
Decades of conflict in Iraq have contributed to a "catastrophic" rise in antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in the country, according to a commentary published yesterday in BMJ Global Health.
In a review of literature on AMR and wars in Iraq going back to the 1980s, a team led by researchers with the American University of Beirut explore the underinvestigated role that these conflicts have played in spiking rates of resistance in pathogens such as Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Klebsiella pneumoniae in Iraq. They note that while war and the treatment of soldiers' injuries with antibiotics have been implicated in the emergence of AMR as far back as the 1940s, current armed conflicts and the resistance-inducing properties of non-antibiotic antimicrobials, such as heavy metals used in ammunition and explosives, need further exploration.
"Contemporary conflicts, waged in urban and industrialised landscapes, pressure microbes with selective environments that contain unique combinations and concentrations of toxic heavy metals and antibiotics, while simultaneously providing niches and dissemination routes for microbial pathogens," the authors wrote.
Looking at literature from the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988) through the US invasion and occupation (2003-2011) and the ISIS conflict (2014-2017), the authors conclude that this selective pressure has been exacerbated by the high number of wounded soldiers and civilians, the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics for war wounds, the dismantling of healthcare infrastructures, the loss of healthcare workers, the deterioration of infection control measures, and lack of access to proper water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH).
"Taken together, a destroyed healthcare infrastructure, inappropriate microbial therapies, limited resources, high heavy metal contamination in humans and the environment, and lack of WASH, combined, likely play instrumental roles in the catastrophic rise of AMR in Iraq and, by extension, regionally and globally," they wrote.
The authors say clinical, microbiologic, ethnographic, and environmental research is needed to conclusively establish the role that these multiple conflicts have played in the rise of multidrug-resistant organisms, and that understanding these links is essential for global response.