Abstract
<h3>Abstract</h3> It is generally accepted that intervention strategies to curb antibiotic resistance cannot solely focus on human and veterinary medicine but must also consider environmental settings. While the environment clearly has a role in the transmission of resistant bacteria, it is less clear what role it plays in the emergence of novel types of resistance. It has been suggested that the environment constitutes an enormous recruitment ground for resistance genes to pathogens, but the extent to which this actually happens is unknown. In this study, we built a model framework for resistance emergence and used the available quantitative data on the relevant processes to identify the steps which are limiting the appearance of antibiotic resistance determinants in human or animal pathogens. We also assessed the effect of uncertainty in the available data on the model results. We found that in a majority of scenarios, the environment would only play a minor role in the emergence of novel resistance genes. However, the uncertainty around this role is enormous, highlighting an urgent need of more quantitative data to understand the role of the environment in antibiotic resistance development. Specifically, more data is most needed on the fitness costs of antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) carriage, the degree of dispersal of resistant bacteria from the environment to humans, but also the rates of mobilization and horizontal transfer of ARGs. Quantitative data on these processes is instrumental to determine which processes that should be targeted for interventions to curb development and transmission of resistance.
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