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Mathematical basis for the assessment of antibiotic resistance and administrative counter-strategies

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  • Hans H Diebner
  • Anna Kather
  • Ingo Roeder
  • Katja de With

Abstract

Diversity as well as temporal and spatial changes of the proportional abundances of different antibiotics (cycling, mixing or combinations thereof) have been hypothesised to be an effective administrative control strategy in hospitals to reduce the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant pathogens in nosocomial or community-acquired infections. However, a rigorous assessment of the efficacy of these control strategies is lacking. The main purpose here is to present a mathematical framework for the assessment of control stategies from a processual stance. To this end, we adopt diverse measures of heterogeneity and diversity of proportional abundances based on the concept of entropy from other fields and adapt them to the needs in assessing the impact of variations in antibiotic consumption on antibiotic resistance. Thereby, we derive a family of diversity measures whose members exhibit different degrees of complexity. Most important, we extent these measures such that they account for the assessment of temporal changes in heterogeneity including otherwise undetected diversity-invariant permutations of antibiotics consumption and prevalence of resistant pathogens. We apply a correlation analysis for the assessment of associations between changes of heterogeneities on the antibiotics and on the pathogen side. As a showcase, which serves as a proof-of-principle, we apply the derived methods to records of antibiotic consumption and prevalence of antibiotic-resistant germs from University Hospital Dresden (cf. supplement “DiebnerEtAl_Data-Supplement”). Besides the quantification of heterogeneities of antibiotics consumption and antibiotic resistance, we show that a reduction of prevalence of antibiotic-resistant germs correlates with a temporal change of similarity with respect to the first observation of antibiotics consumption, although heterogeneity remains approximately constant. Although an interventional study is pending, our mathematical framework turns out to be a viable concept for the assessment and optimisation of control strategies intended to reduce antibiotic resistance.

Suggested Citation

  • Hans H Diebner & Anna Kather & Ingo Roeder & Katja de With, 2020. "Mathematical basis for the assessment of antibiotic resistance and administrative counter-strategies," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 15(9), pages 1-22, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0238692
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0238692
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Pia Abel zur Wiesch & Roger Kouyos & Sören Abel & Wolfgang Viechtbauer & Sebastian Bonhoeffer, 2014. "Cycling Empirical Antibiotic Therapy in Hospitals: Meta-Analysis and Models," PLOS Pathogens, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(6), pages 1-13, June.
    2. Christoph Baldow & Sebastian Salentin & Michael Schroeder & Ingo Roeder & Ingmar Glauche, 2017. "MAGPIE: Simplifying access and execution of computational models in the life sciences," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(12), pages 1-11, December.
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