Abstract

The first antibiotic, salvarsan, was deployed in 1910. In just over 100 years antibiotics have drastically changed modern medicine and extended the average human lifespan by 23 years. The discovery of penicillin in 1928 started the golden age of natural product antibiotic discovery that peaked in the mid-1950s. Since then, a gradual decline in antibiotic discovery and development and the evolution of drug resistance in many human pathogens has led to the current antimicrobial resistance crisis. Here we give an overview of the history of antibiotic discovery, the major classes of antibiotics and where they come from. We argue that the future of antibiotic discovery looks bright as new technologies such as genome mining and editing are deployed to discover new natural products with diverse bioactivities. We also report on the current state of antibiotic development, with 45 drugs currently going through the clinical trials pipeline, including several new classes with novel modes of action that are in phase 3 clinical trials. Overall, there are promising signs for antibiotic discovery, but changes in financial models are required to translate scientific advances into clinically approved antibiotics.

Keywords

AntibioticsBiologyAntibiotic resistanceDrug discoveryPenicillinAntimicrobialIntensive care medicineBioinformaticsMedicineMicrobiology

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAnti-Bacterial AgentsBacteriaBacterial InfectionsDrug DiscoveryHistory20th CenturyHistory21st CenturyHumans

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
review
Volume
51
Pages
72-80
Citations
2070
Access
Closed

Social Impact

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

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2070
OpenAlex
30
Influential
1840
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Cite This

Matthew I. Hutchings, Andrew W. Truman, Barrie Wilkinson (2019). Antibiotics: past, present and future. Current Opinion in Microbiology , 51 , 72-80. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mib.2019.10.008

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.mib.2019.10.008
PMID
31733401

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%