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Health

Superbug fight unites drug industry

More than 80 international drug and biotech firms urged governments to work with them to combat drug-resistant superbugs which could kill tens of millions of people within decades unless progress is made and new antibiotics found.

Britain's chief medical officer Sally Davies applauds industry commitment to beat antimicrobial resistance

A surgery nurse prepares a syringe during procedures to clean the wound of an amputee patient with MRSA (Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus Aureus) superbug in Berlin. (Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters)
More than 80international drug and biotech firms urged governments to workwith them to combat drug-resistant superbugs which could killtens of millions of people within decades unless progress ismade and new antibiotics found.

In a declaration at the World Economic Forum in Davos, theycalled for coordinated efforts to cut unnecessary use ofantibiotics and support development of new ones, includingthrough changing drug prices and investing in research.

The 83 pharmaceutical companies and eight industry groupsurged governments around the world to commit money "to provideappropriate incentivesfor companies to invest in R&D toovercome the formidable technical and scientific challenges ofantibiotic discovery and development."

Any use of antibiotics promotes the development and spreadof so-called superbugs multi-drug-resistant infections thatcan evade the medicines designed to kill them.International alarm about the superbug threat is risingafter the discovery in China of a gene called mcr-1 that makesbacteria resistant to all known antibiotics.

"For the world to continue to have new antibiotics, we needinvestments in basic science and novel incentive models for industry R&D, and to protect our existing treatments, we need new frameworks for appropriate use," said Paul Stoffels, chiefscientific officer of Johnson & Johnson.

Former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O'Neill was askedin 2014 by Britain's prime minister to conduct a full review ofthe problem and suggest ways to combat it.

In his initial report, he estimated antibiotic and microbialresistance could kill an extra 10 million people a year and costup to $100 trillion US by 2050 if it is not brought under control.

While the problem of infectious bugs becoming drug-resistanthas been a feature of medicine since the discovery of the firstantibiotic, penicillin, in 1928, it has grown in recent years asdrugmakers have cut back investment in the field.

The Declaration on CombatingAntimicrobial Resistancecalls for steps including:

  • Governments committing funding to implement the World HealthOrganization's Global Action Plan to create programs ensuring thathealth systems use antibiotics appropriately, along with increasinguse of fast diagnostic tests and boosting reimbursements for them toensure patients get the correct treatment.
  • Better education of doctors and nurses on appropriate antibioticuse.
  • Improved infection control through better hygiene, vaccinationand preventive treatments.
  • Reduced used of antibiotics in livestock.
  • Higher reimbursements for antibiotics and diagnostic tests indeveloped markets.
  • More collaboration between researchers at drugmakers and thoseat universities and government.
  • More access to antibiotics in countries around the world.

Britain's chief medical officer Sally Davies said thedeclaration was "a clear sign of industry's collectivecommitment to beating the threat of antimicrobial resistance."

"I look forward to seeing an advancement of discussionsbetween companies and governments on how we build new andsustainable market models that properly incentivize thediscovery and development of new antibiotics, whilst ensuringaffordable access to these crucial drugs for all," she said.

With files from Associated Press