Title: Antimicrobial Resistance Where Do We Stand?
1Antimicrobial ResistanceWhere Do We Stand?
- Hannah R Palmer, PharmD, BCPS
- Infectious Diseases Clinical Coordinator
- St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital
- Houston, TX
2I have no conflicts of interest in relation to
this program
Disclosures
3Objectives
- Become familiar with current challenges in
infectious diseases pharmacotherapy - Become familiar with the changing trends in
resistance rates to antimicrobials - Understand the goals of antimicrobial stewardship
programs - Understand the role pharmacists can play in
optimizing the use of antimicrobials
4- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vQKaTlqOQTnw
5Significance of infectious diseases
- 1 cause of mortality worldwide
- 26 of worldwide mortality in 2003
- 120 billion spent annually in the U.S. on
infectious diseases medical care - 3rd most common reason for US hospital admissions
www.nih.gov www.who.gov
6Mortality due to infectious diseases
www.cdc.gov
7Defining Antimicrobial Resistance
- Acquired ability of a pathogen to withstand an
antibiotic that kills off its sensitive
counterparts - Arises from
- Random mutations
- Horizontal gene transfer
- Exposure to antibiotics
- Replication
www.cdc.gov
8The struggle against antibiotic resistance is a
war we will never win. The strength of trillions
upon trillions of microorganisms, combined with
the ancient force of evolution by constant,
unrelenting variation, will inevitably overpower
our drugs - American Academy of Microbiology
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10Challenges
- Hospital
- 50 75 of patients who present to the ER
receive antimicrobials - Up to 99 of these may be inappropriate
- St. Lukes 71 of patients admitted gt 48hrs
receive antibiotics (2008) - Lack of new antibiotics in the pipeline
Am J Med 2006119S53-61 JAMA 1997278875 Br Med
J 19973151211 Arch Intern Med 2003163601
11Number of new antibiotics approved by the FDA
Clin Infect Dis 2009 48112
12- Enterococcus faecium
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Acinetobacter baumanii
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Enterobacter spp.
Clin Infect Dis 2009 48112
13Challenges
- Community
- 75 of pts with ARTIs receive antibiotics
- Only 1/5th may require therapy
- Over 38 million prescriptions annually for ARTIs
alone - 12 million of these unnecessary
- Increasing resistance with most commonly
prescribed antibiotics to most common pathogens
Am J Med 2006119S53-61 JAMA 1997278875 Br Med
J 19973151211 Arch Intern Med 2003163601
14Challenges
15Antibiotic prescriptions during ARTI visits
Grijalva cg, et al JAMA 2009302(7)758
16Antibiotic Prescription Rates for Acute
Respiratory Tract Infections in US Ambulatory
Settings
Grijalva cg, et al JAMA 2009302(7)758
17Prescribing habits for acute otitis media among
children 1998 - 2004
Broad spectrum Amoxicillin/clavulanate Macrolides
Cephalosporins Quinolones
Coco AS. BMC Pediatr. 2009 Jun 24941
18Changing Habits Antibiotic Prescriptions during
ARTI visits
? 620!
? 540!
Grijalva cg, et al JAMA 2009302(7)758
19Resistance to respiratory tract bacteria in
respect to previous antibiotic prescribing
BMJ 20103402096
20Streptococcus pneumoniae Resistance
Rates of high-level penicillin resistance (MIC 2
mg/mL) 19862001 respiratory tractinfection
seasons
Karchmer AW. Clin Infect Dis 2004 39S14250
21Influence of penicillin resistance
Karchmer AW. Clin Infect Dis 2004 39S14250
22Levofloxacin for CAP
- Remains Level I recommendation
- Evidence from well-conducted, randomized
controlled trials - Should be used with caution when Pseudomonas
aeruginosa a concern - ? hospital resistance (SLEH ICUs 56 resistant)
- Resistance
- S. pneumoniae
- Increases with PCN resistance
- H. influenzae remains rare
- Atypical bacteria rare
- Moxifloxacin resistance - lower?
- In one study, 13.3 levo R vs. 8.9 moxi
Mandell LA et al. Clin Infect Dis 200744S27 Ho
PL, et al. JAC. 200148659
23Levofloxacin use and outpatient E. coli UTI
resistance versus time
Johnson L, et al. Am J Med 2008121876
24Urinary isolates in the ED St. Lukes
E.coli (n123) Enterococcus (n71) Klebsiella (n30) Pseudomonas (n17) Proteus (n16)
Ampicillin 80 (65) 11 (15) NA NA NA
Levofloxacin 47 (38) NA 6 (20) 13 (76) 5 (31)
Ciprofloxacin 47 (38) NA 6 (20) 13 (76) 7 (44)
Cotrimoxazole 46 (37) NA 5 (17) NA 8 (50)
Nitrofurantoin 12 (10) 9 (13) 23 (77) NA 16 (100)
Over half of these patients required follow up
with an intervention, switching the original
antibiotic prescribed
Covey R, et al. 2009, Unpublished data
25Correlation of levofloxacin resistance and
alternative agents among E. coli UTIs
Clin Infect Dis 2010 51(3)280285
26Fosfomycin The Not-So-New, New Kid on the Block
- Phosphonic acid derivative
- FDA approved in 1996 for uncomplicated UTIs
- Only available as oral sachet in U.S.
- Available in IV formulation in Europe
- Retains excellent activity against urinary
pathogens (so far) even among MDR pathogens - Use is increasing!
Monurol (fosfomycin) Package Insert 2007.
Forest Pharmaceuticals, St. Louis, MO
27Fosfomycin (Monurol)
Class Phosphonic acid inhibitor bactericidal
Activity Most aerobic Gram-positive, Gram-negative pathogens
Penetration Excellent into kidneys/bladder/urine Cmax urine gt 1000 mg/mL (gt128 mg/mL at 48hrs)
Side effects GI diarrhea (10), nausea (5)
Availability Oral 3g sachet (US)
Dose 3g sachet x 1 uncomplicated UTIs 3g sachet qod x 3 doses MDR urinary pathogens
Cost 50/sachet
Drug Interactions Metoclopramide (? fosfomycin concentrations)
Int J Antimicrob Agents 200934206-515 Monurol
(fosfomycin) Package Insert 2007. Forest
Pharmaceuticals, St. Louis, MO
28Fofsomycin versus Comparators
Comparative agent Study population Outcome
Amoxicillin Chemotherapy 1990aa 3619 single doses of fosfo and amox Eradication, recurrence, re-infection no difference persistence less in F group
Amox-clav Chemotherapy 1990 3624-26 single dose of fosfo, mult doses amox/clav No difference in efficacy nor side effects
Nitrofurantoin Infection 1990 18S94-S97 Pharm World Sci 1993 15257 Clin Ther 1999 21(11)1864-1872 Single dose fosfo vs. 7d nitro at multiple different (RCT) No differences in efficacy higher relapse in nitro group
Oflox/norflox Chemotherapy 1990 3646-49 Infection 1990b 18S70-S76 Single dose fosfo vs. differing doses FQs No difference in efficacy higher rate of SEs in F group
TMP-SMX Infection 1990 18S70-S76 Single dose fosfo vs. differing doses/days No differences in efficacy diarrhea higher in F group
29St. Lukes ED isolates fosfomycin susceptibility
Pathogen (n) No. of pathogens susceptible
E. coli 24 100
Enterococcus spp. 9 78 (2 VRE INT)
Staphylococcus spp 4 100
Klebsiella pneumoniae 3 100
Proteus spp. 2 100
Streptococcus spp 2 100
Enterobacter cloaecae 1 100
Citrobacter koseri 1 100
Pseudomonas aeruginosa 1 100
Morganella spp. 1 0
Chabria et al. 2010, Unpublished data
30Whats new with the flu?
hwww.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/
31New CDC recommendations Antivirals
- Confirmed or suspected influenza PLUS
- Severe, complicated, or progressive illness
AND/OR - Require hospitalization AND/OR
- Outpatients with underlying medical conditions
AND/OR - No known risk factors for severe illness if
treatment can be initiated within 48 hours of
illness onset AND/OR - Based on clinical judgment
www.cdc.gov
32Antiviral ResistanceAdamantadines
- Agents
- Amantadine (Symmetrel, generic)
- Rimantidine (Flumadine, generic)
- Resistance
- Influenza B inherently resistant
- Influenza A resistance
- 1995 0.8
- 2004 12.3
- 2005 96
- No longer recommended
www.cdc.gov J Inf Dis 2007 196 249-57
33Antiviral resistanceNeuraminidase inhibitors
- Available agents
- Oseltamivir (Tamiflu) oral only
- Zanamavir (Relenza) inhaler only
- Peramivir (Phase III studies) IV
- Oseltamivir resistance
- H274Y mutation seen in 2010 seasonal H1N1 and
avian H5N1 viruses - Through June 2010, 300 oseltamivir-resistant
novel H1N1 viruses detected worldwide - Remain drugs of choice for Influenza
www.cdc.gov J Inf Dis 2007 196 249-57
34Clostridium-difficile associated diarrhea
NAP1/ribotype 027
Arch Surg 2007142624-631
35Clostridium-difficile associated disease
treatment timeline
New epidemic strain of C. dif described
(NAP1/027)
SHEA CDAD position paper published
Prospective, randomized trial metro vs. vanc
PO Vancomycin FDA approved for CDAD
New IDSA/SHEA guidelines
C.dif described
1935
1980
2010
1995
1983
2000
2007
First randomized, prospective, double-blinded,
placebo-controlled trial comparing vancomycin and
metronidazole
36C. difficile-associated diarrhea
A Comparison of Vancomycin and Metronidazole for
the Treatment of Clostridium difficile-Associated
Diarrhea, Stratified by Disease SeverityFred A.
Zar, Srinivasa R. Bakkanagari, K.M. L. S. T.
Moorthi, and Melinda B. DavisUniversity of
Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, and Saint Francis
Hospital, Evanston, Illinois
Severe CDAD gt 2 points Severe CDAD gt 2 points
1 point 2 points
Age gt 60 years ICU
Tmax gt 38.3C albumin lt 2.5 mg/dL WBC gt 15,000 cells/mm3 Endoscopic evidence of pseudomembraneous colitis
Clin Infec Dis 200745302-7
37Rate of cure by disease severity and treatment
.006
Clin Infec Dis 200745302-7
38Changing paradigm in C. difficile St. Lukes
specific data
144 Evaluable patients with 1st or 2nd episode
Pre-implementation
Mild-moderate disease 85 (59)
Severe Disease 59 (41)
metronidazole 77 (91)
vancomycin 8 (9)
metronidazole 51 (86)
vancomycin 8 (14)
82 Evaluable patients with 1st or 2nd episode of
C. diff Post-implementation
Mild-moderate disease 47 (57)
Severe Disease 35 (43)
metronidazole 30 (64)
vancomycin 17 (36)
metronidazole 7 (20)
vancomycin 28 (80)
39Antibiotic Use A balancing act
Avoid unnecessary Antimicrobial Use
Appropriate Adequate Initial Antimicrobial
Treatment
? mortality
? drug resistance
40Antimicrobial Stewardship
- Limit inappropriate use of antimicrobials
- Optimize selection, dose, route, and duration of
antimicrobial therapy to maximize clinical cure
or prevention of infection - Limit emergence of resistance, adverse drug
events, and cost
41Antimicrobial Stewardship Programs (ASPs)
- Collaboration of a multi-disciplinary team
- ID physician
- Clinical pharmacist
- Clinical microbiologist
- Information system specialist
- Infection control professional/epidemiologist
- Support from hospital administration
- St. Lukes Center for Antimicrobial Stewardship
and Epidemiology (CASE)
42What can we do?
Medical Executive Committee
Quality of Care Committee
Pharmacy, Nutrition, and Therapeutics Committee
CASE Advisory Board CAS Medical Director
Infectious Disease Pharmacists Infection Control
Practitioner Clinical Microbiologist Nursing Infor
mation Management Medical Staff Members from, but
not limited to Infectious Disease Internal
Medicine Emergency Medicine General
Surgery Cardiovascular Surgery Orthopedics Patholo
gy
CASE Team Infectious Disease Pharmacists Infectiou
s Disease Physician Pharmacy ID Fellow Dir.
Infection Control
CASE Research Collaborative St. Lukes UH College
of Pharmacy
CASE Medical Director
43CASE initiatives
- Bug-drug mismatch lists
- Bug-drug
- Gram-positive Gram negative
- Daptomycin-linezolid
- Sterile site list review
- Daptomycin policy
- Clostridium-difficile treatment policy
- Pharmacokinetic service/consults
- 24-hour pager
44ASP opportunities
- Medical Staff Education
- Prospective audit of antimicrobial use with
feedback - Antimicrobial Restrictions and Controls
- Antimicrobial Support Teams
- Pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics
- Therapeutic Substitutions
- Dose/drug optimization
- Automatic Stop Orders
- Antibiotic Order Forms
- Cost savings
- Interventional Pharmacists
- Reduction of Pharmaceutical Promotion?
- Rotational or Cyclic Antimicrobial Use?
- Promotion of Combination Therapy?
- Etc
45How ASPs can alter prescribing habitsAntibiotics
for HAP
Hanzelka K, et al. Ann Pharmacother (submitted)
46Impact of an ASP on Sepsis
Pre Post p value
Adequacy of empiric antibiotics 68 85 lt 0.05
28-day mortality 32 24 NS
Chest 2006130787-93
47Impact on outcomes
Clin Infect Dis 200133289
48www.IDsociety.org
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50Antimicrobial ResistanceWhere Do We Stand?
- Hannah R Palmer, PharmD, BCPS
- Infectious Diseases Clinical Coordinator
- St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital
- Houston, TX