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The German AMR Strategy, One Health - Global Health Lothar H. Wieler Robert Koch Institute PAC 11 Side-Event From strategies to action – Adressing the challenges of AMR in the Northern Dimension Area Berlin, Germany 19 November 2015 DART (2008 – 2014) German strategy against antibiotic resistance Strategy of • the Federal Ministry of Health • the Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture • the Federal Ministry of Education and Research DART (2008 – 2014) 10 national aims in 4 components: • Surveillance-systems for antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial use • Prevention and control measurements to reduce antimicrobial resistance • Cooperation and coordination • Research and evaluation Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (ARS) Strengthening the surveillance system • Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (ARS) is a laboratory-based sentinel surveillance system with continuous collection of data on antimicrobial resistance for the entire spectrum of clinically relevant bacterial pathogens for both inpatient and outpatient care at national level. • The major objective is to provide reference data for public use and specific feedback for participating laboratories. The organisation involved in the project: Robert Koch Institute https://ars.rki.de/ Timescale: ongoing Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (ARS) Strengthening the surveillance system ? Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (ARS) Strengthening the surveillance system Surveillance of antibiotic consumption (AVD) Strengthening the surveillance system The objectives of the project are: • to provide an electronic automated system for the collection, analysis and reporting of antibiotic consumption data in the hospital sector. • to support the hospitals in the conduct of antibiotic • consumption surveillance and local antibiotic stewardship efforts • to build up a national database as a basis for the provision of reference data. • 120 hospitals registered, 45 reported data Timescale: Start of the project: 2013. Pilotphase: 08—12, 2014. Routine phase: since 2015 The organisation involved in the project: Robert Koch Institute, Dep. 3, FG37 www.rki.de Webside project: https://avs.rki.de NEO-KISS Strengthening the surveillance system • NEO-KISS (nosocomial infection surveillance system for preterm infants on neonatology departments and ICUs) is a mandatory national surveillance system for nosocomial infections in very low birth weight infants in Germany. All children with a birthweight of less than 1500 g are included until their hospital discharge, death or weight of over 1800 g. Specially developed definitions are used for the diagnosis of the three kinds of infections: pneumonia, primary bloodstream infections, and necrotizing enterocolitis. Timescale: Start: 2006, ongoing The organisation involved in the project: National Reference Center for Nosocomial Infection Surveillance http://www.nrz-hygiene.de/surveillance/kiss/neo-kiss/ NEO-KISS Strengthening the surveillance system Hospital antibiotic stewardship (ABS) expert training and network initiative Promote the responsible use of antibiotics • • To increase the number of physicians and pharmacists with knowledge and skills in rational prescribing and strategic antibiotic stewardship activities in acute care hospitals. To establish a stewardship expert network for exchange of experience, for continuous education, and as forum for cooperative quality improvement projects Timescale: 2010—2013 and 2014—2017 Photo: picture-alliance/dpa/Bernd Wüstneck The organisations involved in the project: Abteilung Infektiologie, Universitätsklinikum Freiburg, Abteilung Infektiologie, Universitätsklinikum Dresden DGI www.dgi-net.de ABS-Expertennetzwerk www.antibiotic-stewardship.de Aktion “Saubere Hände” (Clean Hands) Combating and preventing infections • “Aktion Saubere Hände” (Clean Hands) is a national campaign for improvement of compliance to hand disinfection in German healthcare facilities • Based on the WHO campaign “Clean Care is Safer Care” that started in 2005. • It supports implementation of multimodal infection control interventions. The organisation involved in the project: German National Reference Center for Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections Coalition for Patient Safety Timescale: 2008—ongoing MRSA-Net and Regional MRSA/MDR Networks Promote the responsible use of antibiotics • Reduction of MRS (MDR) load in the ambulatory, hospital and nursing home setting by increasing the implementation of guidelines and communication in stakeholder networks. The organisation involved in the project: regional and local health offices MRSA-Net http://www.mrsa-net.nl/de/ Regional MRSA/ MDR Networks (Germany) http://www.rki.de/DE/Content/Infekt/ Krankenhaushygiene/Netzwerke/Netzwerke_node.htm Timescale: since 2005 GERMAP Strengthening the One Health approach • Provides a summary of data on the consumption of antimicrobials and the extent of resistances against antimicrobials in human and veterinary medicine. It is compiled by an expert group from human and veterinary medicine and is updated every second year. It is a basis for risk assessment and supports the development of treatment-guidelines for both humans and animals. Timescale: 2008, ongoing The organisations involved in the project: - Bundesamt für Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit Dienstsitz Berlin - Paul-Ehrlich-Gesellschaft für Chemotherapie - Infektiologie Freiburg, Medizinische Universitätsklinik Zentrum Infektiologie und Reisemedizin Research Area “Antimicrobial Resistance and Nosocomial Infections” Support of research and development • Supporting research and development is one goal of the German Antimicrobial Resistance Strategy “DART 2020”. • The research area “Antimicrobial Resistance, Hygiene and Nosocomial Infections” supports its implementation. Within this activity 11 projects out of four thematic areas were funded over a period of three years. The projects include results-based intervention studies, the training of specialist staff, model projects for inter-sectoral health care, and the further development of quality assurance. Timescale: 2012—2015 The organisation involved in the project: German Federal Ministry of Health http://www.bmg.bund.de/themen/ praevention/krankenhausinfektionen/ antibiotika-resistenzstrategie.html Research projects: RESET - Strengthening the One Health approach • Collaborative project on ESBL- and (fluoro-)quinolone resistance in enterobactericeae (RESET) • To determine the prevalence of ESBL-producing bacteria in humans, animals, animal food and the environment. • To identify the respective resistance genes and analyse their transferability between Enterobacteriaceae. • To compare genetic relationship of bacterial isolates and resistance gene carrying plasmids in different settings, to evaluate the transmission pathways of ESBL-resistance. Timescale: 2011—2016 The organisation involved in the project: Institut für Biometrie, Epidemiologie und Informationsverarbeitung, Hannover Research projects: MedVetStaph - Strengthening the One Health approach Goals: 1. To identify the risk MRSA which emerged in livestock and companion animals pose to humans. 2. To identify the contribution of clinically relevant antibiotic resistance genes contained by staphylococci from animals to antibiotic resistance development in staphylococci of human. 3. To further develop targeted antibiotic resistance surveillance as well as strategies for diagnostics, intervention, and therapy as one health approach. Timescale: 2011—2016 The organisation involved in the project: Institut für Hygiene, Dr. Robin Köck Universitätsklinikum Münster DART — veterinary issues combating and preventing infections promote the responsible use of antibiotics • Reducing the number of antibiotic treatments of fattening animals to the inevitable minimum by improving animal health and strengthening prudent use through legal requirements. The organisation involved in the project: Legislator Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture Timescale: Came into force April 1, 2014 QS Quality scheme for food: The food industry’s own antibiotics monitoring Strengthening the surveillance system • Reducing the number of antibiotic treatments in livestock to the inevitable minimum. • Strengthening prudent use. • In the QS system, veterinarians have to enter all relevant data for each single antibiotic treatment of livestock into the QS database. • All details on this are described in specific guidelines. • The analysis of this data by QS enables veterinarians and livestock keepers to compare the antibiotic treatments with the average of all farms in the QS system. Timescale: continuing since 2013 The organisation involved in the project: QS GmbH https://www.q-s.de/veterinarians/antibioticsmonitoringveterinarians.html Prescription only for antibiotics in veterinary medicine Promote the responsible use of antibiotics • In Germany, all antimicrobial veterinary medicinal products are available only on prescription by a veterinary surgeon who in turn is only permitted to hand out prescriptions to owners of animals under his or her care. • Over-the-counter sale is prohibited. The organisation involved in the project: Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture Timescale: ongoing since many years AMR and animal health related research Support of research and development • There are two major approaches for agricultural livestock farming to reduce the exposure of consumers to resistant bacteria and their resistance characteristics from livestock farming: 1. Reducing the occurrence of resistant bacteria in livestock farming through preventive measures to maintain the health of animal stocks without antibiotics 2. Preventing the transmission of resistant bacteria along the food chain. The organisation involved in the project: Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture and stakeholders Timescale: next 5 years EARS-Net Report 2014: results (overview) EARS-Net Report 2014: results (overview) EARS-Net Report 2014: results (overview) MRSA trend in Germany (mandatory reporting data) Incidence of notified episodes of invasive methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus infections per 100,000 persons stratified by age, sex and year of notification in Germany, 2010–2014 (n=20,679) Incidence of invasive Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections in Germany, 2010 to 2014 Jan Walter, Sebastian Haller, Hans-Peter Blank, Tim Eckmanns, Muna Abu Sin, Julia Hermes (accepted Eurosurveillance) Notified MRSA Infections (blood or CSF) per 100.000 persons by Federal State, Germany 2010 to 2014 Livestock-associated MRSA (ST398) in Veterinarians odds ratio for LA MRSA colonization (bars mark the 95% confidence intervals) Visits to swine farms and nasal colonization with livestock-associated (LA) MRSA (clonal complex 398) among 695 veterinarians in Germany, 2008/2009 20 15 10 5 0 1 2 3-9 Number of visits to swine farms per week Walter, Espelage, Cuny, Jansen, Witte, Eckmanns, Hermes. Clin Infect Dis Sep. 3 10+ Molecular surveillance (Whole Genome Sequencing) Healthcare-associated outbreak - MSSA • Berlin 2010 • Neonatal Intensive Care Unit • HCW A did not constantly transmit the MRSA to the patients U Nübel, M Nachtnebel, G Falkenhorst, J Benzler, J Hecht, M Kube, F Bröcker, K Moelling, C Bührer, P Gastmeier, B Piening, M Behnke, M Dehnert, F Layer, W Witte, T Eckmanns, PLoS One, 2013 Molecular surveillance (Whole Genome Sequencing) Healthcare-associated outbreak Klebsiella pneumonia (ESBL) • Berlin current outbreak • Acute rehabilitation clinic with 26 intubated patients • In time NGS analysis, 2 independent clusters Pandemic ESBL- (CTX-M) producing E. coli ST131: A One Health-Issue Clinical impact: Urinary tract infections (UTI) Bloodstream infections (BSI) Riley (CMI 2014); Nicolas-Chanoine (CMR 2014) Bacterial Genomes are highly diverse: The Maximum Common Genome (MCG) of ST131 Genome 1 • The MCG is defined as the set of conserved genes occurring in every of the considered genomes • The size of the MCG changes depending on the group looked at: MCG The more related the genomes are the bigger will be the MCG • Genes in the MCG don't need to be essential. Essential genes don't need to be in the MCG, but usually the overlap is quite big Genome 2 Genome 3 von Mentzer et al. (Nature Genetics 2014) Phylogeny of ST131 (n=228) from various sources (Whole genome, Maximum likelihood, 9 non-ST131 outliers isolates to root phylogeny) (H30Rx, Clade C) Alan McNally et al. (submitted) Phylogeny of ST131 (n=228) from various sources (Maximum likelihood, core genome vs. accessory genome) - multiple circulating clones of E. coli ST131 - each contains a fixed plasmid repertoire - each has undergone clonal expansion and global dissemination The core genome alignment (BAPS clusters, BratNextGen analysis), CTX-M gene type, accessory gene profile cluster (KPax2). (The accessory gene profile phylogeny is colour coded by overlaying the accessory genome profile) Alan McNally et al. (submitted) DART 2020 Fighting antibiotic resistance for the good of both humans and animals – and the environment Strategy of • the Federal Ministry of Health • the Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture • the Federal Ministry of Education and Research DART 2020 • GOAL 1: Strengthening the One Health approach nationally and internationally • GOAL 2: Recognizing changes in resistance at an early stage • GOAL 3: Retaining and improving therapy options • GOAL 4: Breaking chains of infection early and avoiding infections • GOAL 5: Raising awareness and strengthening skills • GOAL 6: Supporting research and development Global Health: Ebola and Antimicrobial Resistance in the G7 context • • • • The experienced Ebola crisis and the existing AMR crisis show clearly the need for a new engagement in Global Health G7 offered to assist at least 60 countries to implement the International Health Regulation This is an excellent chance to strengthen the health systems and to support these countries in the development of national AMR action plans and the implementation of the Global Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System (GLASS) African Network for improved Diagnostics, Epidemiology and Management of Common Infectious Agents (ANDEMIA) • German Federal Ministry of Education and Research financed African Networks; 80% of the money (9.3 Mill €) for the African partners; coordinated by an African partner • Antimicrobial Resistance, One Health, support of Surveillance Systems Côte d’Ivoire Burkina Faso Democratic Republic of Congo South Africa The organisation involved in the project: Robert Koch Institute Charité University Hospital Berlin Timescale: start 2016 to 2021 Thank you Unit 11 Unit 13 Unit 14 Unit 16 Unit 31 Unit 32 Unit 33 Unit 35 Unit 37 ZBS 1 JRG 1 JRG 4 P 2: Enteropathogenic Bacteria and Legionella Nosocomial Pathogens and Antibiotic Resistances Hospital Hygiene, Infection Prevention and Control Mycotic and Parasitic Agents and Mycobacteria Data Management Surveillance Immunization Gastrointestinal Infections, Zoonoses and Tropical Infections Healthcare-associated Infections, Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance and Consumption Highly Pathogenic Viruses Microbial Genomics Bioinformatics Acinetobacter baumannii – Biology of a Nosocomial Pathogen