(PARIS, France) -- Spreading antibiotic resistance could have disastrous consequences for patients undergoing surgery or chemotherapy, a study said Thursday.
In the United States, up to half of infections after surgery and over a quarter of infections after chemotherapy are caused by organisms resistant to standard antibiotics, researchers found.
A 30 per cent reduction in the efficacy of preventive antibiotics given to patients undergoing these procedures could result in 120,000 infections and 6,300 infection-related deaths each year in the United States alone, they predicted.
"This is the first study to estimate the impact of antibiotic resistance on broader medical care in the United States," Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy in Washington, said in a statement.
"A lot of common surgical procedures and cancer chemotherapy will be virtually impossible if antibiotic resistance is not tackled urgently."
Antibiotics are routinely given as a precautionary measure to patients undergoing surgery and cancer treatment, to prevent infection.
At the same time, however, bacterial resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics is increasing at an alarming pace.
The study, published in medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases, is the first to examine the extent of rising resistance to preventive antibiotics.
A team led by Laxminarayan reviewed data from clinical trials conducted between 1968 and 2011.
They found that 39 per cent of infections after caesarean sections, and 50 - 90 per cent of infections after rectal prostate biopsies, were caused by organisms resistant to common antibiotics.
Just over a quarter of infections after blood cancer chemotherapy were resistant.
In a comment also carried by The Lancet, Joshua Wolf of the Saint Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis said the study "describes a future in which patients who need surgery or chemotherapy can no longer be protected from life-threatening infections by antibiotic" treatment.
"All clinicians have a responsibility to prevent this situation from becoming our patients' reality."