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National action plans for antimicrobial resistance and variations in surveillance data platforms

Authors :
Pallett, S
Charani, E
Hawkins, L
Mazzella, A
Anton-Vazquez, V
Banerjee, R
Evans, T
Patterson, B
Subbarao, S
Alqahtani, S
Basarab, M
Breathnach, A
Mughal, N
Moore, L
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
World Health Organization, 2023.

Abstract

Objective To assess how national antimicrobial susceptibility data used to inform national action plans vary across surveillance platforms. Methods We identified available open-access, supranational, interactive surveillance platforms and cross-checked their data in accordance with the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) Data Quality Assurance: module 1. We compared platform usability and completeness of time-matched data on the antimicrobial susceptibilities of four blood isolate species: Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae from WHO’s Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System, European Centre for Disease Control’s (ECDC’s) network and Pfizer’s Antimicrobial Testing Leadership and Surveillance database. Using Bland–Altman analysis, paired t-tests, and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, we assessed susceptibility data and number of isolate concordances between platforms. Findings Of 71 countries actively submitting data to WHO, 28 also submit to Pfizer’s database; 19 to ECDC; and 16 to all three platforms. Limits of agreement between WHO’s and Pfizer’s platforms for organism–country susceptibility data ranged from −26% to 35%. While mean susceptibilities of WHO’s and ECDC‘s platforms did not differ (bias: 0%, 95% confidence interval: −2 to 2), concordance between organism–country susceptibility was low (limits of agreement −18 to 18%). Significant differences exist in isolate numbers reported between WHO–Pfizer (mean of difference: 674, P-value

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1032..1e9896a5f94220e6bc9d3d6cab8cb5db