Title: Review of Antibiotics Part 1
1Review of AntibioticsPart 1
- Gary R. Skankey, MD, FACP, FIDSA
- University of Nevada
- School of Medicine
2Penicillin - Spectrum
- Lancfield group streptococci
- Alpha streptococcus, except pneumococcus
- Enterococcus
- Oral anaerobes - peptostreptococcus, etc.
- Treponema pallidum and other spirochetes
- Actinomyces
3Penicillin - Mechanism of Action
- Penicillin is a beta-lactam antibiotic
- Binds to penicillin binding proteins on bacterial
cell surface - Inhibits cell wall synthesis
4Penicillin and Pneumococcus
- About 30 resistant, 15 intermediately sensitive
- Altered PBPs makes penicillin and sometimes
cephalosporins ineffective - Plasmid mediated,possibly transferred from other
species - Plasmid also caries resistance genes to other
antibiotics macrolides, tetracyclines, sulfa
drugs
5Penicillin - Neisseria
- Increasing resistance due to beta-lactamase
production in N. gonnorrhea and N. meningitidis - Unless organism proven sensitive, do not use
penicillin empirically for meningitis or sexually
transmitted disease.
6Penicillin - Dosing
- Mild infections - cellulitis, pharyngitis, etc.,
- Penicillin V 500mg PO QID
- Penicillin G 1 - 2 million units IV Q4hrs
- Serious infections - meningitis, endocarditis
- Penicillin G 4 million units IV Q4hrs.
- Syphillis
- latent 2.4 million units benzathine penicillin
IM Q week x 3 weeks - neurosyphillis 4 million units IV Q4hrs x 10
days - Adjust dose for renal failure
7Penicillin - Clinical Uses
- Syphillis
- S. pyogenes pharyngitis
- Actinomyces infections
- Subacute bacterial endocarditis due to
pcn-sensitive alpha-streptococci - Pencillin-sensitive pneumococcal and
meningococcal meningitis
8Ampicillin - Spectrum
- Same gram positives as penicillin
- Enteric gram negatives (if sensitive)
- E. coli
- Proteus
- Salmonella
- Shigella
- Respiratory tract gram negatives
- Haemophillus influenzae, Moraxella morganii
- Pasteurella moltocida
- Listeria monocytogenes
9Ampicillin and Enteroccocus
- Weak affinity for penicillin-binding proteins
bacterostatic - Must add aminoglycoside (gentamicin) to create
bacterocidal regimen - E. faecalis usually sensitive
- E. faecium usually resistant
10Ampicillin and Haemophillus
- About 40 of H. influenzae is resistant
- Produces beta-lactamase
- Resistance overcome by use of beta-lactamase
inhibitor
11Ampicillin and Salmonella
- Increasing resistance in salmonella makes it
unreliable against typhoid fever. - About 40 resistance
12Ampicillin - Dosing
- Mild infections - cystitis, pharyngitis
- Amoxacillin 500 mg PO TID
- Moderate infections - pyelonephritis, cellulitis,
osteomyelitis - Ampicillin 1 - 2 gm IV Q6hrs
- Severe infections - meningitis, endocarditis
- Ampicillin 2 gm IV Q4hrs
- Adjust dose for renal failure
13Ampicillin - Clinical Uses
- Amoxacillin for ampicillin-sensitive UTIs
- In combo with gentamicin for enterococcal
endocarditis - Listeria monocytogenes infections
- meningitis
- bacteremia
- Cat bite cellulitis clindamycin
- Penicillin-sensitive alpha-streptococcal SBE
14S. aureus - beta lactamase
- 1st described in 1945
- Confers resistance to penicillin and ampicillin
- Coded for on plasmid
- Plasmids also carry resistance to other
antibiotics - Usually inducible
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16Beta-lactamase-Resistant Penicillins
- Methicillin
- high risk of interstitial nephritis, no longer on
market - Nafcillin
- Oxacillin
- Dicloxacillin (PO)
17Nafcillin/Oxacillin - Spectrum
- Oxacillin-sensitive S. aureas
- Oxacillin-sensitive coagulase negative staph
- Okay against Lancfield group streptococci and
viridans streptococci, but there are better drugs
for these - No gram negative or anaerobic coverage to speak of
18Nafcillin/Oxacillin - Pearls
- Most potent anti-staph drug made
- Excellent CNS penetration (staph meningitis)
- No dose adjustment for renal failure
- predominantly hepatic excretion
- Watch out for
- leukopenia
- thrombocytopenia
- interstitial nephritis
19Nafcillin/Oxacillin - Clinical Uses
- All MSSA infections
- Endocarditis
- Meningitis
- Osteomyelitis
- Pneumonia
- Abscesses
- Cellulitis
20Anti-pseudomonal Penicillins
- Carbenicillin
- no longer on the market
- Ticarcillin
- only on market as Timentin
- Piperacillin
- hard to get as piperacillin alone, usually only
available as Zosyn
21Piperacillin - Spectrum
- Pseudomonas
- Enterobacteriacae group
- Beta-lactamase negative Moraxella, Neisseria,
Haemophillus - Same gram positive spectrum as penicillin
- Same anaerobic spectrum as penicillin
22Piperacillin dosing
- Mild to moderate gram negative (non-pseudomonal)
or streptococcal infections - 3 gm IV Q6 hrs.
- Moderate to severe pseudomonal infections
- 3 gm IV Q4 hrs.
- Or Piperacillin/tazobactam 3.375 gm IV Q4 hrs
23Beta-lactam/Beta-lactamase Inhibitor Combinations
- Unasyn
- ampicillin/sulbactam
- Timentin
- ticarcillin/clavulenate
- Zosyn
- piperacillin/tazobactam
24Unasyn - Spectrum
- Streptococci
- MSSA
- All anaerobes
- Beta-lactamase-producing gram negatives
- Enterococcus - bacterostatic
- Penicillin-sensitive pneumococcus
25Unasyn - Dosing
- Mild infections
- 1.5 gm IV Q6 hrs.
- Moderate to severe infections
- 3.0 gm IV Q6 hrs.
- Adjust dose for renal failure
26Unasyn - Clinical Uses
- Head and neck infections
- Peritonsilar abscess
- Sinusitis
- Mastoiditis
- Mandibular osteomyelitis
- Actinomyocosis
- Infected Bite Wounds
- Human
- Dog
- Cat
- Diabetic Foot infections, including osteomyelitis
- Culture negative endocarditis
27Zosyn - Spectrum
- Streptococci
- MSSA
- All anaerobes
- Beta-lactamase-producing gram negatives
- Enterococcus - bacterostatic
- Piperacillin-sensitive pseudomonas
- 18 gm per 24 hrs
28Zosyn - Dosing
- Usual dosing
- 3.375 gm IV Q6 hrs.
- Fulminant sepsis
- 4.5 gm IV Q6 hrs.
- Pseudomonas sepsis
- 3.375 gm IV Q4 hrs
- Adjust dose for renal failure
29Zosyn - Clinical Uses
- Intra-abdominal infections
- Nosocomial aspiration pneumonia
- Diabetic foot infections when Pseudomonas might
be involved - Pulmonary infections in patients with
bronchiectasis or cystic fibrosis
30Cephalosporins
- Inhibit cell wall synthesis - peptidoglycan
- Side effects are mild
- rash
- eosinophilia
- leukopenia
- leukocytosis
- biliary sludge (ceftriaxone)
- thromobocytosis
31First Generation Cephalosporins
- Cefazolin - Ancef IV
- Cephalothin - Keflin IV
- Cephalexin - Keflex PO
- Cephradine - Velosef PO
- Cefadroxil - Duricef PO
32Ancef - Spectrum
- Staphylococcus
- Streptococcus
- E. coli, Proteus, Klebsiella if sensitive
33Ancef - Clinical Uses
- Any MSSA infection
- Cellulitis (2 gm IV Q8 hrs.)
- Osteomyelitis
- Endocarditis
- Pneumonia
- Not for meningitis
- Any Lancfield or viridans group streptococcal
infections - Endocarditis
- Cellulitis
- Sensitive enteric gram negative infections
- UTI
34Second Generation Cephalosporins
- Cefuroxime IV - Zinacef
- Cefotetan IV - Cefotan
- Cefoxitin IV - Mefoxin
- Cefuroxime axitil PO - Ceftin
- Cefaclor PO - Ceclor
- Cefprozil PO - Cefzil
35Cefuroxime/Cefotetan - Spectrum
- H. influenzae
- Anaerobes
- Staphylococcus
- Streptococcus
- Enterobacteriaceae
361st vs 2nd Generation
- 1ST GENERATION
- H. influenzae -
- S. aureus
- Streptococcus
- Moraxella -
- Gram negatives
- Anaerobes -
- 2ND GENERATION
- H. influenzae
- S. aureus
- Streptococcus
- Moraxella
- Gram negatives
- Anaerobes
37Cefuroxime - Clinical Uses
- Upper respiratory tract infections
- sinusitis
- peritonsilar abscess
- otitis media
- etc.,
- Lower respiratory tract infections
- pneumonia
- acute bacterial bronchitis
- Urinary tract infection
38Cefotetan/Cefoxitin - Clinical Uses
- Intra-abdominal infections
- diverticulitis
- intra-abdominal abscess
- peritonitis
- cholycystitis
- etc.,
- Osteomyelitis
- Diabetic foot infections
39Third Generation Cephalosporins
- Cefotaxime IV - Claforan
- Ceftriaxone IV - Rocephin
- Ceftazidime IV - Fortaz
- Cefixime PO - Suprax
- Cefpodoxime PO - Vantin
40Claforan/Rocephin - Spectrum
- Streptococci
- Viridans, Lancfield groups, pneumococcus
- S. aureus
- Enteric gram negatives
- H. influenzae
- Neisseria meningitidis and gonnorrhea
- some anaerobes
41Fortaz - Spectrum
- All gram negatives, including Pseudomonas
- Weak if any gram positive coverage
- No anaerobic coverage
42Claforan/Rocephin -Clinical Uses
- Meningitis - 2gm Q4 hrs/2gm Q12 hrs
- Community-acquired pneumonia
- UTI
- Upper Respiratory Tract Infections
- sinusitis
- peritonsilar abscess
- Intra-abdominal infections
43Fortaz - Clinical Uses
- Hospital-acquired pneumonia
- Hospital-acquired UTI
- Post-op meningitis
- Intra-abdominal infections
- Pulmonary infections in patients with cystic
fibrosis or bronchiectasis - Nail-puncture cellulitis/osteomyelitis
44Fourth Generation Cephalosporin
45ZWITTERIONIC CHEMICAL STRUCTURE
OCH3
N
H N
H
H
S
N
CI-
O
H2O
N
N
S
O
HCI H2N
CH3
COOH
cefepime
46CEFEPIME GASTROINTESTINAL PENETRATION
- Cefepime pharmacokinetics and effects on fecal
flora were assessed in 8 healthy volunteers who
received 1 g q12h IV for 8 days - Elimination was almost entirely renal, with no
evidence of accumulation - Minimal changes in intestinal flora (16 genera
analyzed)
Bächer K et al. J Antimicrob Chemother.
199230365-375.
47GRAM-NEGATIVE IN VITROACTIVITY OF CEFEPIME
- Acinetobacter calcoaceticus subsp lwoffi
- Citrobacter diversus
- Citrobacter freundii
- Enterobacter spp
- Enterobacter agglomerans
- Escherichia coli
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Hafnia alvei
- Klebsiella oxytoca
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Moraxella catarrhalis
- Morganella morganii
- Proteus mirabilis
- Proteus vulgaris
- Providencia rettgeri
- Providencia stuartii
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Serratia marcescens
In vitro activity does not necessarily correlate
with clinical results. Cefepime has been shown
to be active against susceptible strains of these
pathogens in clinical infections. Including
?-lactamaseproducing strains.
48GRAM-POSITIVE IN VITROACTIVITY OF CEFEPIME
- Staphylococcus aureus (methicillin-susceptible
only) - Staphylococcus epidermidis (methicillin-susceptibl
e only) - Staphylococcus saprophyticus
- Streptococcus agalactiae (Lancefield group B
streptococci) - Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Streptococcus pyogenes (Lancefield group A
streptococci) - Viridans group streptococci
In vitro activity does not necessarily correlate
with clinical results. Cefepime has been shown
to be active against susceptible strains of these
pathogens in clinical infections.
49Maxipime - Clinical Uses
- Hospital-acquired pneumonia
- Sepsis in prolonged hospitalization
- Intra-abdominal infections
50Cephalosporins
51Carbipenems
- Imipenem - Primaxin
- Meropenem Merem
- Ertapenem Invanz
- Doripenem - Dorimax
- Inhibit cell wall synthesis
52Primaxin/Merem/Dorimax - Antibacterial
Spectrum
- Covers everything but
- MRSA
- Stenotrophomonas
- B. cepacia
- pcn-resistant enterococcus (only bacterostatic
vs.pcn.sensitive strains) - C. difficile
- some pcn-resistant pneumococcus
53Imipenem - Primaxin Toxicity
- Rash - 50 cross-allergenicity with penicillin
- Seizures
- renal failure (high serum levels)
- intracranial pathology (lowers seizure threshold)
- Nausea/vomiting
- Leukocytosis
- Thrombocytopenia
54Merem - Toxicity
- Same as Primaxin, except
- Minimal seizure risk
55Ertapenem spectrum
- All gram positives (except MRSA, and
vanco-resistant Enterococcus faecium) - All gram negatives (except pseudomonas)
- All anaerobes
56Vancomycin
57Vancomycin
- Class - glycopeptide
- Inhibits cell wall synthesis, and RNA synthesis
(double action) - Binds to d-ananyl-d-alanine portion of cell wall
precursor
58Vancomycin - Toxicity
- Red mans syndrome
- histamine release during too rapid infusion
- Ototoxicity
- commonly irreversible
- associated with sustained high doses (peaks gt30)
- Nephrotoxicity
- very uncommon now
- ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity amplified in
presence of aminoglycoside or high-ceiling
diuretics
59Vancomycin - Dosing
- Generally 1 gm IV Q12hrs
- Peak and trough with third or fourth dose
- Target peak 30 - 40 ug/dl
- Target trough 10 - 15 ug/dl (mild to moderate
infections) - Target trough 15 20 ug/dl (more severe
infections or those with penetration issues) - If trough high --gt lengthen interval
- If peak high or low --gt adjust dose
60Vancomycin - Dosing
61Vancomycin - Dosing Random Levels
- Use only when patients serum creatinine is
unstable - Write order to give dose as soon as random level
result known - Vancomycin 1 gm IV Q24 hrs prn random level lt10
or lt12 - Never order when patient receiving regularly
dosed Vancomycin
62Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole
- Each component inhibits sequential steps of
tetrahydrofolic acid synthesis thus act
synergistically - High oral bioavailablilty
63Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole
- Toxicity
- 75 adverse reactions involve skin
- urticarial rash most common
- Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, exfoliative dermatitis,
toxic epidermal necrolysis are rare - allergic cholestatic hepatitis
- reversible drop in creatinine clearance in
patients with normal renal function - irreversable renal failure in patients with renal
disease
64Uses of Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole
- Useful alone or in combo with Rifampin in mild
MRSA infections - UTI, Bronchitis, cellulitis
- Switch to PO TMP/SMX after a course of IV
vancomycin - Use in combination with vancomycin and rifampin
in serious MRSA infections - Drug of choice for Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
- Drug of choice for Pneumocystis
65Rifampin
- Inhibits DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
- Concentration in lung exceeds serum levels
- PO IV
- Synergy demonstrated with cefazolin vs MSSA and
with Vancomycin vs MRSA - Never use as monotherapy, resistance develops
rapidly
66Rifampin - Toxicity
- Chemical hepatitis
- GI intolerance
- Increase serum creatinine
67Rifampin - Drug-Drug Interactions
- Increases hepatic metabolism of many drugs thus
reducing their serum levels - coumadin
- theophyline
- fluconazole, itraconazole, ketoconazole
- digoxin
- cyclosporin
- propranolol
- sulfonylureas
- prednisone
- dilantin
68Synercid - quinupristin
69Synercid - dalfopristin
70Synercid
- Class Streptogramin
- Quinupristin and dalfopristin act synergistically
- Mechanism of action bind to 50s ribosome to
inhibit protein synthesis
71Synercid - Antibacterial Spectrum
- MSSA - bacterocidal
- MRSA - bacterocidal
- Vancomycin-resistant E. faecium - bacterostatic
- unreliable vs E. faecalis
- Coag. neg. staph
- Corynebacterium jeikeium
- S. agalactiae
- S. pneumoniae (including pcn-resistant strains)
- S. pyogenes
72Synercid - Administration
- IV form only
- 7.5 mg/kg IV Q8hrs
- No adjustment for renal failure
73Synercid - Drug interactions
- Inhibits cytochrome P450 3A4, thus increases
levels of - cyclosporin
- Benzodiazepines
- Ca channel blockers
- antihistamines
- Steroids
- Statins
74Synercid - Side effects
- Infusion site pain and inflammation
- Myalgias
- Arthralgias
- Nausea
75Zyvox (linezolid)
76Zyvox - (linezolid)
- Class - oxazolidinone
- Acts on 50S ribosome
- 100 oral bioavailability
- Bacterostatic
- 65 non-renal excretion - no dosing adjustment
for renal failure - Dose 600mg IV or PO Q12hrs
- Minimal drug-drug interactions
77Zyvox - Spectrum of Activity
- FDA indication
- Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA and MRSA )
- Enterococcus faecalis (including VRE)
- Enterococcus faecium (including VRE)
- Streptococcus pneumoniae ( pcn.-resistant and
pcn.-sensitive ) - Streptococcus pyogenes
- Streptococcus agalactiae (gp B strep)
- Coagulase negative staph (including MR-CNS)
- Viridans group strep
- Pasteurella multocida
78Zyvox - Toxicity
- Thrombocytopenia - about 10
- Diarrhea - 8.3
- Headache - 6.5
- Nausea - 6.2
- Vomiting - 3.7
- Insomnia - 2.5
- Constipation - 2.2
- Rash - 2.0
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