Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance continues to escalate worldwide, threatening effective medical care, patient safety, and global health security. Traditional antibiotics are increasingly unreliable against multidrug-resistant pathogens, resulting in delayed appropriate therapy, prolonged illness, higher healthcare costs, and increased mortality. In this context, antimicrobial stewardship must evolve beyond the preservation of older drugs to include the judicious, evidence-based use of newer antibiotics. When used empirically in high-risk scenarios, novel agents can improve clinical outcomes by ensuring timely, effective coverage against MDR organisms while reducing the need for broad-spectrum combinations that drive collateral resistance and adverse effects. A major challenge, however, is the underutilization of these agents, which not only limits patient benefit but also undermines incentives for continued pharmaceutical innovation. To address this gap, stewardship programs must incorporate strategies for appropriate empiric deployment of new antibiotics, guided by local epidemiology, risk stratification, rapid diagnostics, and multidisciplinary decision-making. A coordinated global effort, linking stewardship, innovation, and policy reform, will be critical to optimize the role of novel antimicrobials in clinical practice moving forward.