Original from: Cepheid
Cepheid announced today an important partnership with the Fleming Initiative, a global collaboration established by Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London to combat antimicrobial resistance.
The Fleming Initiative and Cepheid will introduce the partnership at an event in New York aligned with the United Nations General Assembly High Level Meeting about AMR1.
The Fleming Initiative brings together research scientists, policymakers, clinicians, behavioral experts, public and commercial partners to provide the networks, expertise and skills to provide equitable solutions to AMR at the global scale.
"Almost everyone who has visited a healthcare provider for an undiagnosed infection has taken antibiotics as a preventative measure at one time in our lives. Too often, we are given broad spectrum antibiotics for viral infections or allergic reactions instead of as a treatment for a bacterial infection. That's how antimicrobial resistance develops," said Vitor Rocha, President of Cepheid. "Accurate diagnostics are at the frontline of the battle to eliminate preventative antibiotic use. Every one of us can help reduce unnecessary antibiotic use by requesting an accurate diagnostic test to identify the source of an infection before we begin a course of antibiotics."
The Initiative will draw on diverse expertise and public involvement to tackle antimicrobial resistance from all angles. The partners will work together to catalyze worldwide action in the fight against AMR where poverty, climate change, and health inequality exacerbate the issues caused by drug-resistant infections.
"At the Fleming Initiative we aim to unlock powerful new ideas to drive significant change in the fight against AMR. This requires collective innovation across industries, from practitioners to policy-makers and the public," said Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham, Executive Chair of the Fleming Initiative. "I am delighted to welcome Cepheid as our first diagnostics partner. Currently 20% of antibiotic prescriptions given in primary care lack an appropriate diagnosis. We have to do better. Cepheid's expertise will be essential to our efforts to ensure antibiotics work for generations to come."
AMR is widely recognized by the World Health Organization as one of the top ten public health threats in the world. A study published this month in the Lancet2 found that resistance to antibiotics has led to over one million deaths each year since 1990. The study predicts increasing rates of drug-resistant infections will cause annual deaths to rise from 1.14 million in 2021 to 1.91 million in 2050 and forecasts that without further policy interventions, global deaths will reach 39 million between 2025 and 2050—the equivalent of three deaths per minute.
Cepheid's significant pledge to the Fleming Initiative will be used for collaborative scientific and clinical research, with a focus on strengthening and expanding the use of in vitro diagnostics to support antimicrobial stewardship programs to enable responsible antibiotic use and control the rise of resistant infections. The collaboration will focus initially on the most critical areas of AMR:
Encourage active screening for carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) for earlier detection of critical infections and colonization
Implementation of community-based acute respiratory infection (ARI) testing and care pathways to provide decentralized diagnostic and treatment pathways
Accelerate a precision medicine approach for sepsis to identify and treat patients with a particular sepsis response state
Source: Cepheid Partners with Fleming Initiative to Fight Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)
Copyright © 2024 GL events Ruihe (Shanghai) Exhibition Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. ( 沪ICP备12004745号-1 )
We deliver the latest IVD news straight to your inbox. Stay in touch with CACLP News.
sign-up for our newsletter today.
To ensure our newsletter hit your inbox, make sure to add @caclp.com to your safe senders list. And, as always, feel free to contact
us with any questions and thanks again for subscribing.