Metadata
Title
Antibiotic pressures can unintentionally fuel the rise of drug-resistant pathogens in the gut
Category
undergraduate
UUID
846a531edf6f42cc975db517929b616f
Source URL
https://beyondantibiotics.ox.ac.uk/news/antibiotic-pressures-can-unintentionally...
Parent URL
https://beyondantibiotics.ox.ac.uk/
Crawl Time
2026-03-09T03:18:52+00:00
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Antibiotic pressures can unintentionally fuel the rise of drug-resistant pathogens in the gut

Source: https://beyondantibiotics.ox.ac.uk/news/antibiotic-pressures-can-unintentionally-fuel-the-rise-of-drug-resistant-pathogens-in-the-gut Parent: https://beyondantibiotics.ox.ac.uk/

21 Nov 2025

Antibiotic pressures can unintentionally fuel the rise of drug-resistant pathogens in the gut

Researchers at the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology in collaboration with researchers at the Institute of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Oxford are investigating how the enrichment of Klebsiella pneumoniae (Kp) in the gut following antibiotics alters the colonic immune landscape. Kp is a leading antibiotic-resistant pathogen and the third most common cause of deadly AMR-related infections.

Our in vivo studies revealed that:

Next steps include developing an intranasal infection model to explore how antibiotic blooms in the gut may influence secondary lung infections.

This research, led by Dr Ffion Hammond and supervised by Prof Dame Fiona Powrie and Dr Claire Pearson, highlights the complex interplay between antibiotics, the microbiome and immune response, and the urgent need for targeted strategies to prevent AMR spread.

This research is funded by the Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC) Programme Grant Scheme under the reference number EP/V026623/1.