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The Burden of Bacterial Antimicrobial Resistance in the Who Eastern Mediterranean Region 1990–2021: A Cross-Country Systematic Analysis With Forecasts to 2050 Publisher Pubmed



Mestrovic T ; Naghavi M ; Robles Aguilar G ; Davis Weaver N ; Swetschinski LR ; Wool EE ; Araki DT ; Gershberg Hayoon A ; Gray B A ; Han C ; Ikuta KS ; Rosenblad E ; Aalruz H ; Abdelsalam S Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Mestrovic T
  2. Naghavi M
  3. Robles Aguilar G
  4. Davis Weaver N
  5. Swetschinski LR
  6. Wool EE
  7. Araki DT
  8. Gershberg Hayoon A
  9. Gray B A
  10. Han C
  11. Ikuta KS
  12. Rosenblad E
  13. Aalruz H
  14. Abdelsalam S
  15. Abedi A
  16. Abolhassani H
  17. Aburuz S
  18. Afzal S
  19. Ahmad A
  20. Ahmadzade AM
  21. Ahmed A
  22. Ahmed H
  23. Ali A
  24. Ali Z
  25. Ali L
  26. Ali SS
  27. Almarwani S
  28. Almidani O
  29. Alrifai RH
  30. Altawfiq JA
  31. Alzoubi KH
  32. Andretta Mendes J
  33. Andrews JR
  34. Arabloo J
  35. Arafat M
  36. Athari SS
  37. Atout MMW
  38. Azadnajafabad S
  39. Aziz S
  40. Azizian K
  41. Barqawi HJ
  42. Basharat Z
  43. Bedi N
  44. Berkley JA
  45. Bhattacharjee NV
  46. Brown CS
  47. Bustanji Y
  48. Cooper BS
  49. Dash NR
  50. Dolecek C
  51. Eckmanns T
  52. Eddra A
  53. El Sayed I
  54. Elhadi M
  55. Elhuneidi W
  56. Elias C
  57. Ellis S
  58. Elsohaby I
  59. Eshrati B
  60. Fahim A
  61. Fatehizadeh A
  62. Koya MSF
  63. Feizkhah A
  64. Garrett DO
  65. Ghazy RM
  66. Ghoba S
  67. Giannakis K
  68. Haddadi R
  69. Hadei M
  70. Halim SA
  71. Hamidi S
  72. Hasaballah AI
  73. Hasan RS
  74. Hasani H
  75. Haselbeck AH
  76. Hay B C S
  77. Hezam K
  78. Hosseinzadeh M
  79. Hsu RL
  80. Hussein NR
  81. Imam MT
  82. Iregbu KC
  83. Ismail F
  84. Jafarzadeh A
  85. Jalili M
  86. Jalilzadeh Yengejeh R
  87. Jamshidi E
  88. Jomehzadeh N
  89. Kamal Z
  90. Kasraei H
  91. Khamesipour F
  92. Khidri FF
  93. Khusuwan S
  94. Kuddus M
  95. Kyu HH
  96. Mahmoud MA
  97. Makram De Df O
  98. Malakan Rad E
  99. Marks F
  100. Mcmanigal B
  101. Memish ZA
  102. Merza MA
  103. Mohamed NS
  104. Mokdad AH
  105. Moodi Ghalibaf A
  106. Moore CE
  107. Moradi Y
  108. Mousavi P
  109. Mturi FN
  110. Muzaffar M
  111. Naghavi P
  112. Najmuldeen HHR
  113. Nargus S
  114. Natto Ea Eb Z
  115. Nauman J
  116. Naveed M
  117. Niazi RK
  118. Olwoch P
  119. Pathan AR
  120. Perna S
  121. Pollard AJ
  122. Qasim NH
  123. Rahim F
  124. Rahimimovaghar V
  125. Ramadan H
  126. Redwan E
  127. Rehman IU
  128. Reyes LF
  129. Rosenthal VD
  130. Runghien T
  131. Saddik BA
  132. Saeed U
  133. Saheb Sharifaskari N
  134. Sahebkar A
  135. Saki M
  136. Saleem Z
  137. Saleh MA
  138. Samy AM
  139. Sartorius B
  140. Shafie M
  141. Shah H
  142. Shahid S
  143. Shahwan MJ
  144. Shakoor S
  145. Shamshirgaran MA
  146. Sharifan A
  147. Siddig EE
  148. Simoes EAF
  149. Smith G
  150. Soliman SSM
  151. Stergachis A
  152. Tabatabai S
  153. Tavakoli Oliaee R
  154. Temsah R
  155. Tharwat S
  156. Tigoi C
  157. Ullah I
  158. Ullah S
  159. Vaithinathan AG
  160. Vollset SE
  161. Waheed Y
  162. Walson Gi J
  163. Waqas M
  164. Williams PCM
  165. Yaghoubi S
  166. Yuan CW
  167. Zakham F
  168. Zare I
  169. Zeariya MGM
  170. Murray CJL

Source: The Lancet Public Health Published:2025


Abstract

Background Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an urgent global crisis and one of the world's most complex challenges. Although there is increasing evidence of its impact on human mortality and morbidity, precise burden estimation has many challenges, and thus far has been elusive for the Eastern Mediterranean Region. Here, we present a comprehensive time-trend analysis of regional and country-level AMR burden estimates in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR), between 1990 and 2021, with forecasts up to 2050. Methods We estimated deaths and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) attributable to and associated with AMR for 11 infectious syndromes, 22 bacterial pathogens, and 84 pathogen–drug combinations for the WHO EMR and each of its countries from 1990 to 2021. Data were obtained from mortality registries, surveillance systems, hospital records, systematic literature reviews, and other sources. We based our modelling approach on five broad components: the number of deaths in which infection had a role, the proportion of infectious deaths attributable to a given infectious syndrome, the proportion of infectious syndrome deaths attributable to a given pathogen, the percentage of a given pathogen resistant to an antimicrobial drug of interest, and the excess risk of mortality (or duration of an infection) associated with this resistance. These components were then used to estimate the disease burden by using two counterfactual scenarios: deaths and DALYs attributable to AMR (considering an alternative scenario where drug-resistant infections are replaced with susceptible infections), and deaths and DALYs associated with AMR (considering an alternative scenario where infections would not occur at all). Predictive statistical modelling was applied to generate estimates of AMR burden for each country. We also generated AMR burden forecasts up to 2050. We generated 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) for the final estimates by taking the 2·5th and 97·5th percentiles across 500 draws through the multistage computational pipeline, and models were cross-validated for out-of-sample predictive validity. Findings We estimated 380 000 deaths (95% UI 332 000–426 000) associated with bacterial AMR and 92 800 deaths (78 300–111 000) attributable to bacterial AMR in the EMR in 2021. In the past 31 years, there was considerable variation in AMR mortality trends across countries of the region and different age groups. Between 1990 and 2021, associated deaths among children younger than 5 years decreased by 50·0% (38·2–62·0), while those among adults aged 70 and older rose by over 85·7% (95% UI 57·0–115·7). Six pathogens were identified as the primary generators of burden: Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Acinetobacter baumannii , and Pseudomonas aeruginosa . A substantial increase in the AMR burden due to S aureus was observed between 1990 (28 200 deaths [21 600–34 000]) and 2021 (49 500 deaths [43 100–56 200]); consequently, in 2021, methicillin-resistant S aureus was a leading pathogen–drug combination for most countries in the region for deaths and DALYs attributable to, and associated with AMR. Somalia had the highest age-standardised mortality rates in the region: for deaths attributable to and associated with AMR per 100 000 population in both 1990 and 2021; conversely, the country with the lowest burden in the EMR was Qatar. By 2050, the number of deaths attributable to AMR in region is forecasted to reach 187 000 (157 000–223 000) and deaths associated with AMR were projected to reach 752 000 (629 000–879 000). Interpretation Our study shows that bacterial AMR has been a serious public health threat in the EMR for more than 30 years, with a substantial fatal and non-fatal burden for priority bacterial pathogens and pathogen–drug combinations. The magnitude of this issue, future projects, and the inadequate response capacity in many countries underscore the need for more stringent regional leadership in this field. The insights gained from this study can direct targeted mitigation strategies for individual countries within the region, aiding in resource allocation and funding decisions, and emphasising the need for collaborative multisectoral endeavours among nations to address this issue. Funding Wellcome Trust, and the UK Department of Health and Social Care using aid funding managed by the Fleming Fund. © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.
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