Glycopeptides, Oxazolidinones, Streptogramins and
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Transcript Glycopeptides, Oxazolidinones, Streptogramins and
Glycopeptides, Oxazolidinones,
Streptogramins and
Aminoglycosides
Hail M. Al-Abdely, MD
Consultant, Adult Infectious Diseases
King Faisal Specialist Hospital and
Research Center
AIM OF THIS PRESENTATION
Practical use of these antibiotics
No sophisticated stuff!!
Driving forces behind Drug
development
Good market
Common NOT rare (pseudomonas versus
Burkhelderia)
Common in the rich (HIV versus leishmania)
Difficult to treat
Emerging
new organisms (Fungi in immune
suppressed patients)
Resistance in old organisms (several bacteria)
Better kinetics and safety (Ampho B versus Azoles)
Basic Human need
Glycopeptides
Glycopeptides
Vancomycin
Licensed
throughout the world
Teicoplanin
Not
FDA approved
Vancomycin
Vancomycin is obtained from Nocardia
orientalis
Vancomycin has been used clinically since
1956
Recent improvements in manufacturing
have increased its purity and reduced its
toxicity
Pure gram positive spectrum
Vancomycin
Vancomycin is bactericidal (except enterococcus)
binds to the precursor units of bacterial cell walls
(peptidoglycans), inhibiting their synthesis.
In addition, RNA synthesis is inhibited
Work systemically, topically and locally
Systemic gram-positive infections
C. difficile colitis
Shunt infections/ventriculitis
When do you need Vancomycin
Nafcillin
Vancomycin
When do you need Vancomycin
Resistance to better drugs
MRSA, Coagulase-negative Staphylococi
Amp-resistant enterococcus,
Some corynebacteria and bacillus
Allergy to better drugs
Toxicity of better drugs
Empiric therapy for suspected resistance
Special situations
Dosing intervals in OPD setting
Dialysis
Disadvantages of Vancomycin
Parentral
Poor penetration to CSF
Lower efficacy than penicillins
Mild to moderate toxicity
Resistance
VRSA
VRE
% Vancomycin-Resistant
Enterococci
Nosocomial Enterococci Reported as
Resistant to Vancomycin, by Year
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99
*National Nosocomial Infections
Surveillance (NNIS) System
Data, 1989-1999.
Year
Vancomycin-resistant enterococci
Non-Intensive Care Unit Patients
30
25
20
15
10
5
00
20
99
19
98
19
97
19
96
19
95
19
94
19
93
19
92
19
91
19
90
19
89
0
19
Percent Resistance
Intensive Care Unit Patients
Source: National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance (NNIS) System
Due you need to measure levels
No except
Pre-existing
renal impairment
Rising creatinine
Co-administered nephrotoxic drugs
Assure therapeutic levels (serious infections)
Measure only trough levels (pre-dose)
Dialysis patients: pre-dialysis level
STOP
weekly vancomycin dosing in HD
patients
Teicoplanin
Similar to vancomycin in spectrum
Once daily and I.M dosing
May retain activity against vancomycinresistant Staphylococcus aureus
More active against enterococcus than
vancomycin
When you may need Teicoplanin
Dosing advantages for out-patient
treatment
VRSA
Some strains of VRE
Lipopepetides
Daptomycin
Lipopepetides
Daptomycin
Approval by FDA September 2003 for treatment of
complicated skin and soft tissue infections
Mechanism of action: disruption of the plasma
membrane function.
Bacteriocidal against multidrug-resistant, grampositive bacteria
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Vancomycin-resistant enterococci
Glycopeptide-intermediate and -resistant S. aureus.
Penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
Daptomycin
Fast bacteriocidal action
Concentration-dependent killing
Post antibiotic effect
Once daily dosing
Excreted mainly through kidneys
Streptogramins
quinupristin
dalfopristin
Streptogramins
Isolated from Streptomyces pristinaespiralis
Used as oral agents in France since the 1960s
Dalfopristin and quinupristin are the only parentral
agents
The combination product (Synercid®) has up to 16
times the activity of each agent alone
Streptogramins inhibit bacterial protein synthesis by
irreversibly blocking ribosome functioning
Each component is bacteriostatic but the combination is
bacteriocidal
The main reason for development and approval is VRE
Synercid™
Combination of dalfopristin and
quinupristin
administered by intravenous infusion
Metabolism is not dependent on
cytochrome P450. But a major inhibitor of
the activity of cytochrome P450 3A4
isoenzyme
Elimination through fecal excretion
When you may ask for Synercid™
Serious VRE infection
MRSA infection for which you can not use
vancomycin +/- linezolid
Safety of Synercid™
Safe with no major toxicities
Thrombophlebitis, GI
Mostly given through a CVL
Oxazolidinones
Oxazolidinones
Synthetic antibiotics
One approved (Linezolid), some are still
investigational (Eperezolid, furazolidone)
Linezolid
Linezolid
Approved for use in adults April 2000 and for
pediatrics December 2002
Works against aerobic gram-positive organisms
Linezolid inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by
interfering with translation
binds to a site on the bacterial 23S ribosomal
RNA of the 50S subunit; this action prevents the
formation of a functional 70S initiation complex,
an essential step in the bacterial translation
process
Linezolid
Linezolid is administered by intravenous infusion
or orally
oral bioavailability for linezolid is 100%.
have significant penetration into bone, fat,
muscle, and hematoma fluid
metabolism is non-enzymatic and does not
involve CYP450
does not inhibit or induce CYP450 isoenzymes.
Non-renal clearance accounts for 65% of an
administered linezolid dosage (no adjustment in
renal failure)
Indications of Linezolid
Mainly developed because of VRE
first new antibiotic approved to target
methicillin-resistant staphylococci in 35
years
Resistance to Linezolid
linezolid-resistant VRE organisms were
being discovered in various institutions
Also some MRSA
Safety of Linezolid
linezolid is a non-selective inhibitor of
monoamine oxidase (MAO)
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Members of the Group
Streptomycin
Neomycin
Kanamycin
Gentamycin
Tobramycin
Amikacin
Arbikacin
Dibekacin
Netilmicin
Sisomycin
Aminosidine
Paromomycin
Spectinomycin
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Mechanism of Action
interfere with protein synthesis
active transport mechanism
Mode of Action
bactericidal
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Antibacterial activity
Spectrum:
aerobic gram (-) bacteria
mycobacteria
Brucella
gram (+) bacteria
Characteristics
Highly polar cations limited distribution
Low activity in low PH
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Pharmacodynamics
Concentration
dependent killing
Postantibiotic effect
Once
daily dosing
Similar efficacy
Low nephrotoxicity
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
very poorly absorbed
parenteral
Distribution negligible binding to plasma proteins
excluded from most cells
VD = ECF
in renal cortex / inner ear
Excretion
GF
AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Mechanisms of Resistance
inactivation by microbial enzymes
Plasmid-mediated
Acetylases, adnylases, phosphorylases
Amikacin is the most stable
impaired intracellular transport / failure of
permeation
altered ribosomal binding site / low affinity of the
drug
Enterococcus: In cases of high level resistance to
gentamicin, you can only use streptomycin
PROBLEMS OF AMINOGLYCOSIDES
Adverse Effects
Ototoxicity
Nephrotoxicity
Monitoring
Neurotoxicity
Distribution
Combined with other
agents
Resistance Alternatives
Monitoring levels of Aminoglycosides
Trough levels correlate with nephrotoxicity
and a lesser extent ototoxicity
High peak levels in elderly can be
associated with nephrotoxicity and
ototoxicity
If dosing once daily, check trough levels.
They should be non-detectable
Close monitoring is essential in renal
impairment
Final Statement
Microbes are going to stay with us no mater
what we do to them
Those who are going to stay with us are those
that are most resilient (i.e. resistant) ones that
can adapt to all of our weapons
So, let’s try to keep facing the less resilient ones;
those that we can treat effectively
We do that by a “wise” management of the battle
with microbes through judicious use of
antimicrobials.