Photo: Courage Kosi Setsoafia Saba. University for Development Studies, Ghana

Sewage reveals levels of antimicrobial resistance worldwide

Bacteria and microorganisms Genes and genomes Food safety Health and diseases

Sewage can reveal the occurrence of antimicrobial resistant bacteria among healthy populations, an international study led by the Technical University of Denmark shows.

A comprehensive analysis sewage collected in 74 cities in 60 countries has yielded the first, comparable global data, which show the levels and types of antimicrobial resistant bacteria that are present in mainly healthy people in these countries. The National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark, headed the study, which was conducted by an international team of researchers.

In this metagenomics study, the researchers have mapped out all the DNA material in the sewage samples and found that according to antimicrobial resistance, the world's countries fall within two groups: North America, Western Europe, Australia and New Zealand generally have the lowest levels of antimicrobial resistance; while Asia, Africa and South America have the highest levels.

"In the fight against antimicrobial resistance, our findings suggest that it would be a very effective strategy if concerted efforts were made to improve sanitary conditions in countries with high levels of antimicrobial resistance"
Professor Frank Møller Aarestrup

Brazil, India and Vietnam have the greatest diversity in resistance genes, while Australia and New Zealand have the lowest.

Sanitation and health closely linked to antimicrobial resistance

According to the researchers, the use of antimicrobials only explains a minor part of the occurrence of antimicrobial resistance in the various countries. Therefore, the researchers have searched for other factors that could be either drivers for or indicators of the occurrence of resistant bacteria. In this work, they have used several comprehensive data sets from the World Bank, which e.g. have measured the countries' health status and stage of development.

The researchers’ work shows that most of the variables, which are associated with the occurrence of antimicrobial resistance in a country, are related to the sanitary conditions in the country and the population’s general state of health.

"In the fight against antimicrobial resistance, our findings suggest that it would be a very effective strategy if concerted efforts were made to improve sanitary conditions in countries with high levels of antimicrobial resistance," Professor Frank Aarestrup from the National Food Institute and head of the study says.

Using the same data from the World Bank, the researchers have also predicted the levels of antimicrobial resistance in 259 countries/territories and they have drawn up a world map of resistance in healthy populations. According to their estimates, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Sweden have the lowest levels of resistance, whereas Tanzania, Vietnam and Nigeria have the highest levels. According to the estimates, Denmark has the sixth lowest level of antimicrobial resistance.

Reusable data

Contrary to data from traditional methods of analysis, raw data from metagenomics studies can be reused to examine other problems. The researchers from the sewage project are e.g. using data from the study to analyze the occurrence of other disease-causing microorganisms in the sewage.

As more resistance genes emerge in the future, researchers will also be able to reanalyse publicly available raw data from metagenomics studies to quickly uncover how these genes have emerged and spread.

A step closer to a global surveillance system

The researchers will use the experience gained from the project to fulfill their overall ambition of developing a worldwide surveillance system that can continuously monitor the occurrence and spread of disease-causing microorganisms and antimicrobial resistance.

"Analysing sewage can quickly and relatively cheaply show exactly which bacteria abound in an area—and collecting and analysing sewage doesn’t require ethical approval, as the material cannot be traced back to individuals. Both parameters help to make a surveillance system via sewage a viable option—also in developing countries,” Professor Frank Aarestrup explains.

The researchers’ ambition is to develop a system that makes it possible to exchange and interpret information in real time. As such, it would be possible to use the global surveillance data e.g. to manage diseases that threaten to spread beyond a country’s borders and develop into pandemics, such as Ebola, measles, polio or cholera.

Read more

The study is described in further detail in an article in the highly regarded scientific journal Nature Communications: Global monitoring of antimicrobial resistance based on metagenomics analyses of urban sewage.

The study was funded through grants from the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the Velux Foundation and via the EU-funded project COMPARE. Several COMPARE partners participated in the study.

Read more about how the National Food Institute’s research in DNA sequencing techniques helps to establish international standards for the detection, monitoring and study of global spread of pathogenic microorganisms and antimicrobial resistant bacteria.

Image: National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark

Predictions of abundance of antimicrobial resistance in all countries and territories in the world. Map coloured according to predicted abundance of antimicrobial resistance from light blue (low abundance) to dark blue (high abundance).

UN Sustainable Development Goals

Part of the National Food Institute’s vision is to produce knowledge that prevents disease and promotes health. Through its participation in e.g. the sewage project, the institute also helps to support the UN's Sustainable Development Goal of ensuring healthy lives and promoting well-being for all.