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To Push or To Pull? In a Post-COVID World, Supporting and Incentivizing Antimicrobial Drug Development Must Become a Governmental Priority

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posted on 2025-08-01, 11:38 authored by J Cama, R Leszczynski, PK Tang, A Khalid, V Lok, CG Dowson, A Ebata
The COVID-19 pandemic has refocused attention worldwide on the dangers of infectious diseases, in terms of both global health and the effects on the world economy. Even in high income countries, health systems have been found wanting in dealing with the new infectious agent. However, the even greater long-term danger of antimicrobial resistance in pathogenic bacteria and fungi is still under-appreciated, especially among the general public. Although antimicrobial drug development faces significant scientific challenges, the gravest challenge at the moment appears to be economic, where the lack of a viable market has led to a collapse in drug development pipelines. There is therefore a critical need for governments across the world to further incentivize the development of antimicrobials. Most incentive strategies over the past decade have focused on so-called “push” incentives that bridge the costs of antimicrobial research and development, but these have been insufficient for reviving the pipeline. In this Perspective, we analyze the current incentive strategies in place for antimicrobial drug development, and focus on “pull” incentives, which instead aim to improve revenue generation and thereby resolve the antimicrobial market failure challenge. We further analyze these incentives in a broader “One Health” context and stress the importance of developing and enforcing strict protocols to ensure appropriate manufacturing practices and responsible use. Our analysis reiterates the importance of international cooperation, coordination across antimicrobial research, and sustained funding in tackling this significant global challenge. A failure to invest wisely and continuously to incentivize antimicrobial pipelines will have catastrophic consequences for global health and wellbeing in the years to come.

Funding

204909/Z/16/Z

BB/S011269/1

GCRF One Health Poultry Hub

MR/S013598/1

Medical Research Council (MRC)

Wellcome Trust

History

Rights

© 2021 American Chemical Society. open access under a a Creative Commons CC-BY License

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from the American Chemical Society via the DOI in this record data availability: This study did not generate any new data. The data on COVID-19 deaths used in the publication are publicly available at https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/ (access date 15th December 2020).

Journal

ACS Infectious Diseases

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2021-02-19T21:06:02Z

FOA date

2021-02-22T10:24:48Z

Citation

Published online 19 February 2021

Department

  • Mathematics and Statistics

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