The relationship between the volume of antimicrobial consumption in human communities and the frequency of resistance

  1. D. J. Austin*,,
  2. K. G. Kristinsson, and
  3. R. M. Anderson
  1. Wellcome Trust Centre for the Epidemiology of Infectious Disease, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, United Kingdom; and Department of Microbiology, National University Hospital, IS-101, Reykjavík, Iceland
  1. Communicated by Robert May, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom (received for review August 10, 1998)

Abstract

The threat to human health posed by antibiotic resistance is of growing concern. Many commensal and pathogenic organisms have developed resistance to well established and newer antibiotics. The major selection pressure driving changes in the frequency of antibiotic resistance is the volume of drug use. However, establishing a quantitative relationship between the frequency of resistance and volume of drug use has proved difficult. Using population genetic methods and epidemiological observations, we report an analysis of the influence of the selective pressure imposed by the volume of drug use on temporal changes in resistance. Analytical expressions are derived to delineate key relationships between resistance and drug consumption. The analyses indicate that the time scale for emergence of resistance under a constant selective pressure is typically much shorter than the decay time after cessation or decline in the volume of drug use and that significant reductions in resistance require equally significant reductions in drug consumption. These results highlight the need for early intervention once resistance is detected.

Footnotes

  • * To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: daren.austin{at}zoology.ox.ac.uk.

  • A Commentary on this article begins on page 800.

  • ABBREVIATION:
    DDDs,
    defined daily doses
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