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April 3, 2025

Antibiotic resistance among key bacterial species plateaus over time, study shows

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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Antibiotic resistance tends to stabilize over time, according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS Pathogens by Sonja Lehtinen from the University of Lausanne, Switzerland, and colleagues.

Antibiotic resistance is a major public health concern, contributing to an estimated 5 million deaths per year. Understanding long-term resistance patterns could help public health researchers to monitor and characterize drug resistance as well as inform the impact of interventions on resistance.

In this study, researchers analyzed drug resistance in more than 3 million bacterial samples collected across 30 countries in Europe from 1998 to 2019. Samples encompassed eight bacteria species important to public health, including Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, and Klebsiella pneumoniae.

They found that while antibiotic resistance initially rises in response to , it does not rise indefinitely. Instead, resistance rates reached an equilibrium over the 20-year period in most species.

Antibiotic use contributed to how quickly resistance levels stabilized as well as variability in resistance rates across different countries. But the association between changes in drug resistance and antibiotic use was weak, suggesting that additional, yet unknown, factors are at play.

The study highlights that a continued increase in antibiotic resistance is not inevitable and provides new insights to help researchers monitor drug resistance.

Senior author Francois Blanquart notes, "When we looked into the dynamics of antibiotic resistance in many important bacterial pathogens all over Europe and in the last few decades, we often found that resistance frequency initially increases and then stabilizes to an intermediate level. The consumption of the antibiotic in the country explained both the speed of initial increase and the level of stabilization."

Senior author Sonja Lehtinen summarizes, "In this study, we were interested in whether frequencies in Europe were systematically increasing over the long-term. Instead, we find a pattern where, after an initial increase, resistance frequencies tend to reach a stable plateau."

More information: PLOS Pathogens (2025).

Journal information: PLoS Pathogens

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Antibiotic resistance among key bacterial species tends to stabilize over time rather than increase indefinitely. Analysis of over 3 million samples from 30 European countries between 1998 and 2019 showed that resistance rates reached equilibrium in most species. While antibiotic use influenced the speed of resistance stabilization, the weak association with resistance changes suggests other factors are involved. This finding aids in understanding and monitoring drug resistance.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.