论文标题
通过退款激励窄谱抗生素开发
Incentivizing Narrow-Spectrum Antibiotic Development with Refunding
论文作者
论文摘要
抗生素耐药性的迅速增长是对全球公共卫生的严重威胁。没有进一步的激励措施,制药公司对开发抗生素的兴趣不大,因为成功概率很低,开发成本很大。 “抗生素困境”加剧了这种情况:针对抗性细菌开发窄谱抗生素对社会最有益,但对公司的吸引力最大,因为它们的用法比对广谱药物的使用量更大,因此销售较低。从一般数学框架开始,用于研究抗生素抗性动态的抗生素数量,我们确定有效的治疗方案,并引入了一种基于市场的退款计划,该计划激励制药公司开发狭窄的抗生素抗生素:成功的公司可以从新建立的抗生素资助其发展成本的成本中获得退还。提议的退款涉及固定和可变部分。与为此目的其他新开发的抗生素相比,后者(i)随着使用新抗生素的使用而增加了当前抗性菌株 - 耐药性溢价 - (ii)(ii)使用这种抗生素用于非抗药性细菌。我们概述了这种退款方案如何解决抗生素困境,并应对抗生素R \&d固有的各种不确定性来源。最后,将我们的退款方法与最近建立的抗微生物抵抗(AMR)行动基金联系起来,我们讨论了如何为抗生素基金提供资金。
The rapid rise of antibiotic resistance is a serious threat to global public health. Without further incentives, pharmaceutical companies have little interest in developing antibiotics, since the success probability is low and development costs are huge. The situation is exacerbated by the "antibiotics dilemma": Developing narrow-spectrum antibiotics against resistant bacteria is most beneficial for society, but least attractive for companies since their usage is more limited than for broad-spectrum drugs and thus sales are low. Starting from a general mathematical framework for the study of antibiotic-resistance dynamics with an arbitrary number of antibiotics, we identify efficient treatment protocols and introduce a market-based refunding scheme that incentivizes pharmaceutical companies to develop narrow-spectrum antibiotics: Successful companies can claim a refund from a newly established antibiotics fund that partially covers their development costs. The proposed refund involves a fixed and variable part. The latter (i) increases with the use of the new antibiotic for currently resistant strains in comparison with other newly developed antibiotics for this purpose---the resistance premium---and (ii) decreases with the use of this antibiotic for non-resistant bacteria. We outline how such a refunding scheme can solve the antibiotics dilemma and cope with various sources of uncertainty inherent in antibiotic R\&D. Finally, connecting our refunding approach to the recently established antimicrobial resistance (AMR) action fund, we discuss how the antibiotics fund can be financed.