5 июня, 2024

Study Global Burden of Disease: a germ, but more than 1 million deaths

Erkenntnis

  • 5 bacterial pathogens – Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa – were collectively responsible for over 50 % of global bacterial deaths in 2019.

Why this matters

  • Prevention measures and, especially in very young patients, visits to the doctor should be called upon if infections are suspected.

Key results

  • 33 investigated bacterial pathogens were in the year 2019 for 56.2 % (7,7  million) of the estimated 13.7  millions of infection-related global deaths.
  • 5  Pathogens – S. aureus, E. coli, S. pneumoniae, K. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa – caused 54.9 % of all deaths among the bacterial pathogens studied.
  • Alone S. aureus was marked with> 1  million deaths linked and in 135  countries are the leading cause of bacterial deaths (especially among people aged> 15  years) followed by E. coli (leading cause in 37  countries), S. pneumoniae (24  countries) as well as K. pneumoniae and Acinetobacter baumannii (each 4  countries).
  • Lower respiratory tract and bloodstream infections were for 4.00 and 2.91  million deaths, and peritoneal and intra-abdominal infections were responsible for 1.28  millions of deaths.

Study design

  • Systematic modelling study to estimate the number of global deaths associated with 33 clinically significant, antibiotic-sensitive and antibiotic-resistant bacterial pathogens across 11 major infectious syndromes in 2019.
  • Funding: Bill &— Melinda Gates Foundation, other sponsors

Restrictions

  • Sparse and incomplete data for many low/middle-income countries
  • Misclassified deaths

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