Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade

Abstract Background During the last six decades, extensive use of antibiotics has selected resistant strains, increasing the rate of fatal infectious diseases, and exerting an economic burden on society. This situation is widely accepted as a global problem, yet its degree is not well elucidated in...

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Main Authors: Hazrat Bilal, Muhammad Nadeem Khan, Tayyab Rehman, Muhammad Fazal Hameed, Xingyuan Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-05906-1
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spelling doaj-c4729f84fe924912b8453253cbbd3ddd2021-03-11T11:23:07ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342021-03-0121111910.1186/s12879-021-05906-1Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decadeHazrat Bilal0Muhammad Nadeem Khan1Tayyab Rehman2Muhammad Fazal Hameed3Xingyuan Yang4Institute of Physical Science and Information Technology, Institute of Health Sciences Anhui UniversityFaculty of Biological Sciences, Department of Microbiology, Quaid-i-Azam UniversityKhyber Medical University, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Department of Medical MicrobiologyInstitute of Physical Science and Information Technology, Institute of Health Sciences Anhui UniversityInstitute of Physical Science and Information Technology, Institute of Health Sciences Anhui UniversityAbstract Background During the last six decades, extensive use of antibiotics has selected resistant strains, increasing the rate of fatal infectious diseases, and exerting an economic burden on society. This situation is widely accepted as a global problem, yet its degree is not well elucidated in many regions of the world. Up till now, no systemic analysis of Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in Pakistan has been published. The current study aims to describe the antibiotic-resistance scenario of Pakistan from human samples of the last 10 y, to find the gaps in surveillances and methodology and recommendations for researchers and prescribers founded on these outcomes. Methods Original research articles analyzed the pattern of Antibiotic resistance of any World Health Organization (WHO) enlisted priority pathogens in Pakistan (published onward 2009 till March 2020), were collected from PubMed, Google scholar, and PakMedi Net search engines. These articles were selected based on predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data about the study characteristics and antibiotic-resistance for a given bacterium were excluded from literature. Antibiotic resistance to a particular bacterium was calculated as a median resistance with 95% Confidence Interval (CI). Results Studies published in the last 10 y showed that Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) is the most reported clinical diagnosis (16.1%) in Pakistan. E. coli were reported in 28 (30.11%) studies showing high resistance to antibiotics’ first line. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was found in 49% of S. aureus’ total reported cases. Phenotypic resistance pattern has mostly been evaluated by Disk Diffusion Method (DDM) (82.8%), taken Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) as a breakpoint reference guideline (in 79.6% studies). Only 28 (30.11%) studies have made molecular identification of the resistance gene. blaTEM (78.94% in Shigella spp) and blaNDM-1 (32.75% in Klebsiella spp) are the prominent reported resistant genes followed by VanA (45.53% in Enterococcus spp), mcr-1 (1.61% in Acinetobacter spp), and blaKPC-2 (31.67% in E. coli). Most of the studies were from Sindh (40.86%), followed by Punjab (35.48%), while Baluchistan’s AMR data was not available. Conclusion Outcomes of our study emphasize that most of the pathogens show high resistance to commonly used antibiotics; also, we find gaps in surveillances and breaches in methodological data. Based on these findings, we recommend the regularization of surveillance practice and precise actions to combat the region’s AMR.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-05906-1Antibiotic resistanceBacteriaPakistanSystematic review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hazrat Bilal
Muhammad Nadeem Khan
Tayyab Rehman
Muhammad Fazal Hameed
Xingyuan Yang
spellingShingle Hazrat Bilal
Muhammad Nadeem Khan
Tayyab Rehman
Muhammad Fazal Hameed
Xingyuan Yang
Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
BMC Infectious Diseases
Antibiotic resistance
Bacteria
Pakistan
Systematic review
author_facet Hazrat Bilal
Muhammad Nadeem Khan
Tayyab Rehman
Muhammad Fazal Hameed
Xingyuan Yang
author_sort Hazrat Bilal
title Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
title_short Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
title_full Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
title_fullStr Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic resistance in Pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
title_sort antibiotic resistance in pakistan: a systematic review of past decade
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background During the last six decades, extensive use of antibiotics has selected resistant strains, increasing the rate of fatal infectious diseases, and exerting an economic burden on society. This situation is widely accepted as a global problem, yet its degree is not well elucidated in many regions of the world. Up till now, no systemic analysis of Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in Pakistan has been published. The current study aims to describe the antibiotic-resistance scenario of Pakistan from human samples of the last 10 y, to find the gaps in surveillances and methodology and recommendations for researchers and prescribers founded on these outcomes. Methods Original research articles analyzed the pattern of Antibiotic resistance of any World Health Organization (WHO) enlisted priority pathogens in Pakistan (published onward 2009 till March 2020), were collected from PubMed, Google scholar, and PakMedi Net search engines. These articles were selected based on predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data about the study characteristics and antibiotic-resistance for a given bacterium were excluded from literature. Antibiotic resistance to a particular bacterium was calculated as a median resistance with 95% Confidence Interval (CI). Results Studies published in the last 10 y showed that Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) is the most reported clinical diagnosis (16.1%) in Pakistan. E. coli were reported in 28 (30.11%) studies showing high resistance to antibiotics’ first line. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was found in 49% of S. aureus’ total reported cases. Phenotypic resistance pattern has mostly been evaluated by Disk Diffusion Method (DDM) (82.8%), taken Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) as a breakpoint reference guideline (in 79.6% studies). Only 28 (30.11%) studies have made molecular identification of the resistance gene. blaTEM (78.94% in Shigella spp) and blaNDM-1 (32.75% in Klebsiella spp) are the prominent reported resistant genes followed by VanA (45.53% in Enterococcus spp), mcr-1 (1.61% in Acinetobacter spp), and blaKPC-2 (31.67% in E. coli). Most of the studies were from Sindh (40.86%), followed by Punjab (35.48%), while Baluchistan’s AMR data was not available. Conclusion Outcomes of our study emphasize that most of the pathogens show high resistance to commonly used antibiotics; also, we find gaps in surveillances and breaches in methodological data. Based on these findings, we recommend the regularization of surveillance practice and precise actions to combat the region’s AMR.
topic Antibiotic resistance
Bacteria
Pakistan
Systematic review
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-05906-1
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