Aiims delhi leads fight against superbugs

As antibiotics increasingly fail, researchers at AIIMS Delhi are leading the battle against superbugs through early diagnosis, biomarker research, and rational antibiotic use. A recent case of a 50-year-old man with resistant bacterial meningitis underscores the urgency. The institute is running multiple projects to slow down antimicrobial resistance.

A 50-year-old man arrived at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Delhi with fever, headache, neck stiffness, and confusion. Doctors suspected meningitis and tested whether it was viral or bacterial. Lab results confirmed a bacterial infection, but the bacteria was resistant to penicillin. "What surprised us was that this patient had never been hospitalised before," says Dr Bimal Kumar Das, professor and head of microbiology at AIIMS Delhi.

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR), where micro-organisms evolve to survive medicines, poses a serious public health threat. It is projected to cause 10 million deaths worldwide by 2050. In India, an estimated 2.97 lakh deaths were linked to AMR in 2019, and the country remains one of the largest consumers of antibiotics.

Tackling AMR is a priority at AIIMS, which is running around 15 research projects focused on understanding resistance patterns, improving diagnosis, and promoting rational antibiotic use. The institute has been designated as an Infectious Disease Research Diagnostic Laboratory (IRDL) centre and serves as the nodal coordinating centre for the Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network (AMRSN). "The focus is on early diagnosis, targeted therapy and strong hospital infection control," says Dr Das.

The growing resistance of Salmonella typhi, which causes typhoid, is a serious concern in north India, studied using advanced genetic testing. A major driver of AMR is empirical antibiotic use, started before identifying the pathogen, especially in critical patients. "We begin empirical therapy based on the most likely cause. But if we cannot identify the organism later, antibiotics continue longer than necessary," says Dr Hitender Gautam, professor of microbiology at AIIMS Delhi.

One key area is sepsis, a life-threatening response to infection that can lead to organ failure. Dr Gautam's team is identifying site-specific biomarkers for bacteremia, where bacteria enter the bloodstream. For bacterial meningitis, research targets viable but non-culturable (VBNC) bacteria to avoid unnecessary antibiotics. Novel DNA and RNA signatures are being developed to detect resistance in ESKAPE pathogens like Klebsiella pneumoniae.

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are increasingly drug-resistant due to misuse, including treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria. AIIMS is exploring CRISPR-Cas9-based gene-editing therapy to target resistant E. coli. India-specific data is being generated on new antibiotics such as Eravacycline and Omadacycline. Quorum sensing inhibitors, like furanone and gallium nitrate, disrupt bacterial communication to prevent biofilms.

For multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, the BPaL-M regimen—combining bedaquiline, pretomanid, linezolid, and moxifloxacin—shortens treatment to six months with over 90 per cent success rates. Genomic sequencing enables rapid resistance identification. "Only this multi-pronged approach of early diagnosis, targeted therapy, innovation and strict infection control can slow the rise of superbugs in India," experts stress.

Relaterade artiklar

Illustration of Australian scientists developing antibodies targeting bacteria-specific sugar to treat drug-resistant infections in mice.
Bild genererad av AI

Australiensiskt team utvecklar antikroppar som riktar sig mot ett bakterieexklusivt socker, rensar läkemedelsresistenta infektioner i möss

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI Faktagranskad

Australiska forskare rapporterar att de har konstruerat monoklonala antikroppar som känner igen pseudaminsyra — ett socker som produceras av bakterier men inte av människor — och använt dem för att hjälpa till att eliminera multiresistenta Acinetobacter baumannii-infektioner i möss, ett steg mot potentiella passivimmunterapibehandlingar för svåra hospitalsinfektioner.

Forskare vid University of Basel har utvecklat en ny testmetod för att avgöra om antibiotika faktiskt eliminerar bakterier eller bara stoppar deras tillväxt. Denna metod, kallad antimikrobiell encellig testning, spårar individuella bakterier under mikroskop för att bedöma läkemedelseffektivitet mer exakt. Resultaten, publicerade i Nature Microbiology, belyser variationer i bakteriers tolerans mot behandlingar för tuberkulos och andra lunginfektioner.

Rapporterad av AI

AIIMS Delhi signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday with 19 other AIIMS institutions to promote joint research in areas like artificial intelligence in healthcare and low-cost cancer treatments. This agreement creates a pan-India research consortium of 20 AIIMS institutes. Officials say the group will focus on multicentric clinical trials and key health challenges facing the country.

Forskare från University of Warwick och Monash University rapporterar att pre-methylenomycin C-lakton – en förbisedd biosyntetisk mellanprodukt från Streptomyces coelicolor – visar mer än 100-faldig ökning i aktivitet jämfört med methylenomycin A mot grampositiva patogener, inklusive de bakom MRSA och VRE. Upptäckten ger fart åt insatserna för att bekämpa antimikrobiell resistens, som direkt kopplades till uppskattningsvis 1,27 miljoner dödsfall 2019.

Rapporterad av AI

Prof KVS Hari, director of the Centre for Brain Research at IISc Bengaluru, emphasized digital biomarkers for early detection and prevention of dementia. He noted that India's rapidly aging population makes dementia a major public health challenge. The centre focuses on data collection and AI to understand disease progression in the Indian context.

Forskare har uppskattat hur snabbt vissa E. coli-stammar sprids mellan människor och hittat en linje med ett grundläggande reproduktionsantal jämförbart med H1N1-svininfluensan. Baserat på genomiska data från Storbritannien och Norge modellerar analysen —publicerad 4 november 2025 i Nature Communications— överföring för tre ST131-klader och understryker implikationer för spårning av antibiotikaresistenta infektioner.

Rapporterad av AI Faktagranskad

Forskare vid University of Cambridge har upptäckt att 168 vanliga industri- och jordbrukskemikalier kan skada nyttiga bakterier i människans tarm, där vissa även främjar antibiotikaresistens. Baserat på en stor laboratoriescreening skapade teamet en maskininlärningsmodell för att förutsäga vilka kemikalier som kan utgöra risker för mikrobiomet.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj