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Published in: Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control 1/2020

Open Access 01-12-2020 | Research

A one health framework to estimate the cost of antimicrobial resistance

Authors: Chantal M. Morel, Richard A. Alm, Christine Årdal, Alessandra Bandera, Giacomo M. Bruno, Elena Carrara, Giorgio L. Colombo, Marlieke E. A. de Kraker, Sabiha Essack, Isabel Frost, Bruno Gonzalez-Zorn, Herman Goossens, Luca Guardabassi, Stephan Harbarth, Peter S. Jørgensen, Souha S. Kanj, Tomislav Kostyanev, Ramanan Laxminarayan, Finola Leonard, Gabriel Levy Hara, Marc Mendelson, Malgorzata Mikulska, Nico T. Mutters, Kevin Outterson, Jesus Rodriguez Baňo, Evelina Tacconelli, Luigia Scudeller, the GAP-ON€ network

Published in: Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Objectives/purpose

The costs attributable to antimicrobial resistance (AMR) remain theoretical and largely unspecified. Current figures fail to capture the full health and economic burden caused by AMR across human, animal, and environmental health; historically many studies have considered only direct costs associated with human infection from a hospital perspective, primarily from high-income countries. The Global Antimicrobial Resistance Platform for ONE-Burden Estimates (GAP-ON€) network has developed a framework to help guide AMR costing exercises in any part of the world as a first step towards more comprehensive analyses for comparing AMR interventions at the local level as well as more harmonized analyses for quantifying the full economic burden attributable to AMR at the global level.

Methods

GAP-ON€ (funded under the JPIAMR 8th call (Virtual Research Institute) is composed of 19 international networks and institutions active in the field of AMR. For this project, the Network operated by means of Delphi rounds, teleconferences and face-to-face meetings. The resulting costing framework takes a bottom-up approach to incorporate all relevant costs imposed by an AMR bacterial microbe in a patient, in an animal, or in the environment up through to the societal level.

Results

The framework itemizes the epidemiological data as well as the direct and indirect cost components needed to build a realistic cost picture for AMR. While the framework lists a large number of relevant pathogens for which this framework could be used to explore the costs, the framework is sufficiently generic to facilitate the costing of other resistant pathogens, including those of other aetiologies.

Conclusion

In order to conduct cost-effectiveness analyses to choose amongst different AMR-related interventions at local level, the costing of AMR should be done according to local epidemiological priorities and local health service norms. Yet the use of a common framework across settings allows for the results of such studies to contribute to cumulative estimates that can serve as the basis of broader policy decisions at the international level such as how to steer R&D funding and how to prioritize AMR amongst other issues. Indeed, it is only by building a realistic cost picture that we can make informed decisions on how best to tackle major health threats.
Footnotes
1
In some cases, comparison to a non-infected population is more relevant, in particular where there have been certain types of preventive measures. For example, if vaccination prevents all future drug-resistant and susceptible infections, the harm of drug-resistance as well as infections in general is eliminated, and therefore the most appropriate comparison would calculate the cost impact of resistant infections relative to no infection..
 
2
This challenge has been repeatedly brought to the fore in the litigation of damage claims after death following resistant infection.
 
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Metadata
Title
A one health framework to estimate the cost of antimicrobial resistance
Authors
Chantal M. Morel
Richard A. Alm
Christine Årdal
Alessandra Bandera
Giacomo M. Bruno
Elena Carrara
Giorgio L. Colombo
Marlieke E. A. de Kraker
Sabiha Essack
Isabel Frost
Bruno Gonzalez-Zorn
Herman Goossens
Luca Guardabassi
Stephan Harbarth
Peter S. Jørgensen
Souha S. Kanj
Tomislav Kostyanev
Ramanan Laxminarayan
Finola Leonard
Gabriel Levy Hara
Marc Mendelson
Malgorzata Mikulska
Nico T. Mutters
Kevin Outterson
Jesus Rodriguez Baňo
Evelina Tacconelli
Luigia Scudeller
the GAP-ON€ network
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control / Issue 1/2020
Electronic ISSN: 2047-2994
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13756-020-00822-6

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