Antimicrobial Medicines Consumption in Eastern Europeand Central Asia – An Updated Cross-National Study and Assessment of QuantitativeMetrics for Policy Action
Закрыть
Conţinutul numărului revistei
Articolul precedent
Articolul urmator
139 0
SM ISO690:2012
CARP, Angela, ROBERTSON, Jane, IWAMOTO, Kotoji, NOI, Autori, HOXHA, Iris. Antimicrobial Medicines Consumption in Eastern Europeand Central Asia – An Updated Cross-National Study and Assessment of QuantitativeMetrics for Policy Action. In: Frontiers in Pharmacology, 2019, nr. 9, p. 0. ISSN 1663-9812. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2018.01156
EXPORT metadate:
Google Scholar
Crossref
CERIF

DataCite
Dublin Core
Frontiers in Pharmacology
Numărul 9 / 2019 / ISSN 1663-9812

Antimicrobial Medicines Consumption in Eastern Europeand Central Asia – An Updated Cross-National Study and Assessment of QuantitativeMetrics for Policy Action

DOI:https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2018.01156

Pag. 0-0

Carp Angela1, Robertson Jane2, Iwamoto Kotoji2, Noi Autori, Hoxha Iris3
 
1 Coordination, Implementation and Monitoring Unit of the Health System Projects, Chişinãu,
2 World Health Organization, Denmark,
3 University of Medicine, Tirana
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 1 martie 2023


Rezumat

Introduction: Surveillance of antimicrobial medicines consumption is central to improving their use and reducing resistance rates. There are few published data on antibiotic consumption in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. To address this, 18 non-European Union (EU) countries and territories contribute to the WHO Regional Office for Europe (WHO Europe) Antimicrobial Medicines Consumption (AMC) Network. Objectives: (i) Analyze 2015 consumption of J01 class antibacterials for systemic use from 16 AMC Network members; (ii) compare results with 2011 data and 2015 ESAC-Net estimates; (iii) assess consumption against suggested indicators; (iv) evaluate the impact of planned changes to defined daily doses (DDDs) in 2019 for some commonly used antibiotics; and (v) consider the utility of quantitative metrics of consumption for policy action. Methods: Analysis methods are similar to ESAC-Net for EU countries. The Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) classification and DDD methodology were used to calculate total consumption (DDD/1000 inhabitants/day [DID]), relative use measures (percentages), extent of use of WHO Watch and Reserve group antibiotics and impact of DDD changes. Findings: Total J01 consumption in 2015 ranged 8.0–41.5 DID (mean 21.2 DID), generally lower than in 2011 (6.4–42.3 DID, mean 23.6 DID). Beta-lactam penicillins, cephalosporins, and quinolones represented 16.2–56.6, 9.4–28.8, and 7.5–24.6% of total J01 consumption, respectively. Third-generation cephalosporins comprised up to 90% of total cephalosporin consumption in some countries. Consumption of WHO Reserve antibiotics was very low; Watch antibiotics comprised 17.3–49.5% of total consumption (mean 30.9%). Variability was similar to 2015 ESAC-Net data (11.7–38.3 DID; mean 22.6 DID). DDD changes in 2019 impact both total and relative consumption estimates: total DIDs reduced on average by 12.0% (7.3–35.5 DID), mostly due to reduced total DDDs for commonly used penicillins; impact on rankings and relative use estimates were modest. Discussion: Quantitative metrics of antibiotic consumption have value. Improvements over time reflect national activities, however, changes in total volumes may conceal shifts to less desirable choices. Relative use measures targeting antibiotics of concern may be more informative. Some, including WHO Watch and Reserve classifications, lend themselves to prescribing targets supported by guidelines and treatment protocols. 

Cuvinte-cheie
antibiotic utilization, antimicrobial medicines consumption, Central Asia, cross-national comparative study, Eastern Europe, national surveillance networks, quality indicators