Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.

<h4>Objective</h4>The evolution of antibiotic resistance is far outpacing the development of new antibiotics, causing global public health concern about infections that will increasingly be unresponsive to antimicrobials. This risk of emerging antibiotic resistance may be meaningfully al...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ashley A DeNegre, Martial L Ndeffo Mbah, Kellen Myers, Nina H Fefferman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212969
id doaj-d50889264d60457e8dccbc1a6884f24f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d50889264d60457e8dccbc1a6884f24f2021-03-04T10:35:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01142e021296910.1371/journal.pone.0212969Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.Ashley A DeNegreMartial L Ndeffo MbahKellen MyersNina H Fefferman<h4>Objective</h4>The evolution of antibiotic resistance is far outpacing the development of new antibiotics, causing global public health concern about infections that will increasingly be unresponsive to antimicrobials. This risk of emerging antibiotic resistance may be meaningfully altered in highly AIDS-immunocompromised populations. Such populations fundamentally alter the bacterial evolutionary landscape in two ways, which we seek to model and analyze. First, widespread, population-level immunoincompetence creates a novel host environment with disrupted selective pressures. Second, within AIDS-prevalent populations, the recommendation that antibiotics be taken to treat and prevent opportunistic infection raises the risk of selection for drug-resistant pathogens.<h4>Design</h4>To determine the impact of HIV/AIDS on the emergence of antibiotic resistance-specifically in the developing world where high prevalence and economic challenges complicate disease management.<h4>Methods</h4>We present an SEIR epidemiological model of bacterial infection, and parametrize it to capture HIV/AIDS-attributable emergence of resistance under conditions of both high and low HIV/AIDS prevalence.<h4>Results</h4>We demonstrate that HIV/AIDS-immunocompromised hosts can be responsible for a disproportionately greater contribution to emergence of resistance than would be expected based on population-wide HIV/AIDS prevalence alone.<h4>Conclusions</h4>As such, the AIDS-immunocompromised have the potential become wellsprings of novel, resistant, opportunistic pathogen strains that can propagate into the broader global community. We discuss how public health policies for HIV/AIDS management can shape the evolutionary environment for opportunistic bacterial infections.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212969
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ashley A DeNegre
Martial L Ndeffo Mbah
Kellen Myers
Nina H Fefferman
spellingShingle Ashley A DeNegre
Martial L Ndeffo Mbah
Kellen Myers
Nina H Fefferman
Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ashley A DeNegre
Martial L Ndeffo Mbah
Kellen Myers
Nina H Fefferman
author_sort Ashley A DeNegre
title Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.
title_short Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.
title_full Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.
title_fullStr Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.
title_full_unstemmed Emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: A case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in AIDS patients.
title_sort emergence of antibiotic resistance in immunocompromised host populations: a case study of emerging antibiotic resistant tuberculosis in aids patients.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description <h4>Objective</h4>The evolution of antibiotic resistance is far outpacing the development of new antibiotics, causing global public health concern about infections that will increasingly be unresponsive to antimicrobials. This risk of emerging antibiotic resistance may be meaningfully altered in highly AIDS-immunocompromised populations. Such populations fundamentally alter the bacterial evolutionary landscape in two ways, which we seek to model and analyze. First, widespread, population-level immunoincompetence creates a novel host environment with disrupted selective pressures. Second, within AIDS-prevalent populations, the recommendation that antibiotics be taken to treat and prevent opportunistic infection raises the risk of selection for drug-resistant pathogens.<h4>Design</h4>To determine the impact of HIV/AIDS on the emergence of antibiotic resistance-specifically in the developing world where high prevalence and economic challenges complicate disease management.<h4>Methods</h4>We present an SEIR epidemiological model of bacterial infection, and parametrize it to capture HIV/AIDS-attributable emergence of resistance under conditions of both high and low HIV/AIDS prevalence.<h4>Results</h4>We demonstrate that HIV/AIDS-immunocompromised hosts can be responsible for a disproportionately greater contribution to emergence of resistance than would be expected based on population-wide HIV/AIDS prevalence alone.<h4>Conclusions</h4>As such, the AIDS-immunocompromised have the potential become wellsprings of novel, resistant, opportunistic pathogen strains that can propagate into the broader global community. We discuss how public health policies for HIV/AIDS management can shape the evolutionary environment for opportunistic bacterial infections.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212969
work_keys_str_mv AT ashleyadenegre emergenceofantibioticresistanceinimmunocompromisedhostpopulationsacasestudyofemergingantibioticresistanttuberculosisinaidspatients
AT martiallndeffombah emergenceofantibioticresistanceinimmunocompromisedhostpopulationsacasestudyofemergingantibioticresistanttuberculosisinaidspatients
AT kellenmyers emergenceofantibioticresistanceinimmunocompromisedhostpopulationsacasestudyofemergingantibioticresistanttuberculosisinaidspatients
AT ninahfefferman emergenceofantibioticresistanceinimmunocompromisedhostpopulationsacasestudyofemergingantibioticresistanttuberculosisinaidspatients
_version_ 1714805403883143168