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The prudent use of antibiotics in veterinary medicine: the right drug, the right time, the right dose the right duration of treatment P.L. Toutain National Veterinary School ; Toulouse, France The Bunge y Born foundation, 18th November 2011 Tandil, Argentina 1 The priorities of a sustainable veterinary antimicrobial therapy is related to public health issues, not to animal health issues: Why? 2 Medical consequences of antimicrobial resistance 3 The antibiotic ecosystem: One world, One health Treatment & prophylaxis Human medicine Community Hospital Veterinary medicine Animal feed additives Agriculture Plant protection Environment Industry 4 Prevent emergence of resistance: but of what resistance? Target pathogens Drug efficacy in animal: A vet issue Possible overuse of antibiotics Animal issue Zoonotics Drug efficacy in man Natural eradication Individual issue Commensal flora Resistance gene reservoir Global ecological problem Risk for permanent colonisation Population issue 5 Emergence of resistance for Salmonella typhimurium DT104 in UK to quinolones following the market autorisation of enrofloxacin 6 Stöhr & Wegener, Drug resistance Updates, 2000, 3:207-209 Commensal bacteria: transmission of resistance genes from animal to man: 7 Horizontal genes exchanges (BLSE) in the gut The gut is the main animal ecosystem in which veterinary antibiotics are able to promote resistance in man 8 Gut flora & antimicrobial resistance AB: oral route Proximal G.I.T 1-F% Distal Gut flora •Zoonotic (salmonella, campylobacter •commensal ( enterococcus) Food chain Environmental exposure Blood Target biophase Bug of vet interest Résistance = lack of efficacy Résistance = public health concern 9 Gut flora & antimicrobial resistance Gastrointestinal tract Proximal Gut flora •Zoonotic (salmonella, campylobacter •commensal ( enterococcus) Intestinal secretion Bile Systemic Administration Distal Quinolones Macrolides Tétracyclines Food chain Environment Blood Biophase Target pathogen Résistance =public health issue Résistance = lack of efficacy 10 The aim was to assess the impact of 3 ampicillin dosage regimens on ampicillin resistance among Entrobacteriaceae recovered from swine feces and on the excretion in feces of the blaTEM gene 11 % ampicillin-resistant Enterobacteria Result: Percent of ampicillin-resistant Enterobacteriaceae for each mode of administration 100 80 oral route fed 60 oral route fasted 40 intramuscular route 20 control 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Days 12 Hazard associated to the release of antibiotic in environment 13 Fate of antibiotics, zoonotic pathogens and resistance genes: residence time in the different biotopes Digestive tract: 48h Lagoon: few weeks Ex:T1/2 tiamuline=180 days Bio-aérosol Air, water & ground pollution Air pollution 14 What are the solutions to these critical issues • No or few solution for the veterinarians – For mastistis, use local intramammary treatment, not systemic treatment • We need innovations from pharmaceutical companies 15 Innovation: PK selectivity of antibiotics G.I.T AB: oral route Proximal Distal 0% Gut flora •Zoonotic (salmonella, campylobacter •commensal ( enterococcus) 100% Food chain environment Blood Kidney Biophase Résistance = public health concern Animal health 16 Innovation: PK selectivity of antibiotics G.I.T Proximal Distal Gut flora •Zoonotic (salmonella, campylobacter •commensal ( enterococcus) AB: IMroute Food chain Quinolones, macrolides environment Blood Kidney Biophase Résistance = public health concern Animal health 17 Judicious, prudent,responsible sustainable… use of antibiotics 18 1- No misuse 19 An example of misuse: in ovo administration of ceftiofur 20 Correlation between the prévalence of chicken meat contaminated by E.coli and Salmonella enterica résistant to ceftiofur and human infection to resistant Salmonella Heidelberg (r=0.91 pour Salmonella) Salmonella Heidelberg Salmonella E Coli enterica 21 Effect of the withdrawal of ceftiofur in hatchery Salmonella Heidelberg Salmonella E Coli 22 2- No overuse 23 Human and veterinary antibiotic usage: US vs EU 6% 9% 6% 29% 65% 85% Human Animal therapy Source: UCS 2000 Non-therapeutic Human Veterinary Source: FEDESA 2001 Growth promotion 24 No overuse means no antibiotics as growth promotor 25 we have evidence that market introduction of generics or of “me-too’ drugs has influence on antibiotic consumption; 26 Generics for antibiotics (quinolones) : conclusions More generics/”me too” Decrease relative price Increase antibiotic consumption (not true for all antibiotics) Increase resistance 27 Generics and antibiotic consumption 28 Use of fluoroquinolones in veterinary medicine: Germany, DK, UK From Hellmann: Assoc Vet Consult. SAGAM 2005 29 Use of fluoroquinolones in veterinary medicine: Eastern EU, Spain, Portugal From Hellmann: Assoc Vet Consult. SAGAM 2005 30 Issues associated to ‘generics’ that are not bioequivalence 31 Non-bioequivalence of various trademarks of enrofloxacin in cow Sumano & al 2001 Dtsch tierärztl Wschr 108 281-320 32 3-The right drug 33 Old or more recent drugs? • Many recommendations to establish list of essential antibiotics for human medicine • Where is the science demonstrating the benefit in terms or resistance to only use old antibiotics in veterinary medicine? 34 For three antibiotic classes (quinolones, cephalosporins and carbapenems), it was observed that the less active drugs could be worse at hastening the spread of resistance than more active drugs in the same class. This led the authors to qualify the (WHO) stratagem of recommending the use of old antibiotics as part of microbiological folklore. 35 How a vet can select the best drug amongst competitors (the so-called me-too) for pulmonary infection? 36 Amongst the different macrolides marketed for treatment and prevention of bovine respiratory disease (BRD) associated with Mannheimia haemolytica, Pasteurella multocida, Histophilus somni diseases, what is the best one? • • • • Tulathromycine,Draxxin (Pfizer) Tilmicosine, Micotil (Elanco) Gamithromycine, Zactran (Merial) Tildipirosin, Zuprevo (Intervet) 37 The need of comparative clinical trials for the newest antibiotics 38 Currently, antibiotics are compared only by non-inferiority trials Types of Hypothesis testing for antimicrobial drugs Non-inferiority (not worse) Equivalence (similar) Superiority (better) 39 Draxxin vs. Micotil by Pfizer Micotil vs . Draxxin by Elanco 40 Draxxin vs Micotil by Pfizer Take home message: •Draxxin superior to Micotil P<0.00x Micotil vs . Draxxin by Elanco Take home message: • Micotil not significantly different of Draxxin for most endpoints (P>0.05) but Micotil is more cost-effective (CAN$8/animal) and the lower initial BRD treatment costs in the DRAX group did not offset the higher metaphylactic cost of DRAX 41 4-The right time to start a treatment 42 The different modalities of antimicrobial therapy Disease health Antibiotic consumption Therapy Metaphylaxis (Control) Pathogen load Prophylaxis (prévention) Growth promotion Only a risk factor High Small No 43NA 44 Progression of infection Inoculation of Pasteurella multocida 1500 CFU/lung Bacteria counts per lung (CFU/lung) A mouse model to compare metaphylaxis and curative treatment anorexia lethargy dehydration no clinical signs of infection 1010 108 106 104 102 100 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time (h) early (10h) Administration Late (32h) Administration 45 What we demonstrated • For a same dose of marbofloxacin, early treatments (10 hours after the infection) were associated to – more frequent clinical cure – more frequent bacteriological cure – less frequent selection of resistant bacteria than late treatments (32 hours after the infection) Early administrations were more favourable than late administrations 46 5-The right dose for efficacy 47 Why to optimize dosage regimen for antibiotics 1. To optimize efficacy 2. Reduce the emergence and selection of resistance 48 How to find and confirm a dose (dosage regimen) • Dose titration – Animal infectious model • PK/PD • Clinical trials 49 Dose titration Dose Response clinical Black box Dose titration for antibiotic using infectious model PK/PD PK Dose PD Body pathogen Plasma concentration response 50 Why plasma concentrations rather than the dose for an antibiotic ? 51 Most of our pathogens are located in extracellular fluids Cell Extra Cellular Fluid Bug Most bacteria of clinical interest - respiratory infection - wound infection - digestive tract inf. (in phagocytic cell most often) • • • • • mycoplasma (some) chlamydiae Cryptosporidiosis Salmonella Rhodococcus equi Free plasma concentration is equal to free extracellular concentration 52 Do not confuse science, marketing and and propaganda 53 PK/PD indices as indicator of antibiotic efficacy 54 It has been developed surrogates indices (predictors) of antibiotic efficacy taking into account MIC (PD) and exposure antibiotic metrics (PK) Practically, 3 indices cover all situations: •AUC/MIC: quinolones; macrolides •Time>MIC: Penicillins, cephalosporins • Cmax/MIC: aminoglycosies We know the average critical values to achieve for theses indices to cure animals and we can compute the appropriate doses 55 To compute a dose, we have to take into account inter-animal variability using population approaches 56 PK Variability 1.6 Doxycycline Concentrations mg/mL 1.4 n = 215 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Time (h) 57 Pathogens % PD variability: MIC distribution Pasteurella multocida (n=205) 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 SUSCEPTIBLE 0.06250.125 0.25 0.5 1 2 4 MIC (m g/mL) 58 The goal of population kinetics is to document sources of variability to determine a dosage regimen controlling a given quantile (e.g. 90%) of a population and not an average dosage regimen Monte Carlo simulations 59 6-The right dose to prevent resistance 60 Traditional explanation for enrichment of mutants Concentration MIC Selective Pressure Time 61 Mutant Prevention Concentration (MPC) and the Selection Window (SW) hypothesis 62 Blocking Growth of Single Mutants Forces Cells to Have a Double Mutation to Overcome Drug 10-8 Without antibiotics single mutant population 10-8 Wild pop With antibiotics 10-8 single mutant population Wild population éradication sensible single mutant 63 Double mutant The selection window hypothesis Plasma concentrations Mutant prevention concentration (MPC) (to inhibit growth of the least susceptible, single step mutant) MIC Selective concentration (SC) to block wild-type bacteria Mutant selection window All bacteria inhibited Growth of only the most resistant subpopulation Growth of all bacteria 64 Mutants are not selected at concentrations below MIC or above the MPC 65 7-The right duration of a treatment 66 Duration of treatment • The shortest as possible • Many epidemiological evidences that the likelihood of resistance increase with the duration of treatment 67 Conclusion: for a rational antibiotic use, what is the priority? • Environmental safety • target animal safety • efficacy • resistance in target pathogens • operator safety • consumer safety •resistance in non-target pathogens (salmonella, campylobacters) •Transfer of resistance genes 68 Bourgelat & the first veterinary school in the world at Lyon 69 Toulouse & El Francesito Born here on the 11th Dec 1890 70 Toulouse: Rugby, Vet School and Airbus Vet School campus 71