AMR Framework Flashcards

1
Q

What is the global burden of bacterial AMR in humans?

A

Estimated 4.95 million deaths associated with bacterial AMR, including 1.27 million that are directly attributable
Significant regional variation in attributable deaths ( western sub saharan africa > high income N america > australiasia

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2
Q

AMR genes are found in…

A

pathogenic AND non-pathogenic species of bacteria throughout the enviornment

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3
Q

Resistome

A

The collection of all genes that directly or indirection contribute to AMR

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4
Q

What are the main mechanisms of the emergence of AMR?

A
  • Genetic mutations
  • Horizontal gene transfer (mobile genetic elements (MGEs) such as transposons, phages, and plasmids)
  • Transformation, transduciton, conjugation
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5
Q

AMR requires a ____ approach

A

One Health

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6
Q

Direct AMR transmission pathways from animals to humans

A

Focuses on AMR pathogens that develop in animals and are transmitted to people through food, water, or direct contact.

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7
Q

Indirect AMR transmission pathways from animals to humans

A

Occurs through envirnmental mediation: AMR bacteria (not necessarily pathogens) are shed from animals into the environment through various pathways. These bacteria severe as a source of AMR genes that can be shared between bacteria in the environment. Humans are exposed, not necessarily to the original animal-origin bacteria, but to bacteria in the environment that now contain the animal-orign resistance genes.

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8
Q

What is the national burder of AMR in humans?

A
  • 2.8 million antibiotic resistant infections in the US each year - 0-40% reduction in certain types since original 2013 report but 50-315% increase in others
  • 35,000 deaths
  • Resistant hospital-onset infection and deaths both increased 15% in 2020
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9
Q

What are the categories of human AMR threats and what are the 7 criteria used to evaluate them?

A

Urgent > serious > concerning
1. Clinical impact
2. Economic impact
3. Incidence
4. 10-year projection of incidence
5. Transmissibility
6. Availability of effective antibiotics
7. Barrier to prevention

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10
Q

What are the two most common zoonotic foodborne AMR pathogens in the US?

A

Salmonella and campylobacter

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11
Q

What is the relative contribution of salmonella and campylobacter to total AMR infections in the US?

A

Combined are responsible for 400,000 illnesses and 60 deaths. They make up 14% of AMR illnesses (high) and 0.17% of AMR-related deaths (low).

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12
Q

What are the trends in antibiotic sales data for food-producing animals?

A

Sales have been declining since the VFD went into effect in October of 2015.

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13
Q

What are the AMR monitoring systems in place in the US (5)?

A
  1. National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS)
  2. Antimicrobial sales for food producing animals
  3. Antimicrobial use data for food producing animals
  4. Veterinary Laboratory Investigation and Response Network (Vet-LIRN)
  5. National Animal Health Laborator Network (NAHLN) = AMR pilot project
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14
Q

What is the purpose of NARMS?

A
  • Monitor trends in AMR among common foodborne bacteria for humas, retail meats, and food producing animals
  • Disseminate timely information on AMR to promote interventions that reduce resistance among foodborne bacteria.
  • Conduct research to better understand the emergence, persistence, and spread of AMR
  • Assist the FDA in making decisions relateed to the approval of safe and effective antimicrobial drugs for animals
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15
Q

What agencies oversee data colleciton and analysis for NARMS? What samples do they collect?

A
  • FDA - retail meats (salmonella all meats included seafood, cmapy in retain poultry)
  • USDA-FSIS - food animal isolates (cecal sampling from swine, cattle, chicke, turkeys for Salmonella, Campy, E. coli and Enterococcus)
  • CDC - human data (Salmonells, Shigella, Vibrio, E.coli , campy
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16
Q

What is the purpose of tracking antimicrobial sales in food-producing animals?

A
  • Enacted by congrss to assit FDA in analyzing interactions, efficacy, and safety of antimicrobials approved for use in both humans and food-producing animals
  • Pharmaceutical companies must report to the FDA the amount of each antimicrobial active ingredient in drug products sold or distributed for use in food-producing animals
  • FDA summarizes the informaiton and makes it available to the public in annual summary reports.
17
Q

Which antimicrobials approved for use in food-animals were sold the most?

A

Tetracyclines, then penicillins, macrolide,s aminoglycosides, sulfonamides

18
Q

Antimicrobial use in food-producing animals

A

Sales are not equivalent to use!
Data harder to collect
2017 summaries from USDA offer insight but not to changing nature of use patterns
FDA CVM - two cooperative aggreements to support collection (poultry and swine industries, dairy and feedlot industries) … 2024-2025
Similar initiative in companion animals….>2026

19
Q

NLVRN

A
  • Established in 2010 by FDA to investigate potential problems with animal feed and animal drugs
  • 2017 started collecting data on antimicrobial susceptibility of clinical relevant bacterial isolates from different animals hosts, including companion animals
  • Goal is to monitor AMR profiles in animal pathogens routinely isolated in vet clinics and diagnostic labs across the US
20
Q

NAHLN

A
  • Includes 60 state and university laboratoris
  • Overseen by USDA-APHIS

AMR pilot project initiated in 2018:
* Goal is to monitor AMr profiles in animal pathogens routinely isolated
* 30 diff labs across US invovled as of 2021
* Monitors AMr isolates from cattle, swine, poultry, and horses…recently added cats and dogs

21
Q

AMR pathogens affecting animal health in US publication

A
  • AVMA committee + species experts as volunteers
  • Technical report on resistance threats by species
22
Q

Monitoring data on AMR in animals is collected via _____, ____, and ________.

A

NARMS, Vet-LIRN, NAHLN