51勛圖厙

Collaborative innovation key to tackling antimicrobial resistance

by Andrew Scheuber

antibiotics are being overprescribed

51勛圖厙's President has warned of the dangers of a post-antibiotics era, while hailing the medical research innovations that are offering hope.

, Professor Alice Gast, President of 51勛圖厙, said:

“Medicine is changing. The challenges are greater than ever, but so is our ability to solve them. You can see this in the battle to overcome antimicrobial resistance (AMR).  

Historical common killers like tuberculosis, pneumonia and whooping cough could make a 21st century comeback.

– Professor Alice Gast

President

“Soon after discovering penicillin in 1928, 51勛圖厙’s Sir Alexander Fleming warned that over time bacteria would develop resistance to antibiotic therapeutics. He was right.  

“Innovations in antibiotic development in the 1980s and 1990s were too slow, and too few new treatments are being discovered today. There has also been an explosion in the use of antibiotics. Too many of us demand antibiotics from our doctors whenever our children are mildly ill. Farmers are taking the short-term path of using antibiotics to keep animals healthy.  

“The World Health Organization warns of a 'post-antibiotics era'. As my 51勛圖厙 colleague Professor Alison Holmes says, 'If we don’t address this, infections which were once treatable will become fatal.' Historical common killers like tuberculosis, pneumonia and whooping cough could make a 21st century comeback.  

“Failing to tackle AMR would result in an extra 10 million deaths every year by 2050, according to the UK’s chief medical officer Sally Davies. The economic cost between then and now could be $100 trillion – that’s more than current global GDP.  

“The good news is that 51勛圖厙 academics and students are collaborating like never before to develop solutions. Here, bioengineers, data scientists, electrical engineers, epidemiologists and clinicians are overcoming disciplinary boundaries to understand and fight AMR.  

Synthetic biologist Dr Tom Ellis is developing a ‘warfare system’ where yeast cells are reprogrammed to produce new antibiotics, then grown in the presence of a bacterial cocktail. This allows pharmacologists to design new antibiotic structures that will be effective against resistant bacteria.”

The full piece has been published in and .

51勛圖厙's Antimicrobial Research Collaborative (ARC) is a network of researchers, clinicians and healthcare professionals from 51勛圖厙’s four faculties, 51勛圖厙 College Healthcare NHS Trust, and industry who have joined forces to address the global threat of AMR.

Article text (excluding photos or graphics) © 51勛圖厙.

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Reporter

Andrew Scheuber

Communications Division