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Antibiotic research and development: business as usual?
Author(s) -
Stephan Harbarth,
Ursula Theuretzbacher,
Judith Hackett,
Niels Adriaenssens,
James L. Anderson,
Ad Antonisse,
Christine Årdal,
Nathalie Baillon-Plot,
Enrico Baraldi,
Esther Bettiol,
Taimur Bhatti,
David J. Bradshaw,
Nicholas M. Brown,
Yehuda Carmeli,
Otto Cars,
Claudie Charbonneau,
Sue Cheng,
Francesco Ciabuschi,
Joseph Cirino,
Charles Clift,
Abby Colson,
Aaron Dane,
Natalie De-Lima,
Mindy Dooa,
Dušan Drábik,
Barry I. Eisenstein,
Ronald Farquhar,
Dogan Fidan,
David M. Findlay,
Frederic Galli,
Kim Gilchrist,
Steve Gilman,
Timo Goeschl,
Jonathan Goodall,
Herman Goossens,
Dimitrios Gouglas,
Tracey Guise,
Inge C. Gyssens,
Peter Hallerbäck,
Dominique Heymann,
Steven J. Hoffman,
J. Howell,
Marlies Hulscher,
Timothy D. Hunt,
Benedikt Huttner,
Fabricio Jantarada,
Dominique Jaquest,
Florence Joly,
Lum Ka,
Andreas Karas,
Charles Knirsch,
Bart Jan Kullberg,
Ramanan Laxminarayan,
Marion Le Maréchal,
Stéphane Legros,
Nicky Lilliott,
Eva Lindgren,
Christopher Longshaw,
Nicole M. Mahoney,
Dana Mastrangelo,
John C. McDonald,
Steve McKeever,
Tim Mepham,
Romina Milanič,
Annelie A Monnier,
Chantal Morel,
Alec Morton,
Elías Mossialos,
Brigitte Nolet,
Kevin Outterson,
David G. Payne,
Laura J. V. Piddock,
Jens Plahte,
Danielle Potter,
Celiné Pulcini,
John Rex,
Emma L. Ross,
John-Arne Røttingen,
Kellie Ryan,
James G. Ryan,
Tehseen Salimi,
Jeroen Schouten,
Suzanne Schultz,
Antony So,
J Spiesser,
NilsOlov Stålhammar,
M. Stanić,
Evelina Tacconelli,
Elizabeth Temkin,
Donald Trick,
Patrick Vink,
Vera VlahovićPalčevski,
Maureen Watt,
Marc Wells,
Justus Wesseler,
Alex White,
Susan M. Wood,
Veronica Zanichelli,
Anna Zorzet
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.124
H-Index - 194
eISSN - 1460-2091
pISSN - 0305-7453
DOI - 10.1093/jac/dkv020
Subject(s) - antibiotics , medicine , intensive care medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
The global burden of antibiotic resistance is tremendous and, without new anti-infective strategies, will continue to increase in the coming decades. Despite the growing need for new antibiotics, few pharmaceutical companies today retain active antibacterial drug discovery programmes. One reason is that it is scientifically challenging to discover new antibiotics that are active against the antibiotic-resistant bacteria of current clinical concern. However, the main hurdle is diminishing economic incentives. Increased global calls to minimize the overuse of antibiotics, the cost of meeting regulatory requirements and the low prices of currently marketed antibiotics are strong deterrents to antibacterial drug development programmes. New economic models that create incentives for the discovery of new antibiotics and yet reconcile these incentives with responsible antibiotic use are long overdue. DRIVE-AB is a €9.4 million public-private consortium, funded by the EU Innovative Medicines Initiative, that aims to define a standard for the responsible use of antibiotics and to develop, test and recommend new economic models to incentivize investment in producing new anti-infective agents.

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