Global burden of bacterial antimicrobial resistance in 2019: a systematic analysis

Christopher J L Murray , Kevin S Ikuta , Fablina Sharara , Christopher J L Murray , Kevin S Ikuta , Fablina Sharara , Lucien R Swetschinski , Gisela Robles Aguilar , Authia P Gray , Chieh Han , Catherine Bisignano , Puja C Rao , Eve E Wool , Sarah Charlotte Johnson , Annie J. Browne , Michael G. Chipeta , Frederick Fell , Sean Hackett , Georgina Haines–Woodhouse , Bahar H. Kashef Hamadani , Emmanuelle A. P. Kumaran , Barney McManigal , Sureeruk Achalapong , Ramesh Agarwal , Samuel Akech , Samuel B Albertson , John Amuasi , Jason R. Andrews , Aleskandr Aravkin , Elizabeth A. Ashley , François-Xavier Babin , Freddie Bailey , Stephen Baker , Buddha Basnyat , Adrie Bekker , Rose Bender , James A. Berkley , B. Adhisivam , Julia Bielicki , Suppawat Boonkasidecha , James Bukosia , Cristina Gardonyi Carvalheiro , Carlos A Castañeda-Orjuela , Vilada Chansamouth , Suman Chaurasia , Sara Chiurchiù , Fazle Rabbi Chowdhury , Rafai Clotaire Donatien , Aislinn Cook , Ben S. Cooper , Tim R. Cressey , Elia Criollo-Mora , Matthew Cunningham , Saffiatou Darboe , Nicholas Day , Maia De Luca , Клара Докова , Angela Dramowski , Susanna Dunachie , Thuy Duong Bich , Tim Eckmanns , Daniel Eibach , Amir Emami , Nicholas Feasey , Natasha Fisher-Pearson , Karen Forrest , Coralith Garcia , Denise O Garrett , Petra Gastmeier , Ababi Zergaw Giref , Rachel Greer , Vikas Gupta , Sebastian Haller , Andrea Haselbeck , Simon I Hay , Marianne Holm , Susan Hopkins , Yingfen Hsia , Kenneth Iregbu , Jan Jacobs , Daniel Jarovsky , Fatemeh Javanmardi , Adam Jenney , Meera Khorana , Suwimon Khusuwan , Niranjan Kissoon , Elsa Kobeissi , Tomislav Kostyanev , Fiorella Krapp , Ralf Krumkamp , Ajay Kumar , Hmwe Hmwe Kyu , Cherry Lim , Kruy Lim , Direk Limmathurotsakul , Michael J. Loftus , Miles Lunn , Jianing Ma , Anand Manoharan , Florian Marks , Jürgen May , Mayfong Mayxay , Neema Mturi
2022 The Lancet 13,318 citations

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a major threat to human health around the world. Previous publications have estimated the effect of AMR on incidence, deaths, hospital length of stay, and health-care costs for specific pathogen-drug combinations in select locations. To our knowledge, this study presents the most comprehensive estimates of AMR burden to date. We estimated deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) attributable to and associated with bacterial AMR for 23 pathogens and 88 pathogen-drug combinations in 204 countries and territories in 2019. We obtained data from systematic literature reviews, hospital systems, surveillance systems, and other sources, covering 471 million individual records or isolates and 7585 study-location-years. We used predictive statistical modelling to produce estimates of AMR burden for all locations, including for locations with no data. Our approach can be divided into five broad components: number of deaths where infection played a role, proportion of infectious deaths attributable to a given infectious syndrome, 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 based on two counterfactuals: deaths attributable to AMR (based on an alternative scenario in which all drug-resistant infections were replaced by drug-susceptible infections), and deaths associated with AMR (based on an alternative scenario in which all drug-resistant infections were replaced by no infection). We generated 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) for final estimates as the 25th and 975th ordered values across 1000 posterior draws, and models were cross-validated for out-of-sample predictive validity. We present final estimates aggregated to the global and regional level. On the basis of our predictive statistical models, there were an estimated 4·95 million (3·62-6·57) deaths associated with bacterial AMR in 2019, including 1·27 million (95% UI 0·911-1·71) deaths attributable to bacterial AMR. At the regional level, we estimated the all-age death rate attributable to resistance to be highest in western sub-Saharan Africa, at 27·3 deaths per 100 000 (20·9-35·3), and lowest in Australasia, at 6·5 deaths (4·3-9·4) per 100 000. Lower respiratory infections accounted for more than 1·5 million deaths associated with resistance in 2019, making it the most burdensome infectious syndrome. The six leading pathogens for deaths associated with resistance (Escherichia coli, followed by Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) were responsible for 929 000 (660 000-1 270 000) deaths attributable to AMR and 3·57 million (2·62-4·78) deaths associated with AMR in 2019. One pathogen-drug combination, meticillin-resistant S aureus, caused more than 100 000 deaths attributable to AMR in 2019, while six more each caused 50 000-100 000 deaths: multidrug-resistant excluding extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, third-generation cephalosporin-resistant E coli, carbapenem-resistant A baumannii, fluoroquinolone-resistant E coli, carbapenem-resistant K pneumoniae, and third-generation cephalosporin-resistant K pneumoniae. To our knowledge, this study provides the first comprehensive assessment of the global burden of AMR, as well as an evaluation of the availability of data. AMR is a leading cause of death around the world, with the highest burdens in low-resource settings. Understanding the burden of AMR and the leading pathogen-drug combinations contributing to it is crucial to making informed and location-specific policy decisions, particularly about infection prevention and control programmes, access to essential antibiotics, and research and development of new vaccines and antibiotics. There are serious data gaps in many low-income settings, emphasising the need to expand microbiology laboratory capacity and data collection systems to improve our understanding of this important human health threat. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, and Department of Health and Social Care using UK aid funding managed by the Fleming Fund.

Keywords

MedicineAntibiotic resistanceInfectious disease (medical specialty)Drug resistanceIncidence (geometry)Disease burdenDiseaseIntensive care medicineAntibioticsInternal medicineBiologyMicrobiology

MeSH Terms

Anti-Bacterial AgentsBacterial InfectionsDrug ResistanceBacterialGlobal Burden of DiseaseGlobal HealthHumansModelsStatistical

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Publication Info

Year
2022
Type
review
Volume
399
Issue
10325
Pages
629-655
Citations
13318
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

13318
OpenAlex
812
Influential
11111
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Cite This

Christopher J L Murray, Kevin S Ikuta, Fablina Sharara et al. (2022). Global burden of bacterial antimicrobial resistance in 2019: a systematic analysis. The Lancet , 399 (10325) , 629-655. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(21)02724-0

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(21)02724-0
PMID
35065702
PMCID
PMC8841637

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%