Prøve GULL - Gratis

Ending the AMR Cycle

BioSpectrum Asia

|

July 2023

According to the World Health Organisation's (WHO) annual review of antibacterial agents in clinical and preclinical development, the R&D pipeline for new antibacterial medicines is insufficient to tackle the challenge of increasing emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance. Furthermore, the availability and access to new and existing antibiotics, including generics, is a challenge for countries of all income levels. The Global Leaders Group on AMR recently reiterated that the world faces a serious antibiotic pipeline and access crisis that requires innovative financing measures.

Ending the AMR Cycle

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among bacterial pathogens is a silent pandemic and an urgent global public health threat. These superbugs, which are able to resist multiple antibiotics, are on the rise and have claimed millions of lives worldwide as well as long-term disabilities, and high economic costs associated with the healthcare burden.

According to a study by the Global Research on Antimicrobial Resistance (GRAM) Project published in the Lancet, 33 common bacterial infections were either directly or indirectly responsible for 7.7 million deaths in 2019. MRSA, an infection that primarily occurs in people who’ve been in hospitals or other healthcare settings, alone caused more than 100,000 deaths in 2019. These bacterial pathogens are deadlier than most better monitored pathogens such as malaria, HIV or tuberculosis.

The overuse and misuse of antibiotics have led to the emergence of AMR, which is a complex problem that requires a multi-pronged approach to address. The annual AMR death toll is expected to double by 2050 without sufficient intervention.

Environmental sustainability

The constant presence of antimicrobials in our environment increases the spread of AMR driven by the environmental impacts of the manufacture, use and disposal of antimicrobials. In both livestock and humans between 40 and 90 per cent of an antibiotic dose administered is excreted in faeces or urine. In agriculture, these excretes frequently reach the environment and are contaminating soil, plants and water. Pharmaceutical effluent discharge from manufacturing sites have also shown contamination often greater than those of agriculture and humans.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Waters launches charge detection mass spectrometry technology

US-based Waters Corporation has unveiled the Waters Xevo Charge Detection Mass Spectrometer (CDMS), delivering unmatched measurement and characterisation for the broadest range of mega-mass biomolecules central to next-generation therapeutics and structural biology.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Chulalongkorn University launches Thailand's first master's programme in Nurse Anesthesia

The Faculty of Nursing, Chulalongkorn University, has officially launched the \"Master of Nursing Science Programme in Nurse Anesthesia\" - the first of its kind in Thailand.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

WHO strengthens coordination for NTD programmes and supply chain delivery

The World Health Organization (WHO), together with health ministries, pharmaceutical donours, implementing partners and technical support platforms, is strengthening coordination for neglected tropical disease (NTD) programmes and supply chain delivery, through three major back-to-back meetings in Geneva.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

All-in-one coronavirus vaccines to save millions in future pandemics

A new study reveals that vaccines designed to protect against a wide range of coronaviruses could dramatically reduce deaths and economic disruption and limit the need for lockdowns in the event of another global coronavirus pandemic.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

NTU in Singapore introduces Master of Science course in Chinese Medicine

From 2026, Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore will start offering a Master of Science in Chinese Medicine to develop highly skilled postgraduates with advanced expertise in both the theoretical foundations and practical applications of Chinese medicine.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

ProSpecBio launches Activin-A recombinant protein for brain injury research

Israel-based ProSpecBio, an evolving biotech company dedicated to providing highly purified proteins to the global research community, has announced the launch of its latest product: CHO cell-derived recombinant Activin-A, now available for immediate delivery worldwide.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

PAHO publishes guide for designing AI instructions in public health

The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has launched a new guide providing practical advice on how to create Artificial Intelligence (AI) prompts that generate reliable, relevant, and culturally appropriate content across diverse contexts.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Prerna launches India's first MicroRNA based blood test for breast cancer screening

Precision RNA Biotech (Prerna), a healthcare startup from Hyderabad, India has announced the launch of Cantel, India's first microRNA-based blood test for breast cancer screening.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Poly Medicure announces acquisition of Citieffe Group for Rs 324 Cr

India-based medtech firm Poly Medicure has announced signing of a definitive agreement to acquire 100 per cent stake in Medistream SA (Group) consisting of Citieffe SRL and its step-down subsidiaries in USA & Mexico, at an Enterprise Value of Rs 324 crore (EUR 31 million).

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Sumitomo, Novo Nordisk to co-promote obesity drug Wegovy in Japan

Sumitomo Pharma and Novo Nordisk Pharma have entered into a co-promotion agreement in Japan for Wegovy Subcutaneous Injection, a once-weekly subcutaneous injection formulation of GLP-1 receptor agonist indicated for the treatment of obesity disease.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Nov 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size