About Antimicrobial Resistance

Key points

  • Antimicrobial resistance (AR) happens when germs develop the ability to defeat the drugs designed to kill them.
  • AR has the potential to affect people at any stage of life, as well as the healthcare, veterinary and agriculture industries.
  • This makes it one of the world's most urgent public health problems.

More Information

Illustration of Shigella.

Overview

AR happens when germs like bacteria and fungi develop the ability to defeat the drugs designed to kill them. That means the germs are not killed and continue to grow. Resistant infections can be difficult, and sometimes impossible, to treat.

Urgent global threat‎

Antimicrobial resistance is an urgent global public health threat, killing at least 1.27 million people worldwide and associated with nearly 5 million deaths in 2019.

Did you know?‎

In the United States (U.S.), more than 2.8 million antimicrobial-resistant infections occur each year. More than 35,000 people die as a result, according to CDC's 2019 Antibiotic Resistance (AR) Threats Report.

When Clostridioides difficile—a germ (bacterium) that is not typically resistant to antibiotics but can cause deadly diarrhea and inflammation of the colon and is associated with antimicrobial use—is added to these, the U.S. toll of all the threats in the report exceeds 3 million infections and 48,000 deaths.

Bacteria and fungi do not have to be resistant to every antibiotic or antifungal to be dangerous. Resistance to even one antibiotic or antifungal drug can mean serious problems. For example:

  • Antimicrobial-resistant infections that require the use of second- and third-line treatments can harm patients by causing serious side effects, such as organ failure and prolong care and recovery, sometimes for months.
  • Many medical advances are dependent on the ability to fight infections using antibiotics, including joint replacements, organ transplants, cancer therapy and the treatment of chronic diseases like diabetes, asthma and rheumatoid arthritis.
  • In some cases, antimicrobial-resistant infections have no treatment options.

If antibiotics and antifungals lose their effectiveness, then we lose the ability to treat infections and control these public health threats.

Terms to know

  • Germs are microbes—very small living organisms including bacteria, fungi, parasites and viruses.
  • Pathogens are harmful germs that cause infections. Most germs are harmless and even helpful to people.
  • Bacteria cause infections such as strep throat, foodborne illnesses and other serious infections.
  • Fungi cause infections like athlete's foot, yeast infections, and other serious infections.
  • Antibiotics are medicines that fight infections caused by bacteria in humans and animals by either killing the bacteria or making it difficult for the bacteria to grow and multiply.
  • Antifungals are medicines that treat fungal infections by killing or stopping the growth of dangerous fungi in humans, animals or plants.
  • People sometimes use "antibiotic" and "antimicrobial" interchangeably.

How antimicrobial resistance happens

AR is a naturally occurring process. However, increases in antimicrobial resistance are driven by a combination of germs exposed to antibiotics and antifungals, and the spread of those germs and their resistance mechanisms.

How antibiotic and antifungal use affects antimicrobial resistance

Antibiotics and antifungals kill some germs that cause infections, but they also kill helpful germs that protect our body from infection. Antimicrobial resistance accelerates when antibiotics and antifungals pressure bacteria and fungi to adapt. The antimicrobial-resistant germs survive, multiply and spread to other germs. These surviving germs have resistance traits in their DNA that can spread to other germs.

Spread of germs and resistance mechanisms

To survive, germs can develop defense strategies against antibiotics and antifungals called resistance mechanisms. DNA tells the germ how to make specific proteins, which determine the germ's resistance mechanisms. Bacteria and fungi can carry genes for many types of resistance.

Alarmingly, antimicrobial-resistant germs can share their resistance mechanisms with other germs that have not been exposed to antibiotics or antifungals.

This table gives a few examples of defense strategies used to resist the effects of antibiotics or antifungals.

Spread of germs and resistance mechanisms
Resistance Mechanisms Description
Restrict access of the antibiotic Germs restrict access by changing the entryways or limiting the number of entryways.

Example: Gram-negative bacteria have an outer layer (membrane) that protects them from their environment. These bacteria can use this membrane to selectively keep antibiotic drugs from entering.

Get rid of the antibiotic or antifungal Germs get rid of antibiotics using pumps in their cell walls to remove antibiotic drugs that enter the cell.

Example: Some Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria can produce pumps to get rid of several different important antibiotic drugs, including fluoroquinolones, beta-lactams, chloramphenicol, and trimethoprim.

Example: Some Candida species produce pumps that get rid of azoles such as fluconazole.

Change or destroy the antibiotic Germs change or destroy the antibiotics with enzymes, proteins that break down the drug.

Example: Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria produce enzymes called carbapenemases, which break down carbapenem drugs and most other beta-lactam drugs.

Change the targets for the antibiotic or antifungal Many antibiotic drugs are designed to single out and destroy specific parts (or targets) of a bacterium. Germs change the antibiotic’s target so the drug can no longer fit and do its job.

Example: Escherichia coli bacteria with the mcr-1 gene can add a compound to the outside of the cell wall so that the drug colistin cannot latch onto it.

Example: Aspergillus fumigatus changes the cyp1A gene so that triazoles cannot bind to the protein.

Bypass the effects of the antibiotic Germs develop new cell processes that avoid using the antibiotic’s target. 

Example: Some Staphylococcus aureus bacteria can bypass the drug effects of trimethoprim.

5 things to know

  1. Antimicrobial resistance occurs when germs defeat the antibiotic or antifungal drugs designed to kill them. It does NOT mean your body is resistant to antibiotics or antifungals.
  2. Antimicrobial resistance can affect people at any stage of life. Infections caused by resistant germs are difficult—sometimes impossible—to treat. In many cases, these infections require extended hospital stays, additional follow-up doctor visits and treatments that may be costly and potentially toxic.
  3. Healthy habits can protect you from infections and help stop germs from spreading.
  4. Talk to your healthcare provider or veterinarian about whether antibiotics or antifungals are needed. Antibiotics and antifungals do not work on viruses, such as colds and the flu. These drugs save lives but can lead to side effects and antimicrobial resistance. If you have been taking these drugs, tell your doctor if you have three or more diarrhea episodes in 24 hours.
  5. Tell your healthcare provider if you recently traveled to or received care in another country. Antimicrobial resistance has been found in all regions of the world. Modern trade and travel mean it can move easily across borders and can spread in places like hospitals, farms, the community and the environment.

Impacts

Antimicrobial resistance is one of the world's most urgent public health problems because it:

  • Can affect people at any stage of life.
  • Affects healthcare, veterinary and agriculture industries.
  • Can make all antibiotics or antifungals ineffective, resulting in unstoppable infections.

Stopping the spread of antimicrobial resistance is crucial.

What can you do

We all have a role to play, from travelers, animal owners and care givers to patients and healthcare providers.

Resources