Healthcare-Associated Infections
DZIF scientists aim to develop new strategies against the development and spread of antibiotic resistance.
The increase in complex infections and infectious diseases with antibiotic-resistant bacteria poses major challenges for healthcare professionals. Common causative agents of serious bacterial infections include methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strains, extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-producers), vancomycin-resistant Enterococci and and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Infection with one of these pathogens often occurs during treatment in a healthcare facility.
In addressing this problem, two main factors come into focus:
- The mechanisms responsible for the development of resistance must be better understood and resistant pathogens detected more quickly.
- Existing therapeutic options must be preserved through the rational use of antibiotics, and new prophylactic and therapeutic strategies must be developed.
The DZIF research area "Healthcare-Associated Infections" addresses these major topics in its three central themes (see below) with a wide variety of experimental approaches and clinical-translational studies. The focus is deliberately on approaches that provide an alternative to conventional antibiotic therapy, such as vaccinations, microbiota-based therapies or the use of bacteriophages.
Central Themes
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Prevention and therapy of infections with multidrug-resistant bacteria
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Our IT-based prognosis models, high-resolution diagnostic procedures and novel therapeutic approaches aim at stopping the spread of multidrug-resistant pathogens.
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Optimisation of or alternatives to antibiotic-based therapies
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Many pathogens that lead to problematic infections in clinics are brought into the clinics by humans. DZIF researchers aim to develop intervention strategies to eliminate these bacteria in time, before a person becomes a risk patient.
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Surveillance of healthcare-associated multidrug-resistant bacteria
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Genome sequencing is used to investigate the mechanisms and spread of healthcare-associated resistant bacterial strains in order to prevent the development of resistance and infections with multi-resistant pathogens.