Trends in the hospital-sector consumption of the WHO AWaRe Reserve group antibiotics in EU/EEA countries and the United Kingdom, 2010 to 2018

Author:

Benkő Ria123ORCID,Matuz Mária23,Pető Zoltán1,Weist Klaus4,Heuer Ole4,Vlahović-Palčevski Vera5,Monnet Dominique L4,Galistiani Githa Fungie3,Blix Hege Salvesen678,Soós Gyöngyvér3,Hajdú Edit9,

Affiliation:

1. University of Szeged, Albert-Szent Györgyi Medical Centre, Emergency Department, Szeged, Hungary

2. University of Szeged, Albert-Szent Györgyi Medical Centre, Central Pharmacy, Szeged, Hungary

3. University of Szeged, Faculty of Pharmacy, Institute of Clinical Pharmacy, Szeged, Hungary

4. European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), Stockholm, Sweden

5. Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University Hospital Rijeka/Medical Faculty and Faculty of Health Studies, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia

6. The research group for personalized pharmacotherapy and clinical pharmacy, Department of Pharmacy, University of Oslo, Norway

7. Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway

8. WHO Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology, Oslo, Norway

9. University of Szeged, Albert-Szent Györgyi Medical Centre, Internal Medicine Department, Infectious Disease Unit, Hungary

Abstract

Background In 2019, the World Health Organization published the 21st Model list of Essential Medicines and updated the Access, Watch Reserve (AWaRe) antibiotics classification to improve metrics and indicators for antibiotic stewardship activities. Reserve antibiotics are regarded as last-resort treatment options. Aim We investigated hospital-sector consumption quantities and trends of Reserve group antibiotics in European Union/European Economic Area countries and the United Kingdom (EU/EEA/UK). Methods Hospital-sector antimicrobial consumption data for 2010–2018 were obtained from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Antibacterials’ consumption for systemic use (Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical classification (ATC) group J01) were included in the analysis and expressed as defined daily doses (DDD) per 1,000 inhabitants per day. We defined reserve antibiotics as per AWaRe classification and applied linear regression to analyse trends in consumption of reserve antibiotics throughout the study period. Results EU/EEA/UK average hospital-sector reserve-antibiotic consumption increased from 0.017 to 0.050 DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day over the study period (p = 0.002). This significant increase concerned 15 countries. In 2018, four antibiotics (tigecycline, colistin, linezolid and daptomycin) constituted 91% of the consumption. Both absolute and relative (% of total hospital sector) consumption of reserve antibiotics varied considerably (up to 42-fold) between countries (from 0.004 to 0.155 DDD per 1,000 inhabitants per day and from 0.2% to 9.3%, respectively). Conclusion An increasing trend in reserve antibiotic consumption was found in Europe. The substantial variation between countries may reflect the burden of infection with multidrug-resistant bacteria. Our results could guide national actions or optimisation of reserve antibiotic use.

Publisher

European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)

Subject

Virology,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

Reference33 articles.

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