Superbugs that cannot be neutralized by most of the antibiotics in use are spreading across the world. Photo: Getty Images

The human race has a deadly drug problem. The scourge posing an existential threat isn’t heroin or cocaine. Although such drugs do exact a heavy price on societies around the world, the cost of dealing with them is nothing compared with the looming disaster threatened by our out-of-control dependence on antibiotics.

We owe much to antibiotics. After the discovery of penicillin in 1929, bacterial diseases such as pneumonia, bacterial meningitis, tuberculosis and even strep throat lost their power to kill with impunity. Today, antibiotics are given to prevent the risk of infection in patients undergoing surgery. Cancer patients on chemotherapy, which compromises the immune system, take antibiotics to guard against potentially fatal infections.

But just 90 years after Alexander Fleming witnessed the mold penicillin destroying the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus in a petri dish, our love affair with antibiotics has turned sour.

Regarded as miracle drugs by patients and doctors alike, antibiotics have been dished out for decades – often for no good reason. They can’t kill viruses, for instance, but patients with viral infections demand antibiotics and often get them.

But as the World Health Organization has been warning for years, the problem is that thanks to inappropriate overuse, the bugs have developed resistance to antimicrobials – the agents that kill or prevent the growth of those harmful micro-organisms. As a result, the WHO says treatments for a growing list of infections, including tuberculosis, sepsis, urinary-tract infections, food-borne diseases and the once-tamed hospital bug MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), “have become less effective in many parts of the world.” Without antibiotics “modern medical procedures such as major surgery, organ transplantation, treatment of premature babies, diabetes management and cancer chemotherapy will become very high-risk.”

The World Health Organization has been warning for years that thanks to inappropriate overuse of antibiotics, bacteria have developed resistance to antimicrobials – the agents that kill or prevent the growth of those harmful micro-organisms

Some countries are waking up to this danger, including the United Arab Emirates, which in 2018 ordered doctors to stop over-prescribing antibiotics and clamped down on pharmacies illegally issuing the drugs without a prescription. The intervention was well overdue. Six years earlier, research published in The Lancet medical journal found that “in many Middle Eastern countries antibiotics can easily be obtained over the counter.”

Various other studies have highlighted irresponsible prescribing. One in Kuwait found that 50% of 270 patients with upper-respiratory-tract infections were given antibiotics, yet only eight actually needed them. In Iran, 99% of patients in some hospitals routinely received antibiotics.

Misinformation is partly to blame. According to a study at Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University in Dammam published in 2018 in the journal BMC Public Health, some patients in Saudi Arabia firmly believe antibiotics are “for everything” or that they can boost the immune system. Many stockpiled the drugs or took them with them when they went abroad, “just in case.” The study states that overuse has resulted in “exponentially growing antibiotic resistance” in Saudi Arabia.

Some countries are trying to address the problem. Thanks to its “relentless efforts” in the UAE, the Ministry of Health was able to report a 43% drop in antibiotic use at a conference on antimicrobial resistance in Dubai last March. But not every country is making such progress and until they all do it’s a losing battle. A WHO review of 65 countries between 2016 and 2018 found wide variation in the volumes of antibiotics consumed, ranging from 4.4 to 64.4 daily doses per 1,000 inhabitants per day.

As resistance grows, the era of the antibiotic may well be drawing to a close – a scenario with the sort of apocalyptic consequences usually seen in Hollywood disaster movies. Hope is on the horizon, however, and it comes not from a newly developed superdrug but from an alternative treatment to antibiotics that predates penicillin.

The bacteriophage was discovered 10 years before penicillin, but at the time science lacked the ability to use it effectively and then mostly forgot about it after the discovery of penicillin. Now it could become the savior of humankind.

Bacteriophages (phages, for short) are viruses that attack bacteria – and there are an awful lot of them out there waiting to be useful. A recent paper in the World Journal of Gastrointestinal Pharmacology and Therapeutics hailed phages as “the most abundant biological entity on Earth, [which] play a crucial role in regulating bacterial populations [and] are responsible for the death of approximately 20-40% of all marine surface bacteria every 24 hours.”

The researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, concluded that although much is still unknown about the interactions among phages, bacteria and humans, “the time to take phage therapy seriously seems to be rapidly approaching.”

Trials in humans are already under way. In January this year, French researchers reported that a cocktail of 12 bacteriophages had successfully destroyed the bacteria in a dozen burn victims with dangerously infected wounds. They did so more slowly than the antibiotics given to patients in a control group, but the researchers concluded that efficiency would probably improve if phages were used in greater concentrations.

In any event, if antimicrobial resistance continues to increase at its current runaway rate, the comparison with antibiotics could soon become academic and phages will be the only option left.

After a century in the wilderness, the bacteriophage’s time may have come – and not a moment too soon. Experts believe that by 2050 resistance to antibiotics could be claiming 10 million lives every year.

This article was provided by Syndication Bureau, which holds copyright.

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