How can we solve the antibiotic resistance crisis? - Gerry Wright

1,112,310 views ・ 2020-03-16

TED-Ed


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Antibiotics: behind the scenes, they enable much of modern medicine.
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We use them to cure infectious diseases,
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but also to safely facilitate everything from surgery to chemotherapy
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to organ transplants.
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Without antibiotics,
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even routine medical procedures can lead to life-threatening infections.
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And we’re at risk of losing them.
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Antibiotics are chemicals that prevent the growth of bacteria.
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Unfortunately, some bacteria have become resistant
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to all currently available antibiotics.
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At the same time, we’ve stopped discovering new ones.
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Still, there’s hope that we can get ahead of the problem.
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But first, how did we get into this situation?
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The first widely used antibiotic was penicillin,
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discovered in 1928 by Alexander Fleming.
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In his 1945 Nobel Prize acceptance speech,
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Fleming warned that bacterial resistance had the potential to ruin
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the miracle of antibiotics.
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He was right: in the 1940s and 50s,
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resistant bacteria already began to appear.
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From then until the 1980s,
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pharmaceutical companies countered the problem of resistance
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by discovering many new antibiotics.
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At first this was a highly successful— and highly profitable— enterprise.
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Over time, a couple things changed.
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Newly discovered antibiotics were often only effective
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for a narrow spectrum of infections,
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whereas the first ones had been broadly applicable.
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This isn’t a problem in itself,
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but it does mean that fewer doses of these drugs could be sold—
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making them less profitable.
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In the early days, antibiotics were heavily overprescribed,
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including for viral infections they had no effect on.
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Scrutiny around prescriptions increased, which is good, but also lowered sales.
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At the same time, companies began to develop more drugs
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that are taken over a patient’s lifetime,
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like blood pressure and cholesterol medications,
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and later anti-depressants and anti-anxiety medications.
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Because they are taken indefinitely, these drugs more profitable.
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By the mid-1980s, no new chemical classes of antibiotics were discovered.
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But bacteria continued to acquire resistance and pass it along
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by sharing genetic information between individual bacteria
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and even across species.
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Now bacteria that are resistant to many antibiotics are common,
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and increasingly some strains are resistant to all our current drugs.
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So, what can we do about this?
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We need to control the use of existing antibiotics, create new ones,
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combat resistance to new and existing drugs,
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and find new ways to fight bacterial infections.
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The largest consumer of antibiotics is agriculture,
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which uses antibiotics not only to treat infections
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but to promote the growth of food animals.
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Using large volumes of antibiotics
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increases the bacteria’s exposure to the antibiotics
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and therefore their opportunity to develop resistance.
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Many bacteria that are common in animals, like salmonella, can also infect humans,
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and drug-resistant versions can pass to us through the food chain
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and spread through international trade and travel networks.
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In terms of finding new antibiotics,
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nature offers the most promising new compounds.
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Organisms like other microbes and fungi have evolved over millions of years
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to live in competitive environments—
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meaning they often contain antibiotic compounds
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to give them a survival advantage over certain bacteria.
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We can also package antibiotics with molecules that inhibit resistance.
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One way bacteria develop resistance is through proteins of their own
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that degrade the drug.
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By packaging the antibiotic with molecules that block the degraders,
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the antibiotic can do its job.
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Phages, viruses that attack bacteria but don’t affect humans,
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are one promising new avenue to combat bacterial infections.
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Developing vaccines for common infections, meanwhile,
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can help prevent disease in the first place.
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The biggest challenge to all these approaches is funding,
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which is woefully inadequate across the globe.
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Antibiotics are so unprofitable that many large pharmaceutical companies
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have stopped trying to develop them.
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Meanwhile, smaller companies that successfully bring new antibiotics
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to market often still go bankrupt, like the American start up Achaogen.
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New therapeutic techniques like phages and vaccines
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face the same fundamental problem as traditional antibiotics:
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if they’re working well, they’re used just once,
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which makes it difficult to make money.
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And to successfully counteract resistance in the long term,
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we’ll need to use new antibiotics sparingly—
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lowering the profits for their creators even further.
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One possible solution is to shift profits away from the volume of antibiotics sold.
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For example, the United Kingdom is testing a model
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where healthcare providers purchase antibiotic subscriptions.
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While governments are looking for ways to incentivize antibiotic development,
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these programs are still in the early stages.
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Countries around the world will need to do much more—
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but with enough investment in antibiotic development
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and controlled use of our current drugs,
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we can still get ahead of resistance.
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