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Microbiology 10/03/08 Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Transcriber: Sara McGowan 38:49 17: In order to provide the proper treatment, you need to know what types of bacteria are likely to cause the infection, so you can provide treatment while you’re waiting on lab results. It’s important that you try to guide patient management with appropriate susceptibility tests. 18: Some of the terminology that you need to be familiar with. The minimum inhibitory concentration, (MIC) is the lowest concentration of an antibiotic that inhibits visible bacterial growth. This is what is measured by the numbers on the strip of the E-test. The MBC is not routinely done in the diagnostic laboratory. It’s the amount of antibiotic that’s necessary that kills 99.9% of the bacteria in an inoculum. You don’t usually have to kill all the bacteria in someone that has a normal immune system. As long as you can stop it from growing, the host immune system will usually take care of the rest. If you have a severe infection like endocarditis or meningitis or you have a patient with a suppressed immune system, it’s more important to have an antibiotic that actually kills versus inhibiting bacteria. -Static drugs inhibit growth and -cidal drugs kill them. You can measure –cidal activity of an antibiotic to see how many bacteria it kills in vitro. 19: Agar disk diffusion is based on putting a filter paper disk with antibiotic on an agar plate that has been inoculated with bacteria, incubate overnight and look for inhibition. The bigger the zone, the more active the antibiotic. The zone sizes have been correlated with the MICs. You can look up on a table the zone diameters to determine susceptibility. Why is 20mm susceptible and 15 mm resistant? When an antibiotic is developed, a drug company has to determine the quantitative MICs and those are related to the zone diameters. The bacteria are tested two ways: you measure the MIC of an antibiotic and then you measure the zone that the antibiotic gives. If you know the MIC designation for susceptibility, you can see which MICs give you that zone diameter. This is important for drug development. For example, you have an oral or IV drug. You first determine the safe amount to give to someone without side effects or toxicity. This is determined in animal studies. Then you have clinical trials to determine what concentrations actually make people get better. You also have to measure the concentration of the drugs. For example, you take a drug and you can get 4 ug per mL in the bloodstream at the maximum dose without getting toxicity. So the circulating concentration is 4 ug and you can measure how much it takes to inhibit the bacteria. If it takes 10 ug to inhibit the bacteria, that’s not a good drug because it takes more drug to inhibit the bacteria than you can safely give to the patient, so that would be resistant. That’s how susceptible, intermediate or resistant are determined. If it’s susceptible drug, the MIC is considerably lower than the safe amount you can get into a patient. If you have an intermediate resistance, the MIC of the bacteria is close to what you can achieve in the body. If it’s resistant, it takes more to inhibit the bacteria than you can give the patient. That’s how the data in the tables from MIC and zone diameters are determined. 20: With the Etest, you measure the number on the strip. We did this with S. pneumoniae, measuring penicillim, cephataxime and moxifloxacin. You saw that S. pneumoniae was resistant to the Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Sara McGowan pg. 2 cephataxime and penicillin. That’s a quantitative test. What’s the green bacteria? Pseudomonas (the only green one he knows of). 21/22: In the hospital lab there’s the microscan machine. You put your microtiter plate in there. This has the biochemicals analogous to the API strip across the top and dilutions of your antibiotics are at the bottom. This is microbroth dilution MIC testing. If the antibiotic grows it will make turbidity and the machine will read which wells have turbid growth. The lowest concentration with no bacterial growth is the MIC. The machine is programmed with the antibiotic info and it gives you the interpretation of results. 23: The agar dilution method is usually how drug companies determine the data. An agar plate is treated with antibiotics and you plate bacteria to see if they grow. This can be used to screen for oxacillin resistant S. aureus and vancomycin resistant Enterococcus. This is used to look at one antibiotic at one concentration and it’s a qualitative test: is it susceptible or resistant? For most infections there are several treatment options, but this is a yes or no for one drug so it’s used in a few special circumstances. 24: You need to be familiar with these concepts. Susceptible and resistant are easy to understand. If you have a bug with an intermediate result, you may be able to give maximum dosage, and you may be able to get the concentration of antibiotic above the bacteria’s MIC. If you don’t have any other alternatives, an intermediate may work. Or if you have a drug that’s concentrated in the urine and the patient has a urinary tract infection, it may be appropriate. 25: There are a lot of things that are desirable properties in antibiotic design. You want it to have selective toxicity: kills bacteria but not the patient. It needs to be water-soluble to get it spread out through the tissues in the body. Ideally, you’d like it to kill bacteria but that’s not absolutely necessary. It’s necessary if you have really sick patients with impaired immune systems and sever diseases, but in most cases, a drug that inhibits bacteria but doesn’t kill it will work. You’d like to have high concentrations achieved in the body and a long half-life. You get much better patient compliance if you can give the medicine once a day versus 4 times a day. You’d like for it to have a broad spectrum. If you don’t know what bacteria a patient has, you’d like one drug that will get several different bugs. Unfortunately, with very sick patients, you often don’t know what the bacteria is and you don’t have one antibiotic that will get all of the them, so you have to start people with several drugs until you know what they have and you can treat it. You don’t want to miss anything. You also don’t want to affect the normal flora too much. If you give something for more than a few days and upset the normal flora, the patient is a t risk for yeast infections or pseudomembranous colitis from Clostridium. You’d like one that doesn’t easily induce resistance. You want it so potent that it kills the bacteria in an essential component that the bacteria can’t recover from and develop resistant. Also, you’d like one without toxicity or side effects. No single antibiotic gets a perfect score in all categories. The ones on the market at least have several of these attributes. Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Sara McGowan pg. 3 26: Be aware of the concepts in choosing antibiotics for patients. Think about where the infection is, what you’re treating, where the drug is concentrated, where it’s metabolized. If someone has kidney failure, you don’t want to give them an aminoglycoside. If you’re using antibiotics, you may not be managing the patient’s medical conditions, but you have to know about the condition in case you’re giving them an antibiotic that may have an adverse effect on their condition. There may be contraindications. Some drugs can only be given parenterally (IV); they are not good for outpatient use. In order to minimize resistance, you’d like a drug with long half like, kills bacteria quickly that you use for a short period of time. The Z pack was revolutionary because it was only five days. It used to be ten days for antibiotics. Azithromycin for respiratory infection is a five-day treatment. Some drugs are a one-day treatment. Bactericidal versus bacteriostatic has been mentioned. Some antibiotics kill by concentration, so the higher the concentration in the body, the greater the killing. Others kill by time; the greater length of time above the MIC, the better they kill, but it doesn’t increase with higher concentrations. 27: Already talked about. 28: In many cases you have to give multiple drugs together. You open the door for toxicities and interactions, but sometimes you don’t know what you’re treating or you have more than one type of infection at the same time. In TB, you have to use more than one drug to prevent resistance. In some cases, like the trimethrim and the sulfamethoxazole you can get synergy. There are risks if you do this. If you mix things together, you are likely to make people sick, you can get a super infection that has come out because it’s resistant to both of them and treatment is usually more expensive. You can also get antagonism. When people were first learning about antibiotics and someone had S. pneumoniaea meningitis they would get penicillin, which kills streptococcus by inhibiting cell wall formation. It makes sense to add tetracycline to the treatment that blocks protein synthesis. That should kill the bacteria faster. The problem is that tetracycline is a static antibiotic, it doesn’t kill the bacteria but its stops them from dividing. If they are not dividing, penicillin can’t kill them. That’s an antagonistic effect. If you’re going to mix antibiotics, you mix cidal with cidal. Penicillin with aminoglycoside works well together, because aminoglycosides are also cidal; they inhibit growth and kill bacteria. Static and cidal together is usually not a good combination. 29: There are many cases to give prophylaxis, that is, give antibiotics to prevent infection rather than treat. Dentists always give antibiotics to prevent endocarditis following dental work, if the patient has a history of heart disease or murmur. There are ADA guidelines for standard care. Like the people who cared for the patient in the ER with meningococcal meningitis are taking antibiotics to prevent infection. People with AIDS get antibiotics to prevent opportunistic infections. It sometimes causes problems and resistant organisms. It’s common practice for people who get repeat urinary tract infections to get suppressive antibiotics, which can cause resistant bacteria to infect Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Sara McGowan pg. 4 anyway. It’s a standard of care with operations in the GI tract to give antibiotics intraoperatively to prevent infection. 30: We use lots of antibiotics. The most common reason that antibiotics are given in the USA is for ear infections in kids. Ear infections in kids are getting more common: 8-10 million Rx per year. Parents put a lot of pressure on the pediatrician to give antibiotics. So, drug resistance is becoming a problem. 31: Penicillin came out around the time of WWII. Penicillin was the only antibiotic at the time and it was used to treat everything and resistance came along, so antibiotic resistance has been around since the dawn of antibiotics. When penicillin was introduced in 1943, all of S. aureus was susceptible to it and within 2 years it was 90% resistant; it made beta-lactamase. 32: There is selective pressure from antibiotic use. Selective pressure is the environmental conditions that enhance the ability of bacteria to develop resistance and proliferate. You can have spontaneous mutation that naturally occurs to make bacterial resistance or there can be acquisition of new DNA from a plasmid, transposon, bacteriophage or conjugation. Bacteria exchange genetic information and part of that can be genes that encode antibiotic resistance. Organisms with mutations in genes probably would not survive if it were not environmental conditions that encouraged their emergence. Resistant bacteria usually aren’t more virulent and don’t grow as fast or colonize as well. But the fact is that they can live when the susceptible bacteria can’t and we select for them when we kill off everything else. 33: Where do we get antibiotic resistant bacteria? This diagram shows the different ways. There are the day cares, people going back and forth from hospitals and nursing homes. Poor infection controlled practices ease the spread of infections. There is a very low threshold for giving people antibiotics. Third world countries you don’t need a prescription to get antibiotics. You can buy them at the store and take them like you want. For example, someone comes from Mexico to have coronary artery bypass and they bring resistant organisms with them to the hospital and leave them behind. We put antibiotics in animal food, which makes the bacteria immune to the antibiotics and we get bacteria from contaminated animal food. 34: There are a lot of reasons we’re seeing more of this in the hospital. People are sicker than ever. Unless you are really bad off, you don’t get to stay in the hospital, so you’re sick and less able to fight infection. There are a lot of immunocompromised patients. There are a lot of devices put into people and allow bacteria to get into their bodies easier. It’s difficult to police people with contagious diseases and isolate them. Prophylaxis is given unnecessarily. For example, a surgeon was giving vancomycin to every patient before heart surgery and they stayed on it for their stay in the hospital. He was breeding vancomycin-resistant bacteria in these people. 35: Why do some bugs get resistant and others don’t? When penicillin came out, staph was susceptible and was resistant within 2 years. S. pyogenes has been around for the same length of time and is 100% susceptible to penicillin still. It’s because of the genetic makeup of the bacteria. Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Sara McGowan pg. 5 There are a lot of things that favor resistance. Think of three organisms: S. aureus, Enterococcus, P. aeruginosa. They are three organisms that are resistant to a lot of antibiotics and they share these factors in common: they are intrinsically resistant to a lot of antibiotics already, they readily exchange genetic information with other bacteria, they readily survive in adverse environmental conditions, they easily colonize, infect and transmit infections and they can be present in the body without you knowing that they are there. Those are the ingredients of successful bacteria that become resistant. 36: What does it mean? People stay in the hospital longer or unnecessarily. More people die from infection. People get the wrong treatment if the doctors don’t know they have resistant bacteria in their hospital or community. You have to use more expensive and toxic drugs because the cheaper less toxic ones don’t’ work. You have to do more lab tests on the patients to monitor safety because you use toxic drugs. It means the spread of bacteria in the hospital that there’s no treatment for. Once they are in the hospital they never go away. 37: It’s important to remember that it doesn’t make the organism more virulent, it’s just harder to treat. 38: There are two kinds of resistance: innate and acquired. We don’t worry about the innate. Innate resistance is the example of vancomycim that works on gram-positive but not gram-negative bacteria. Mycoplasmas are innately resistant to beta-lactams because they don’t’ have a cell wall; there’s nothing for beta-lactam to inhibit. Chlamydia are innately resistant to beta-lactams because they only work on extracellular bacteria, they don’t penetrate host cells. The innate or primary resistances have always been there and they always will be. We are worried about the acquired resistance. That’s what we have some means of influencing. 39: This reviews the different ways that bacteria pick up resistance genes. There are plasmids and transposons that bring in new genes. Transformation is the uptake of free DNA from the environment that may contain resistance genes. Bacteriophage are viruses that can enter with resistance genes. It’s the acquired resistance that you worry about. There are also mutations, which is the changing of genetic information to allow resistance. 40: S. pneumoniae, the most common cause of otitis media and community acquired pneumonias, was universally susceptible to penicillin for many years. In the past 10 years, we’re seeing resistance because of clonal spread. In 1978, a strain of penicillin resistant S. pneumoniae was identified. It probably got resistant from transformation from a viridans strep. This bug has spread all over the world. If you look at the strains of S. pneumo in the US that are penicillin resistant, most of them are one of 9 or 10 different clonal groups. It’s driven by selective pressure. When you get infected by this organism, you’re not getting a plasmid bringing anything in or a mutation, you’re picking up a bug that’s already resistant and there’s only about a dozen different strains spreading around the country. Just like the hospital with MRSA, there are a handful of strains that go from patient to patient. It’s the same strains that cause the same infections; it’s the same bug that we can never get rid of. It’s important to understand that this is a clonal spread of just a few strains that are everywhere and are spread from person to person. Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Sara McGowan pg. 6 41: This is an example of this. Enterococcus is a big problem in the hospital. There is vancomycin resistant Enterococcus. These are pulsed field gel electrophoresis. This is how we type bacteria. These are 14 patients at UAB hospital that were admitted in 1997, 1998 and 1999. They all got a vancomycin resistant Enterococcus while they were at the hospital. From the DNA bands, broken up by restriction enzymes, you see that everyone is identical. Every one of theses patients had exactly the same strain of bacteria over a three year period of hospitalization in different parts of the hospital. 42: What’s going on in the bacteria, how are they developing resistance? There are multiple mechanisms of resistance. Some bacteria have several different mechanisms of resistance that are going on at the same time. There are sometimes multiple mechanisms of resistance to the same drug, but just like there are a limited number of ways an antibiotic can inhibit bacteria there’s also a limited number of ways bacteria can develop resistance. On way is the inactivation by enzymes; this is betalactamase. There are other enzymes that bacteria can produce to break down other antibiotics, but this is the best known one. Break down the antibiotic before it can get into the bacteria. Another way is metabolic bypass. Trimethrim and sulfamethoxazole inhibits folic acid synthesis in bacteria. The resistant bacteria figured out another way to get folic acid that doesn’t use the intermediate that the sulfonamide inhibits. There can be decreased permeability. The bacteria have genes that synthesize proteins or other components of the envelope that prevent the drug from getting in. They may have a gene that encodes for an efflux pump that binds the antibiotic and it goes in the cell and it pumps it back out. Erythromicin resistance works like that. The second most important mechanism of resistance is altered target. Fluoroquinolones inhibits DNA gyrase, but if there’s a mutation in the DNA gyrase, the binding site of the quinolone is not recognized so it doesn’t work anymore. An altered penicillin binding protein is what happened with MRSA. The penicillin binding protein is mutated and it doesn’t bind the beta-lactams. Most resistance can be classifies in one of those mechanisms. 43: Two mechanisms of beta-lactam resistance. Regular staph is resistant because of beta-lactamase that breaks down the beta-lactams. MRSA is resistant because it has a different penicillin binding protein that the beta-lactam can’t bind to. 44: Quinolone resistance by efflux pumps and mutations in the binding sites of the enzymes. 45: Many macrolide resistance mechanisms. Esterases break down macrolides. There can be efflux and altered binding sites. In S. pneumoniae, some of the macrolide resistant strains have methylated their ribosome. A gene encodes a methylase and the methyl group binds to the ribosomes and the antibiotic can’t get in. 46: Already talked about Antimicrobial Chemotherapy II Sara McGowan pg. 7 47: This is important for dentists and optometrists because you may be the first line in the healthcare system that someone may come to. Anyone that you see that has a large abscess or lesion anywhere on their body, it’s very likely to be MRSA because MRSA is no longer just a problem in the hospital. This is important because the treatment is different from what many primary care physicians are used to treating. They would normally treat with a macrolide or a beta-lactam, but they don’t work. You usually have to use more aggressive treatment. Clindamycin and sulfonamides usually will work. Draining the abscess is important. We now see most staph are methicillin resistant. It complicates treatment and is very easily spread and now these community-acquired staph are getting into the hospital. We have to use vancomycin on severe infections. 48: This is over the last 10 years at UAB. It’s gone from less than 30% to about 60% and 5 out of every 1000 people admitted to the hospital have an MRSA infection. This is important because Medicare and insurance companies say they are no longer going to pay for infections and complications that people get while they are in the hospital. So, hospitals have to work harder to prevent infections because they are note getting reimbursed. 49: Another big problem (numerically not as big a problem as MRSA) is extended spectrum betalactamase producing gram-negative bacteria. These bacteria produce beta-lactamases that have mutated so that even the beta-lactamase stable drugs like cephalosporins will no longer work. This is mainly in E. coli and Klebsiella. Now we have to use more expensive drugs like carbapenems to treat these infections. In the laboratory it’s hard to find resistance as quick as possible. The FDA just approved a new PCR test to identify MRSA faster. Normally, you take the patients blood and culture it and look for bacterial growth, do a gram stain and plate the specimen. Now, if you have a gram-positive organism growing, a PCR test can be done right then and determine if it’s MRSA. Results are 24 hours sooner. The machine is one hundred thousand dollars and it’s $50 per test, so is it worth it? They are using it at the VA and screening every patient for MRSA with a nasal swab and PCR. Results are given in 45 minutes and if they have MRSA they are isolated. The federal government thinks it’s worth it because one MRSA infections costs about 35 thousand dollars to treat, so you don’t have to prevent that many before you’ve paid for it. Especially since you can’t get reimbursed for it anymore and patients are suing hospitals for infections they get. 50: What can we do for drug resistance? Educate doctors that you don’t give antibiotics for viruses and patients not to expect them, so you limit unnecessary antibiotics. Give the right dose and take it for as long as you’re supposed to. Don’t give prophylaxis when it’s not necessary. Try to target the most likely bug with the right drug and once you find out the bug that’s in your patient, change the treatment to match the bug. The CDC has guidelines about antibiotic use that physicians and healthcare providers should follow.