Unregulated
antibiotic sales may increase risk of "superbugs": UK
review
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[November 20, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Global growth of
unregulated over-the-counter and Internet sales of precious antibiotic
medicines is further fuelling the rise of deadly, drug-resistant "superbug"
bacteria, according to a UK government-commissioned review.
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In recent decades, bacteria resistant to multiple drugs have evolved
at the same time as drugmakers have cut back investment in finding
new ways to fight them, creating a global health threat as superbug
strains of infections like tuberculosis and gonorrhea have become
untreatable.
In a report published on Friday amid international alarm about the
discovery in China of a gene that makes bacteria resistant to all
known antibiotics, former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O'Neill
said the threat is exacerbated by patients self-medicating with
drugs from online pharmacies.
He called on governments, regulators and Internet companies
worldwide to clamp down on unlicensed Internet sales of antibiotics
and to improve monitoring of drug quality.
"Even in those countries where it's next to impossible to buy
antibiotics over-the-counter in a shop, it's still often the case
that an unscrupulous online pharmacy is just a few clicks away,"
O'Neill said in a statement with his report.
Chinese and British scientists said on Thursday they had found new
gene in samples from people and animals that makes bacteria highly
resistant to a last-resort class of antibiotics known as
polyamine's. [ID:nL8N13D343]
He said it was "frankly alarming" that even antibiotics as powerful
and important as colitis, one of the polyamine class, can be bought
online without any need of a prescription.
"These internet drug stores could be based anywhere in the world, so
it's vital that regulators – along with the industry, customs
organizations and internet companies – work together to crack down,"
he said.
Over-the-counter sales of antibiotics are illegal in most countries,
and in some parts of the world these laws are well enforced, O'Neill
said.
But the use of antibiotics without a prescription, usually bought
over the counter, "remains relatively commonplace in Southern and
Eastern Europe and many low- and middle-income countries", he
warned.
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The problem of infectious bugs becoming drug-resistant has been a
feature of medicine since the discovery of the first antibiotic,
penicillin, in 1928. But it has grown in recent years with
widespread overuse and misuse of many antibiotics.
The World Health Organization has warned that unless something
drastic is done, many of these medicines could become completely
ineffective by the end of this century, leaving patients vulnerable
to deadly infections.
O'Neill was asked last year by Britain's prime minister to conduct a
full review of the problem and suggest ways to combat it. In his
initial report, he estimated antibiotic and microbial resistance
could kill an extra 10 million people a year and cost up to $100
trillion by 2050 if it is not brought under control.
He has also proposed that a $2 billion innovation fund financed by
drug companies should be created to invest in early-stage research
and speed up development of new medicines to fight drug-resistant
superbugs.
(Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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