Back to Search Start Over

Effective antibacterials: at what cost? The economics of antibacterial resistance and its control

Authors :
Laura J. V. Piddock
Richard Wise
Martin J. Blaser
David M. Livermore
Gail H. Cassell
Steven J. Projan
David Findlay
Kieran Hand
Frances Burke
Neil O. Fishman
Ragnar Norrby
Richard Bax
Stuart B. Levy
Roger Finch
Tony White
Chantal M. Morel
Otto Carrs
Robert Guidos
Michael J. Dawson
Marcus Keogh-Brown
Anthony R. White
Rick Davies
Ian Chopra
Glenn S. Tillotson
John H. Powers
Sarah Garner
Dominique L Monnet
Lloyd George Czaplewski
Source :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. 66:1948-1953
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2011.

Abstract

The original and successful business model of return on investment being sufficiently attractive to the pharmaceutical industry to encourage development of new antibacterial molecules and related diagnostics has been compromised by increasing development costs and regulatory hurdles, resulting in a decreasing chance of success and financial return. The supply of new effective agents is diminishing along with the number of companies engaged in antibacterial research and development. The BSAC Working Party on The Urgent Need:Regenerating Antibacterial Drug Discovery and Development identified the need to establish, communicate and apply the true health and economic value of antibacterials, along with the adoption of meaningful incentives, as part of the future model for antibacterial development. Robust data are needed on the cost of resistance and ineffective treatment of bacterial infection, along with national and local holistic analyses of the cost-benefit of antibacterials. An understanding of the true health and economic value of antibacterials and the cost of resistance across healthcare systems needs to be generated, communicated and used in order to set a pricing and reimbursement structure that is commensurate with value. The development and economic model of antibacterial use needs to be rebuilt based on this value through dialogue with the various stakeholders, including the pharmaceutical industry, and alternative incentives from 'push' to 'pull' and funding models, such as public/private partnerships, agreed. A research and development model that succeeds in developing and delivering new antibacterial agents that address the health needs of society from start to finish, 'from cradle to grave', must be established.

Details

ISSN :
14602091 and 03057453
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d310dcbb5d76143cb6660bf6df04b695
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkr260