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Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (Hong Kong)
Sunday, November 17 2019 - 15:00
AsiaNet
Unprecedented Gathering of Asia Pacific Medical Societies to Respond to the Impact of Antibiotic Resistance on All People
BANGKOK, Nov. 17, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

In anticipation of World Antibiotic Awareness Week (18-24 November) the 
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Summit Expert Group and the Antimicrobial 
Stewardship (AMS) Working Group convened in Bangkok, Thailand, in a first-ever 
regional effort to combat the 'silent tsunami' of antimicrobial resistance. At 
the Joint Asia Pacific AMR Summit-AMS Working Group Meeting, which took place 
over the weekend of 26-27 October, 17 leaders from clinical microbiology, 
infection control, infectious disease and critical care societies in Asia 
Pacific made actionable plans to empower governments, hospital administrators, 
healthcare professionals and the public to address this epidemic. It is 
projected that by 2050, annually more than 4.7 million people in Asia Pacific 
will die from infections previously curable by antibiotics, representing the 
highest projected death toll globally.[1] The economic burden and strain on 
local healthcare systems would be equally astronomical.

Factors unique to the Asia Pacific (including environmental, socio-economic, 
agricultural, geographic and demographic) mean the region acts as an epicenter 
for antimicrobial resistance that impacts healthcare systems.[2],[3] Home to 
60% of the world's population, many of the region's low- and middle-income 
countries also have less stringent healthcare policies, and antibiotics are 
often easily available.[4] In Thailand alone, more than US$170 million was 
spent on antibiotics in 2010, and at least 88,000 infections were antimicrobial 
resistant, resulting in at least 3.24 million additional days in hospital, and 
38,000 deaths.[5]

To address this, the AMR Summit Expert Group, united leaders from 14 medical 
societies/organizations, is joined by the AMS Working Group, which is dedicated 
to improve the quality of antimicrobial stewardship in Asia through tailored 
initiatives, such as the development of the region's first AMS Blueprint and 
specialized antimicrobial stewardship training to resource-constrained 
hospitals.

Antimicrobial resistance happens when microorganisms, such as bacteria and 
fungi, develop the ability to stop an antimicrobial - or multiple 
antimicrobials - from working against it. As a result, infections can grow, and 
even spread to others. 

The misuse and overuse of antibiotics is accelerating the process of 
antimicrobial resistance beyond the speed of medical research. This means that 
common illnesses, such as minor wound, and simple surgeries, such as 
Cesarean-section, tonsillectomy, may become life-threatening once again, 
similar to pre-antibiotic era. Moreover, modern medical treatments, such as 
cancer therapy, organ transplantation and joint replacement, cannot be done 
without effective antibiotics.

Professor Cheng-Hsun Chiu, co-chairperson of the meeting, emphasized the 
importance of combined efforts between local governments, hospital 
administrators, and pharmaceutical companies to drive public awareness, and 
practice and policy change. "A long-term solution involves public education, 
but healthcare professionals also need to be re-educated about proper 
antibiotic practices. We also need decision-makers and leaders at a government 
and institutional level to champion and drive initiatives on antimicrobial 
stewardship, surveillance, diagnostics and access to novel antimicrobial 
agents."

For the first time ever at the Joint Asia Pacific AMR Summit-AMS Working Group 
Meeting, experts from national medical societies in Asia Pacific collectively 
recommend 12 core interventions to promote the success of antimicrobial 
stewardship (Table). "Every government, stakeholder and responsible personnel 
can use the 12 core interventions as a checklist to ensure essential 
interventions for antimicrobial stewardship are met, as part of the commitment 
to combat antimicrobial resistance," said Dr Pisonthi Chongtrakul from 
Thailand's National Strategic Plan on AMR. 

The Joint Asia Pacific AMR Summit-AMS Working Group Meeting marks the beginning 
of an ongoing regional commitment to work towards a world with no unnecessary 
deaths due to antimicrobial resistance.

Table. 12 core interventions to promote the success of antimicrobial 
stewardship[+]

1. A mandated multi-disciplinary national body to coordinate surveillance and 
appropriate use of antimicrobials
2. National clinical guidelines for diagnosis, prevention and treatment of 
infections[*] 
3. Novel treatment and essential antimicrobial list based on treatments of 
choice
4. Strengthening drugs and therapeutics committees in districts and hospitals
5. Problem-based AMS and infection control training in undergraduate curricula 
6. Continuing medical education on AMS as a licensure requirement
7. Supervision, audit and feedback
8. Independent information on antimicrobials
9. Public education about appropriate use of antimicrobials and consequences of 
antimicrobial misuse
10. Avoidance of perverse financial incentives
11. Appropriate and enforced regulation for antimicrobial use and disposal
12. Sufficient government expenditure to ensure availability of antimicrobials, 
diagnostics, and staff to tackle AMR issues 
 
[+]Adapted from World Health Organization (WHO) Policy Perspectives on 
Medicines - Promoting rational use of medicines: core components. Available at: 
https://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/pdf/h3011e/h3011e.pdf. Accessed 26 October 
2019.
[*]in human, animal and agriculture.

Disclaimer: The Joint Asia Pacific AMR Summit-AMS Working Group Meeting was 
coordinated by Pfizer. The sponsor had no role in the content development, 
discussion, recommendations and outcomes from the meeting.

References
[1] Review on Antimicrobial Resistance. Antimicrobial Resistance: Tackling a 
Crisis for the Health and Wealth of Nations. 2014. 
Available at: www.amr-review.org/Publications.html. Accessed October 2019.
[2] Kang C-I, Song J-H. Antimicrobial resistance in Asia: current epidemiology 
and clinical implications. Infect Chemother 2013;45:22–31.
[3] Lai C-C, Lee K, Xiao Y, et al. High burden of antimicrobial drug resistance 
in Asia. J Glob Antimicrob Resist2014;2:141–147.
[4] Hsu L-Y, Apisarnthanarak A, Khan E, et al. Carbapenem-resistant 
Acinetobacter baumannii and Enterobacteriaceae in South and Southeast Asia. 
Clin Microbiol Rev2017;30:1–22.
[5] Sumpradit N, et al.New chapter in tackling antimicrobial resistance in 
Thailand. BMJ 2017;358:j3415.
 
About AMR Summit Expert Group 

The Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Summit Expert Group consists of leaders of 
14 clinical microbiology, infection control, infectious disease and critical 
care medical societies/organizations from India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, 
Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam. The key objective of the 
group is to strategize on combating antimicrobial resistance in Asia, with a 
focus on lobbying for government commitment, creating healthcare professional 
and public awareness, and through multi-sectoral partnerships, eg, animal and 
environmental health. The group's inaugural meeting was held in Bangkok, 
Thailand in November 2018, and was supported by Pfizer.

About Antimicrobial Stewardship Working Group

Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) Working Group was founded in 2017 by 6 
infectious diseases and antimicrobial stewardship experts from Asia to improve 
the quality of antimicrobial stewardship in the region. Since its formation, 
the AMS Working Group has trained healthcare professionals from across Asia on 
building and sustaining antimicrobial stewardship culture; started 
preceptorship programs at antimicrobial stewardship training centers in 
Singapore, Taiwan and India; published an Asian antimicrobial stewardship 
consensus paper, and developed the AMS Blueprint – a toolkit to help Asian 
hospitals implement antimicrobial stewardship programs. The group's initiatives 
and work have been supported by Pfizer. 

APPENDIX

The following medical societies were represented at the AMR Summit and AMS 
Working Group initiatives: 

Indonesia:
Indonesian Society for Clinical Microbiology
The Indonesian Society of Tropical and Infectious Diseases
 
Japan:
The Japanese Society for Infection Prevention and Control
 
Malaysia:
Malaysian Society of Infectious Diseases and Chemotherapy
 
Philippines:
Philippine Hospital Infection Control Society, Inc.
Philippine Society for Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
 
Singapore:
Society of Intensive Care Medicine (Singapore)
 
Taiwan:
Infection Control Society of Taiwan
Infectious Disease Society of Taiwan
 
Vietnam:
Vietnam Society for Infectious Diseases

SOURCE  Antimicrobial Resistance Summit Expert Group and the Antimicrobial 
Stewardship Working Group