c’è la partecipazione di tutti i soggetti interessati. Modalità di comunicazione aggiornate, metodologia statistica ed epidemiologica rigorosa, validità degli studi e solidità delle interpretazioni dei risultati sono la solida matrice su cui E&P è costruita. A questa si accompagna una forte responsabilità etica verso la salute pubblica, che oggi ha ampliato in forma irreversibile il suo orizzonte, e include in forma sempre più consapevole non solo gli esseri umani, ma l’intero pianeta e le modificazioni che l’uomo apporta all’universo in cui vive. L’ambizione è che l’offerta di nuovi strumenti di comunicazione, informazione e formazione, soprattutto attraverso l''uso di internet, renda la rivista non solo un tradizionale veicolo di contenuti e analisi scientifiche, ma anche un potente strumento a disposizione di una comunità di interessi e di valori che ha a cuore la salute pubblica.
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