WHO perspective on antimicrobial resistance

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Transcription:

WHO perspective on antimicrobial resistance Bernadette Abela-Ridder, DVM, MSc, PhD Global Foodborne Infections Network (GFN) Coordinator Department of Food Safety and Zoonoses (FOS) 1

Overview of presentation The World Health Organization and public health perspectives of AMR WHO perspective on foodborne AMR Mechanisms and activities: Training Mentoring Awareness raising 2

Focus on impact and outcomes Communicable diseases Noncommunicable diseases Promoting health through the life-course Health systems Preparedness, surveillance and response Corporate services/ Enabling Functions 3

The evolving threat of antimicrobial resistance Options for action "In terms of new replacement antibiotics, the pipeline is virtually dry. But much can be done. This includes prescribing antibiotics appropriately and only when needed, following treatment correctly, restricting the use of antibiotics in food production to therapeutic purposes and tackling the problem of substandard and counterfeit medicines." http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2012/9789241503181_eng.pdf (published 8 March 2012) 4

WHD 2011 slogan 5

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Many other factors contributing to development of resistance Misuse occurring broadly in many settings Clinical medicine, communities, agriculture Few countries have national plans to limit use No clear accountability Insufficient information on scope & key trends Surveillance systems weak or absent 7

Many other factors contributing to development of resistance Inadequate systems for ensuring quality medicines Inadequate use of available infection prevention & control guidance Insufficient research & development of antimicrobial medicines & diagnostic tests Unrestricted sale & use of antimicrobial drugs in some settings 8

Widely used in food animals Growth enhancement & therapeutic purposes Same classes of antimicrobials as used in humans Food considered most important vector for spread of resistance between humans & animals Globalized distribution of food Require international cooperation 9

Need better implementation of guidance available from WHO & others Comprehensive plan, accountability, civil society engagement Strengthen surveillance and laboratory capacity Access to essential medicines of assured quality Rational use of medicines Enhance infection prevention and control Foster innovation and R&D for new tools 10

WHO Global Principles for Prevention and Control of Foodborne Antimicrobial Resistance National and international interdisciplinary cooperation Prudent use of antimicrobial agents in all sectors No use of antimicrobial agents for growth promotion (EU ban January 1, 2006) Good regulatory system for approval and licensing Prescription-only, appropriate antimicrobial product and administration route Practitioners not having economic profit from prescription Routine prophylactic use of antimicrobials not a substitute for good health management Accurate diagnosis and antimicrobial susceptibility testing Infection control Successful disease control relies on a holistic approach encompassing hygiene, animal husbandry and management, nutrition, animal welfare, and vaccination 11

WHO Global Principles for Prevention and Control of Foodborne Antimicrobial Resistance Antimicrobials identified as critically important in human medicine to be used in animals only if justified (updated every 2 years Fluoroquinolones, 3 + 4 generation cephalosporins Monitoring of antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial usage in human and animals Useful information on prevalence and trends Input for risk assessment and risk management A basis for choosing, implementing and evaluating interventions 12

WHO list of Critically Important Antimicrobials (CIA) Criterion 1: Antimicrobial agent used as sole therapy or one of few alternatives to treat serious human disease (SOLE THERAPY) Criterion 2: Antimicrobial agent is used to treat diseases caused by 1) organisms that may be transmitted to man via nonhuman sources, or 2) diseases caused by organisms that may acquire resistance genes from nonhuman sources (NON HUMAN SOURCE) Critically Important: those antimicrobials which meet both criteria 1 and 2 Highly Important: those antimicrobials which meet either criterion 1 or 2 Important: those antimicrobials which meet neither criterion 1 nor 2 13

Advisory Group on Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance - AGISAR Tackling foodborne antimicrobial resistance through integrated surveillance 31 Members Subcommittees Antimicrobial Usage Monitoring Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Capacity Building & Pilot Projects Data Management Meetings: Copenhagen, Denmark, June 2009. Guelph, Canada June, 2010. Oslo, Norway, June 2011 Aix-en-Provence, France, June, 2012 14

AGISAR Country Pilot Projects Objectives Supplement the work of AGISAR by providing data from various parts of the world, particularly from developing countries. Contribute in strengthening the capacities of countries to establish their own program on integrated surveillance of AMR and antimicrobial drug use. Foster communication and collaboration between animal, food and health sectors. Increase awareness and commitment among countries to implement strategies for prevention and control of foodborne diseases and containment of AMR. Use data generated at country level to influence policy 15

Global Foodborne Infections Network (GFN) Who: A network of professionals and institutions in public health, food and veterinary What: strengthening integrated surveillance, investigation, prevention and control of foodborne and other enteric infections Where: national, regional, global Why: foodborne and enteric diseases constitute a significant burden of disease When: on identification of need and commitment/ readiness of country to embark in process 16

How does GFN work? Lead organization: Steering committee Affiliated organizations Laboratory and Epidemiology Subcommittees Regional centres GFN Members 17

What do we mean by capacity building Moving towards Assessing needs and in-context problem solving Translating knowledge acquired to the work place Measuring the outcome and impact of GFN activities Influencing policy-makers to support technical implementation Strengthening laboratory quality assurance and linkages to laboratories for reference testing System Level Policies, strategies, law, regulations interdependencies and interaction among stakeholders from farm to table Organization Level Resources, procedures, structures, decision making, infrastructure Individual Level Knowledge, skills, competencies, work ethics 18

Challenging but worthwhile A continuing problem.new challenges will arise, including food safety, trade issues Need harmonization of methods and reliable data on antimicrobial use and antimicrobial resistance (capacity building, pilot studies in developing countries) Codex to set standards based on best science and Codex AMR Task force output 'CAC/GL 77-2011: Guidelines for risk analysis of foodborne antimicrobial resistance' Holistic approaches FAO, OIE, WHO WHO-AGISAR Appropriate prevention and control measures Basic and applied research driving policy Mechanisms, trends and risk factors New antimicrobials, alternatives to antimicrobials, tests, vaccines Ending unnecessary use! 19

Thank you! Bernadette Abela-Ridder Department of Food Safety and Zoonoses Email: foodsafety@who.int http://www.who.int/foodborne_disease/resistance/en/index.html

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WHO list of Critically Important Antimicrobials (CIA) sole therapy & non-human use Aminoglycosides Ansamycins Carbapenems and other penems Cephalosporins (3 rd and 4 th generation) Glycopeptides Glycylcyclines Lipopeptides Macrolides and ketolides Oxazolidinones Penicillins (natural, aminopenicillins and antipseudomonal) Quinolones Streptogramins Tetracyclines Drugs used solely to treat TB or other mycobacterial diseases 22

Highly Important Antimicrobials sole therapy or non-human use Amdinopenicillins Aminocyclitols Aminoglycosides (Other) Amphenicols Cephalosporins (1 st and 2 nd generation) Cephamycins Fusidic acid Pseudomonic acids Penicillins (Antistaphylococcal) Pleuromutilins Polymyxins Riminofenazines Sulfonamides, DHFR inhibitors and combinations Sulfones Monobactams 23