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From resistance to resilience: what could the future antibiotic pipeline look like? | IFPMA

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The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified antimicrobial resistance (AMR) as one of the biggest global health threats facing humanity. As bacteria evolve and become resistant to existing antibiotics, the challenge is growing. Some estimates suggest that without reversing this trend, AMR could lead to 10 million deaths a year by 2050. To avoid this, we need to ensure that we have a continuous pipeline that delivers new, innovative antibiotics to treat patients with infections that have become resistant to existing antibiotics.

In a new report, we review the antibiotic pipeline data against bacterial pathogens identified by the WHO and other public health agencies as of the greatest concern, and present modelling data on the future of the pipeline.

The current antibiotic pipeline is not sufficient to

protect against increasing resistance

We find that:

Modelling the future antibiotic pipeline

We worked with predictive health intelligence and data analytics experts from Airfinity on new modelling that helps to build an understanding of how this pipeline might evolve over the next 10 years. Based on a number of key assumptions, two scenarios were developed:

We find that:

Discussion

Our modelling reinforces the economic and health imperative to act boldly. Maintaining the current unsustainable economics of antibiotic R&D will lead to a continued decline in the pipeline. However, with the right incentives in place, we can expect to see the pipeline strengthened - not just in terms of approved products and better access and availability supported by a sustainable market, but also in terms of number of candidates in clinical research.

"This analysis demonstrates why urgent action is needed if we are going to reinforce our pipeline of antibiotics and protect the world from rising drug resistance. Robust pull incentives are crucial in encouraging the research and development investment needed, and by demonstrating the impact that these can have, this report underscores the economic and health imperative for governments to act boldly in a year when the UN is focused on combatting AMR." - James Anderson, Executive Director, Global Health, IFPMA 

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Airfinity, Background slides pdf | 654KB

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