LONDON: A new study has quantified the threat of rising antibiotic resistance on surgery and chemotherapy.
Researchers have reported the strongest evidence yet that rising
antibiotic resistance could have disastrous consequences for patients
undergoing surgery or cancer chemotherapy.
New estimates
suggest that up to half of infections after surgery and over a quarter
of infections after chemotherapy are caused by organisms already
resistant to standard prophylactic antibiotics in the USA.
Worryingly, the findings also predict that just a 30 percent reduction
in the efficacy of preventive antibiotics given routinely before,
during, or after these procedures could result in 120000 more infections
and 6300 infection-related deaths every year in the USA.
Prophylactic antibiotics are given as standard practice to patients
undergoing surgery and cancer treatment to prevent infection and death.
Bacterial resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics is increasing at
an alarming pace. But until now, the potential effect of rising
antibiotic resistance on antibiotic prophylaxis efficacy in patients
undergoing surgery and chemotherapy was not known.
The authors
found that between 39 percent (after caesarean section) and 50-90
percent (after transrectal prostate biopsy) of surgical site infections
are caused by organisms that are resistant to recommended antibiotic
prophylactic regimens. Additionally, just over a quarter (27 percent) of
infections after blood cancer chemotherapy are resistant to standard
antibiotics.
According to researcher Ramanan Laxminarayan, this
is the first study to estimate the impact of antibiotic resistance on
broader medical care in the United States. A lot of common surgical
procedures and cancer chemotherapy will be virtually impossible if
antibiotic resistance is not tackled urgently.
He added "Not
only is there an immediate need for up-to-date information to establish
how antibiotic prophylaxis recommendations should be modified in the
face of increasing resistance, but we also need new strategies for the
prevention and control of antibiotic resistance at national and
international levels."
The study appears in Lancet Infectious Diseases.
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