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Here comes PCT David Gilbert, MD Disclosures • Advisory/Consultant: Pfizer, Bayer, Schering-Plough, Pacific Bioscience, Advanced Life Science, Wyeth, Roche, Johnson and Johnson, Achaogen • Speaker: Merck Major Problem • Increasing resistance of major bacterial pathogens to licensed antibacterials • Discovery and development of new antibacterials is at a low ebb. • Hence, we need to be good stewards of the drugs that are still active. How to reduce empiric use of antibacterials? • Rapid point of care microbial diagnosis. Especially helpful in respiratory tract infections. Example: rapid test for gp.A streptococci • Multiplex PCRs for common viral and bacterial pathogens would be ideal. A few are FDA approved. Clinical integration slow. Surrogate Markers of Bacterial Invasive Disease • Until such time as multiplex PCRS are available, we are left with surrogate markers • Have used fever, WBCs, C-reactive protein levels and ESR in this way for many years. Too insensitive and nonspecific • A new biomarker is procalcitonin (PCT). • See what you think? Procalcitonin • The 116-aminoacid precursor (prohormone) of the 32-aminoacid hormone—calcitonin • Calcitonin produced in neuroendocrine Ccells of thyroid and K-cells of the lung • Pro-CT produced in all parenchymal tissues and monocytes/macrophages Crit.Care Medicine 2008; 36; 941&1684 Calcitonin vs ProCT • Calcitonin lowers serum calcium • Produced only in thyroid and selected lung cells • Levels do not increase in response to bacterial infection. • ProCT is intimately involved with the inflammatory process • Produced by monocytes, fat cells, R-E system, adrenal, G-I tract and more • Rapid large increases in serum levels within 3-6 hrs of onset of bacterial infection What is physiologic role of PCT? • Not yet completely understood • Increases synthesis of nitric oxide • Antibody to PCT increases survival of septic pigs What elevates serum levels of PCT? • Acute local and invasive bacterial infections. • Low perfusion states that may allow translocation of normal flora: major surgical procedures, trauma with shock, severe burns, severe cardiogenic shock, ischemic bowel • Systemic fungal infections; falciparum malaria • Small cell lung Ca; Medullary thyroid Ca • Clinically, interested in PCT levels in RTIs and Sepsis PCT serum levels • Levels rise within 3-6 hrs of onset of bacterial infection. • Degree of elevation correlates with severity of bacterial infection • FDA-approved Immunoassay is sensitive,rapid, and specific. • Levels range from < 0.05 to over 1,000 ng/ml • Sequential levels useful in diagnosis, prognosis, and assist in duration of therapy • Low levels have excellent negative predictive value PCT Levels as Guide to Therapy of Respiratory Tract Infections(RTIs) • Bulk of data from Switzerland • Used sensitive PCT assay • If randomized to PCT group, use of antibacterials encouraged or discouraged by PCT result • Assumption: If patients recovered without an antibacterial, likely that no serious bacterial infection was present PCT-Guided Therapy of AECB* • Randomized controlled blinded trial at Univ. Hosp. in Switzerland • Patients Admitted from ER with steroids and inhalers and then randomized • Group 1. Standard therapy by attending MD. PCT levels kept blinded • Group 2. PCT levels provided and, depending on result, discouraged or encouraged, use of antibiotics Chest 2007; 131:9-19 PCT-Guided Therapy of AECB • PCT levels available within 1 hour, 24/7 • If PCT level < 0.1 ng/ml: “No bacterial infection. Discourage use of antibiotics” • If PCT level > 0.25 ng/ml: “Use of antibiotics encouraged” • Outcome assessment: Antibiotic use acutely and over 6 months. Need for ICU and other secondary endpoints Results: AECB Variable PCTGuided(102) Not PCTGuided (113) Antibiotic 40% 72% Clin. Success 84 89 ICU admit 8 11 Death, any cause 5 9 Positive sputum* 37 40 Viral studies None None *Did not correlate with PCT levels AECB study limitations • One hospital; only inpatients • Ultimately need large multicenter trial that includes both inpatients and outpatients • Future study: If PCT serum level < 0.1 ng/ml, randomize to either placebo or antibiotic • Hopefully include sputum cultures and viral studies PCT Guidance of Antibiotic Therapy of CAP* • Randomized, controlled, blinded trial in Swiss University Hospital • Patients admitted from ER with CAP • All had PCT levels • Controls: Treating MDs not given results of PCT serum level • PCT group: Treating MDs given results with suggestions as to antibiotic use. AJRCCM 2006; 174:84 Chest 2007;131:9 High Levels of PCT in the “septic” patient • Increases likelihood of bacterial sepsis; Differentiates bacterial from viral infection • Predicts prognosis of bacterial sepsis • Differentiation of infectious and noninfectious etiologies of inflammation. • As a guide to the duration of antibiotic therapy. PCT: Marker of Sepsis in ICU* *CCM 2000:28:977. PCT level of >0.5 ng/ml How well does PCT differentiate bacterial and viral infections?* • 360 children admitted from ER with temperature > 38.5o C. • Responsible pathogen identified. • Divided into 3 groups: • Gp. 1: Invasive bacterial infection • Gp. 2: Localized bacterial infection • Gp. 3: Viral infection Ped. Inf. Dis. 1999; 18: 875-81 PCT: Bacterial or viral infection? Result Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Diagnosis Meningitis or bacteremia 46 Local. Bacterial infection 78 Viral infections 1 mo-15 yr 2 mo-15 yr 1 mo-15 yr N.meningitidi S.pyogenes, s, S.pneumo, E.coli, E.coli Salmonella Enterovirus, influenza, Number of patients Age range Example pathogens 236 adenovirus,RSV , EBV Correlation of Peak PCT Level and 90 Day Mortality* PCT: max. level, ng/ml Mortality, % <1.0 5 1-5 11 6-20 28 21-50 37 51-1000 42 CCM 2006;34:2596 PCT is low in non-bacterial infectious causes of SIRS* • Viral infections: unless bacterial superinfection • ARDS (CCM 1999; 27:2172) • Sterile necrotizing pancreatitis (Gut 1997; 41:832) • Post-liver transplant rejection (CCM 2000; 28:555) SIRS= Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome 7:2175 ARDS:Bacterial or not? Sequential PCT levels can shorten antibiotic therapy in septic patients* • Randomized, controlled, open intervention trail in ICU septic and septic shock patients. • Daily PCT levels • Standard of care vs. “stop” rules • Stop if PCT fell 90% from baseline peak • Stop if absolute value of < 0.25 ng/ml • Stop if baseline < 1 and level now <0.1 AJRCCM 2008;177:498 PCT levels at PPMC • Ultra-sensitive, FDA-approved assay available 24/7 starting 9/15/08 • Results in < I hr. • Cost: $68 (CBC $30; Antibiotic $20-120) • Encourage use: ER, ICU, Hospitalists, Primary Care Physicians, and others. Procalcitonin Levels: Summary • Sensitive and specific biomarker for bacterial infection • PCT levels augment, do not replace, clinical assessment of patients with RTIs, suspected and proven sepsis • Will hopefully result in reduced use of empiric antibiotics • Sequential levels hopefully will decrease the duration of antibiotic therapy in some patients. Antibiotic Stewardship • CDC,FDA, NIH, CMS all looking for ways to avoid overuse of antibiotics for nonbacterial Respiratory Tract Infections. • Procalcitonin needs further study, but based on current evidence, low ProCT levels (<0.25 ng/ml), suggest a low priority for antimicrobial therapy in patients with upper and lower respiratory tract infections. Can we rapidly discriminate bacterial from viral RTI? • Sinusitis, otitis, acute bronchitis, AECB, and even CAP • Clinical picture often does not allow discrimination • ESR, CRP no help • Eventually, point of care multiplex PCR • For now, rapid procalcitonin (ProCT) assay available. Procalcitonin Serum Levels • FDA-approved antibody based assay system • Very sensitive: quantifies levels from 0.05 to 1000 ng/ml • Answers in less than 1 hour. ProCT and Viral Infections • Of 236 viral infections, only 3 had serum ProCT levels > 2 ng/ml • Viral meningitis, < 1 ng/ml; bacterial meningitis, very high levels ( approx. 10 ng/ml) • Stimulated European studies designed to determine if ProCT levels could guide antibiotic use for RTIs Eur.resp.journal 2007;30:556 Main Points • Resistance is everywhere • Impressive array of mechanisms of resistance • Vaccines can have a major impact on incidence of invasive bacterial disease • To preserve activity of current drugs, need less empiric use. How? Surrogate markers for bacterial infection or rapid ID of specific viral or bacterial pathogen Resistance is everywhere: S.aureus • World-wide epidemic of CA-MRSA • Roughly 50 % of S.aureus isolates at PPMC are MRSA • In USA in 2005, 8987 cases of invasive disease with 13 % mortality. More deaths than from AIDS. (JAMA 2007;298:1763) • Concomitant increase in vancomycin resistance Anti-MRSA Drugs • Licensed: Vanco, TMP/SMX, Doxy, Clinda, Linezolid, Quinupristin-dalfopristin • In development: Dalbavancin, Telavancin, Ortivancin, Ceftobiprole, Ceftaroline, Iclaprim Resistance is everywhere: S.pneumoniae • Changed in vitro criteria for resistance, and hence, reduced prevalence of resistance to penicillins • Resistance to erythromycin, azithromycin, clarithromycin now roughly 50 % • If allergic to penicillin and macrolide resistant isolate, treatment options: Fluoroquinolone, Clinda, Linezolid Resistance is everywhere: FQs and Gram-negative Bacteria • Resistance of N.gonorrhaeae to FQs • Resistance of salmonella and camplyobacter to FQs • Resistance of E.coli, P.aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter species to FQs Resistance is everywhere: “R” of GNBs to beta-lactams • Increasing resistance of aerobic GNBs to ESPs, ESCs, BL/BLIs, Carbapenems • Mostly enzymatic: Chrom.-inducible cephalosporinases, ESBLs, KPCs(KIebsiella Producing Carbapenemases • Empiric treatment of VAP in NYC: colistin and tigeclycline • Pipeline drugs for P.aer., Acinetobacter: 0 How do bacteria survive in presence of antibacterials? • Synthesis of enzymes that alter the drug • Change the drug target • Pump the drug out before target is reached • Make the cell wall impermeable • Make the target irrelevant; generative alternative synthetic pathways Genetics of Resistance • Resistance can occur from mutations. Once resistance present, spreads by genetic exchange, e.g.: • Bacteriophages • Transformation: update and incorporation of naked DNA (recycling) • Spread of plasmids by conjugation (bacterial sex). Vaccines to Prevent Invasive Bacterial Disease • Haemophilus influenza type b, protein conjugate vaccine • Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine 19F to 19A: Watch Out! • Several reports of emergence of serotype 19A as a virulent and multidrug resistant pneumococcus:”replacement pneumococcal disease” • Serotype 19F is in protein conjugate vaccine; 19A is not. • Rate of Invasive Pneumococcal Disease in immunized alaskan children increased from 134 (2001-2003) to 245 (2004-2006) per 100,000. In vitro susceptibility of 19A? Drug MIC90 Penicillin G 6 Suscept. Interpretation R Amoxicillin 6 R Ceftriaxone 2 Intermediate Azithromycin >256 R Vaccines are not the answer • H.influenza And pneumococcal vaccines successful, but no vaccines for S.aureus or common gram-negative bacteria • Answer to resistance is to use antibacterials less often and, when used, for shorter periods of time.