Title: Bugs and Drugs: Solving the Antibiotic Dilemma
1Bugs and DrugsSolving the Antibiotic Dilemma
- Catherine Davis, Pharm.D.
- Exempla Saint Joseph Hospital
2Presentation Overview
- Briefly review sensitivity testing
- Review advantages/disadvantages of commonly
prescribed antibiotics - Provide recommendations for appropriate
indications for various antibiotics
3Drug Expenditures - 2001
4Challenges in Antimicrobial Selection
- Changing resistance patterns
- New antibiotics from which to select
- National Backorders!!!
- Piperacillin/tazobactam
- Cefotaxime
- Cefotetan
- Penicillin
- Cefazolin
5Sensitivity TestingMinimum Inhibitory
Concentration
- MIC - concentration at which the growth of the
organism is inhibited - breakpoint is determined based on serum/tissue
levels of respective agent - optimum therapy is for peak to achieve gt 8 times
the MIC - CANNOT compare actual s between different
classes of antibiotics
6MIC Interpretation
- If the sensitivity report indicates an MIC less
than a specific concentration (i.e. lt8),
antibiotic in question should achieve adequate
concentrations to inhibit growth - Review all agents listed as susceptible and
select the most narrow spectrum/cost effective
agent that will cover the organism
7Antibiotic SelectionThe Right Agent for the
Right Patient
- Infecting organism
- Susceptibility data/local resistance patterns
- Site of infection
- Duration of hospitalization/prior antibiotics
- Allergy history
- Age
- Renal/Hepatic status
- Immunologic status
- Pregnancy
8Antibiotic Classes
- Beta-Lactams
- penicillins
- cephalosporins
- carbapenems
- monobactams
- Quinolones
- Aminoglycosides
- Glycopeptides
- Macrolides
- Miscellaneous
- VRE Antibiotics
9PenicillinsPen VK, Ampicillin, Amoxicillin
- Advantages
- good oral absorption
- good gram coverage
- Enterococcus
- Streptococcus
- inexpensive
- Disadvantages
- frequent dosing
- increasing resistance
- gram negatives
- Strep pneumo
- inactivates aminoglycosides
10Penicillin, Ampicillin, AmoxicillinIndications
for Use
- Strep infections known to be PCN sensitive
- Enterococcus infections (dose 2 Gms q4h for
ampicillin gentamicin synergy dosed) - Necrotizing fasciitis - PCN 24 MU/day Clinda
600mg q8h - Renal adjust for CrCl lt30 mL/min
11AntiStaphylococcal PCNsNafcillin, Oxacillin,
Dicloxacillin
- Advantages
- excellent Staph aureus coverage
- best treatment option for serious MSSA infections
- narrow spectrum (no gram negative coverage)
- Diclox for Staph
- Disadvantages
- frequent dosing (2 Gms q4-6h)
- increasing incidence of MRSA (35 at ESJH)
- no Enterococcus coverage
12Beta-Lactamase Inhibitors
- Amoxicillin/Clavulanate (Augmentin)
- Ampicillin/Sulbactam (Unasyn)
- Piperacillin/Tazobactam (Zosyn)
- Ticarcillin/Clavulanate (Timentin)
13Beta-Lactamase InhibitorsAugmentin, Unasyn,
Timentin, Zosyn
- Advantages
- stabilization against beta-lactamases
- excellent broad coverage, including anaerobes
- Zosyn gt Timentin for Pseudomonas
- Enterococcus coverage (not Timentin)
- Disadvantages
- GI intolerance (Augmentin)
- Superinfections
- High cost
- frequent dosing
- E. coli resistance increasing with Unasyn
14Unasyn, Zosyn IndicationsUnasyn
Zosyn
- Intraabdominal prophylaxis gentamicin for E.
coli - Mixed infection including Enterococcus
- 1.5-3 Gms q6h
- Severe mixed infection
- workhorse ICU drug
- Ventilator associated pneumonia /- AG
- Severe diabetic foot infection suspected of
involving mixed flora - Narrow as soon as possible
- 3.375 Gms q6h
15CephalosporinsGeneral Similarities
- excellent penetration to tissues, including BBB
(ceftriaxone, cefotaxime) - coverage based on generation
- NO ENTEROCOCCUS ACTIVITY
- wide therapeutic index
- wide range of uses
- historically comprises one of the largest
portions of antibiotic budget
16CephalosporinsFirst Generations
- most active against gram positives
- cellulitis
- good coverage against selected gram negatives (E.
coli, Proteus, Klebsiella) - Good option for pyelonephritis
- excellent for surgical prophylaxis (cefazolin)
- Cefazolin (Ancef) 1 Gm q8h
- Cephalexin (Keflex) higher MICs to Staph
17CephalosporinsSecond Generations
- less gram positive coverage
- additional gram negative coverage, respiratory
pathogens (Hemophilus, Moraxella) - cefuroxime
(Zinacef, Ceftin) - anaerobes (anti-anaerobic agents - cefotetan,
cefoxitin, cefmetazole) - 75 anaerobic coverage
- intraabdominal, GYN prophylaxis
18Cefotetan (Cefotan) , Cefoxitin
(Mefoxin)Indications for Use
- Surgical Prophylaxis for intraabdominal
infections (Cefotan 1 Gm q12h) - Intraabdominal infections from community (no
Enterococcus coverage) - Diabetic foot infections (E. coli, anaerobes)
19CephalosporinsThird Generations
- additional gram negative (nosocomial) coverage,
some gram positive, anaerobic coverage - Pseudomonas coverage (ceftazidime, cefepime)
- excellent BBB penetration (ceftriaxone,
cefotaxime and others) - Good coverage against Strep and Staph (except
ceftazidime)
20Third Generation CephsIndication for Use
- Cefepime (Maxipime), ceftazidime (Fortaz)
- Neutropenic Fever (cefepime 2 Gms q12h)
- Pseudomonas infections
- Cefotaxime (Claforan), ceftriaxone (Rocephin)
- Meningitis (cefotaxime 2 Gms q8h)
- CAP (cefotaxime 1 Gm q8-12h)
- Endocarditis with HACEK organisms or PCN
intermediate Strep (cefotaxime 2 Gms q8h)
21Oral Cephalosporins
- 1st Generation cephalexin (Keflex)
- 500 mg TID-QID
- UTI
- 2nd Generation None Formulary
- Ceftin, Cefzil, Lorabid
- 3rd Generation cefpodoxime (Vantin)
- Oral transition for CAP, STDs
- 100 - 200 mg BID
22Carbapenems
- Imipenem/Cilastatin (Primaxin)
- excellent broad spectrum coverage but increasing
Pseudomonas resistance - reserve for resistant organisms, seriously ill
patients or PCN allergy - potential for seizures - adjust for renal status
- beta-lactamase inducer
- 500 mg q6-8h
- Meropenem (Merrem)
- less seizure risk
- fewer indications
23Carbapenems Ertapenem (Invanz)
- Recently approved agent for community infections
- Intraabdominal or complicated skin and skin
structure infections - No Enterococcus or Pseudomonas coverage
- 1 Gm IV q24h
- Adjust for CrCl lt30 mL/min (500 mg qd)
24MonobactamAztreonam (Azactam)
- ONLY gram-negative coverage
- moderate Pseudomonas activity
- safe to use in PCN allergic patients
- excellent safety profile
- 1 -2 Gms q8h
- Adjust for CrCl lt30 mL/min
25QuinolonesAnother Class with Generations
- excellent tissue penetration
- excellent bioavailabilty
- convenient dosing
- some resistance to Pseudomonas developing
- potential for overuse due to many factors
- avoid with sucralfate, separate from antacids
26QuinolonesFirst Generations
- Norfloxacin, Ciprofloxacin
- primarily gram negative, including Pseudomonas
- some atypical
- poor gram positive, no anaerobic
- Cipro - interactions with theophylline, warfarin,
phenytoin
27QuinolonesSecond Generations
- Levofloxacin, Lomefloxacin, Gatifloxacin,
Moxifloxacin - additional gram positive and atypical coverage,
including Strep pneumoniae - moderate gram negative
- excellent bioavailability
- Levofloxacin - warfarin interactions
- Moxifloxacin - no Pseudomonas coverage, good
anaerobic coverage (KP formulary)
28Levofloxacin (Levaquin)Indications for Use
- CAP, especially patients with comorbidities
- Doxycycline for pts with no comorbidities
- Complicated UTI infections (resistant to first
generation cephs, sulfa) - Gram negative infections in patient allergic to
PCN (/- AG or anaerobic coverage) - Not preferred for cellulitis (750 mg dose)
- 500 mg IV/PO qd (adjust for CrCl lt 50)
- Add metronidazole for anaerobes
29AminoglycosidesGentamicin, Tobramycin, Amikacin
- excellent gram negative coverage
- amikacin gt tobramycin gt gentamicin
- synergistic activity
- low levels for gram positive synergy (1 mg/kg)
- therapeutic levels for gram negative synergy
- (5-7mg/kg once daily)
- NO Anaerobes - requires 02 to get into cell
- dosing strategies dependent on indication
- toxicities well defined
30GlycopeptidesVancomycin
- excellent gram positive
- reserve for resistant organisms, PCN/Ceph
allergic patients - VRE
- GISA??
- nephrotoxicity no longer a real concern
- only monitor troughs except for select
situations - oral ONLY for Flagyl failures
31Macrolideserythro-, clarithro-, azithromycin
- moderate gram positives (Strep developing
resistance - now up to 35) - good atypical
- use for lower respiratory tract infections
- erythro and clarithro interactions
- theophylline, warfarin ( azithro)
- azithromycin - STD coverage (1 Gm x1)
- CAP 250 - 500 mg qd x 5-7 days
32Antianaerobic Agents
- Metronidazole (Flagyl)
- excellent anaerobic, first line C. difficile
- 500 mg q12h except C. diff and bowel preps
- half-life 8 hours
- Excellent bioavailability
- warfarin interaction, disulfiram reactions
- Clindamycin (Cleocin)
- gram positive, anaerobic (600 mg IV q8h max)
- Use with PCN for nec fasciitis (Gp A Strep)
- ? Pseudomembranous colitic
33Miscellaneous
- SMX/TMP (Septra, Bactrim)
- excellent tissue penetration, broad uses
- gram positive and easy gram negative
- warfarin interaction
- Some GI intolerance in elderly
34Antifungals Fluconazole
- Not effective against non-albicans strains
- Indications for use
- C. albicans from sterile body site
- C. albicans from multiple non-sterile sites
(urine, wound, sputum) - Prophylaxis for recurrent intraabdominal rupture
or anastomotic leak - Systemic infections 800 mg load, 400 mg qd
- UTI 100 mg qd x5 days
- Excellent bioavailability
35Antibiotic Costs
36New Agents for VRE
- Quinupristin/Dalfopristin (Synercid)
- Streptogramin antibiotics
- Effective against VREF (not E. faecalis), Staph
aureus (MRSA and MSSA) - Dosing 7.5 mg/kg q8h
- Infusion related ADRs - central line preferred
- Potential to elevate liver enzymes
- Cyt P450 3A4 interaction
- Non-Formulary
37New Agents for VRELinezolid (Zyvox)
- Oxazolidinone antibiotic
- Effective against E. faecalis E. faecium, MRSA,
MSSA, Strep pneumo - IV, PO, Suspension - 100 absorption
- 600 mg BID
- Thrombocytopenia (gt 2 weeks duration of therapy),
GI intolerance - MAOI - weak inhibitor
- Dopamine, epinephrine - adjust dose down
38Cost Comparison
39Linezolid (Zyvox)Indications for Use
- VREF
- likely will be considered preferred therapy in
place of Synercid - need to carefully evaluate for potential
colonization - MRSA Infections ONLY for Vanco intolerant
patients - after trial of continuous infusion /- Benadryl
if possible - ID Consult
40Resistance A National Concern
- Often result of inappropriate or overuse of
antibiotics - Significant financial impact on healthcare
- Selecting out multi-drug resistance
- Narrow coverage as soon as possible
- ? Rotation of preferred classes of antibiotics
- Dont treat colonizations or contaminations