The global economic burden of antibiotic-resistant infections and the potential impact of bacterial vaccines: a modelling study.

IF 7.1 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Nichola R Naylor, Mateusz Hasso-Agopsowicz, Chaelin Kim, Yixuan Ma, Isabel Frost, Kaja Abbas, Gisela Aguilar, Naomi Fuller, Julie V Robotham, Mark Jit
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Antibiotic resistance (ABR) may increase hospital costs, utility loss and mortality risk per patient. Understanding these losses at national, regional and global scales is necessary for efficiently tackling ABR. Our aim is to estimate the global economic burden of antibiotic-resistant infections and the potential for bacterial vaccines to mitigate this burden.

Methods: We take healthcare system and labour productivity perspectives. Hospital cost-per-case and length-of-stay estimates were calculated through meta-analyses and reviewing published systematic reviews. Unit labour productivity losses were estimated through a human capital approach. Modelled estimates were used where secondary data were missing. Death and incidence data were combined with unit cost data to estimate the economic burden associated with ABR in 2019, and the potential costs averted (in 2019 US$) based on uptake scenarios of vaccines that currently exist or are likely to be developed.

Results: Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis had the highest mean hospital cost attributable to ABR per patient, the range was US$3000 in lower-income settings to US$41 000 in high-income settings, with carbapenem-resistant infections associated with a high cost-per-case of US$3000-US$7000 depending on syndrome. ABR was associated with a median value of US$693 billion (IQR: US$627 bn-US$768 bn) in hospital costs globally, with US$207 bn (IQR: US$186 bn-US$229 bn) potentially avertable by vaccines. Productivity losses were quantified at almost US$194 billion, with US$76 bn avertable by vaccines.

Conclusions: The economic burden of ABR is associated with high levels of hospital bed-days occupied, hospital spending and labour productivity losses globally and should, therefore, remain high on national and international policy agendas. Vaccines against Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae would avert a substantial portion of the economic burden associated with ABR. More robust evidence, particularly in low-income countries, on the hospital costs, associated with and attributable to ABR, is needed.

抗生素耐药感染的全球经济负担和细菌疫苗的潜在影响:一项模拟研究。
抗生素耐药性(ABR)可能增加医院费用、效用损失和每位患者的死亡风险。了解国家、区域和全球范围内的这些损失对于有效应对ABR是必要的。我们的目的是估计抗生素耐药感染的全球经济负担以及细菌疫苗减轻这种负担的潜力。方法:我们采取医疗保健系统和劳动生产率的观点。通过荟萃分析和回顾已发表的系统综述,计算了每例医院费用和住院时间估计。单位劳动生产率损失是通过人力资本方法估计的。在缺少二级数据的地方使用了模型估计。将死亡和发病率数据与单位成本数据相结合,以估计2019年与ABR相关的经济负担,以及根据目前存在或可能开发的疫苗的使用情况避免的潜在成本(2019年美元)。结果:耐多药结核病患者的ABR平均住院费用最高,在低收入环境中为3000美元,在高收入环境中为41000美元,碳青霉烯耐药感染与每例3000- 7000美元的高费用相关,具体取决于综合征。与ABR相关的全球医院费用中位数为6930亿美元(IQR: 6270亿至7680亿美元),其中2070亿美元(IQR: 1860亿至2290亿美元)可通过疫苗避免。经量化,生产力损失约为1940亿美元,其中760亿美元可通过疫苗避免。结论:ABR的经济负担与全球高水平的医院住院日占用、医院支出和劳动生产率损失有关,因此应在国家和国际政策议程上保持高度重视。针对金黄色葡萄球菌、大肠杆菌和肺炎克雷伯菌的疫苗将避免与ABR相关的很大一部分经济负担。需要更有力的证据,特别是在低收入国家,证明与ABR相关和可归因于ABR的医院费用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Global Health
BMJ Global Health Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
4.90%
发文量
429
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: BMJ Global Health is an online Open Access journal from BMJ that focuses on publishing high-quality peer-reviewed content pertinent to individuals engaged in global health, including policy makers, funders, researchers, clinicians, and frontline healthcare workers. The journal encompasses all facets of global health, with a special emphasis on submissions addressing underfunded areas such as non-communicable diseases (NCDs). It welcomes research across all study phases and designs, from study protocols to phase I trials to meta-analyses, including small or specialized studies. The journal also encourages opinionated discussions on controversial topics.
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