Transcript Document
Seek and
Destroy:
General Principles and
Antibiotic Choices in Treating
Dental Infections
Kelly W. Jones, Pharm.D., BCPS
McLeod Family Medicine Center
[email protected]
7/18/2015
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Two types of antibiotics
Time-dependent killers
Penicillin, cephalosporin, imipenem
clindamycin, macrolides, TMP/SMX,
tetracyclines
Accumulation at the site of infection is important at
inhibiting bacterial growth
Concentration-dependent killers
Quinolones, Aminoglycosides, Metronidazole
“qAm”
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Time-dependant Killers
Cephalosporin
Macrolides
Tetracycline
Clindamycin
Penicillin
MIC
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Concentration-dependant Killers
Quinolones
Aminoglycosides
Metronidazole
MIC
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Dosing Issues
Three times a day and four times a day dosing
is a set up for adherence problems.
Use total daily dose twice a day.
Cephalexin (Keflex®)
250 mg capsule (#30 cost $14)
500 mg capsule (#30 cost $14)
750 mg capsule (#30 cost $100)
125 mg/5 ml; 250 mg/5 ml each in 100 and 200 ml
Each of these are ~$18
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For cost information: www.drugstore.com
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Dosing Issues
Three times a day and four times a day dosing
is a set up for adherence problems.
Use total daily dose twice a day.
Cephalexin (Keflex®)
250 mg capsule (#30 cost $14)
500 mg capsule (#30 cost $14)
750 mg capsule (#30 cost $100)
125 mg/5 ml; 250 mg/5 ml each in 100 and 200 ml
Each of these are ~$18
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Dosing Issues
Keflex® 750 mg is branded drug.
Why?
Has indication for BID use or as JCAHO
wants you to write: twice daily use.
Therefore write:
Cefalexin 500 mg capsules, take 2 capsules
twice daily. 1 gm twice a day!
You can do this with Penicillin
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You may be wondering?
Why can you give an antibiotic that is a
time-dependent killer less often?
Pharmacokinetic principle:
As you increase the dose and the serum
concentration, you can stay above the MIC
until the next dose - dose dependent.
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Time-dependant Killers
Cephalexin 1 gm
2nd dose
MIC
12 hours
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Dosing Issues: Concentration Killers
“qAm”
More is better!
Examples: Fluoroquinolone
Levofloxacin
250 mg (#10 cost $120)
500 mg (#10 cost $168)
750 mg (#10 cost $260)
5 day therapy for CAP
Metronidazole for trichomonas infection
2 gram single dose is better than 500 mg bid for 7 days
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Administration
IV
100% bioavailable
Best for the sickest patient, they often poorly
absorbs oral drugs
PO
Several classes of drugs have excellent
bioavailability similar to their IV dose
TMP/SMX, FQ, metronidazole
Mayo Clin Proc 1998;73:995
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Research Question of 2010
How long do we treat?
Otitis media
5 days
Uncomplicated UTI’s
3 days with all drugs
Uncomplicated pyelonephritis
7 days with FQ
Strep throat
10 days
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How long do we treat?
Prostatitis
6 weeks with TMP/SMX; 2-4 weeks FQ
CAP
7 to 14 days (14 if in hospital)
Bronchitis
0 days, Do not treat!
Treatment is recommended for smokers and
chronic lung disease patients
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Dental Infections
How long do we treat?
????
Treat as cellulitis - 7 to 10 days
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Common Oral Dental Antibiotics
Penicillin (Pen-Vee K®)
Amoxicillin (Amoxil®)
Amoxicillin/clavulanate (Augmentin®)
Clindamycin (Cleocin®)
Cephalexin (Keflex®)
What about cefdinir?
Erythromycin/Azithromycin/Clarithromycin
Metronidazole (Flagyl®)
IV
Ampicillin/Sulbactam (Unasyn®)
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How to select an
antibiotic!
CSI-like
Where is the infection?
What are the bugs?
Guess the organism based on epidemiology
research
What is the best antibiotic?
Initial antibiotic choice is always empiric
therapy
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Where is the infection?
Mouth
Reversible pulpitis
Irreversible pulpitis
Absess
Cellulitis
Pericoronitis
Periodontal Disease
Antibiotic are best utilized in situations of
regional spread
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What are the bugs?
Dominant isolates are anaerobic bacteria.
Streptococcus mutans
are thought to cause initial caries infection
Alpha-hemolytic streptococci, a.k.a.
Streptococcus viridans
Can coexhist with staph
Streptococcus anginosis
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What are the bugs?
Others
Gram +:
Peptostreptococci
Gram negative:
Bacteroides
Prevotella (Bacteroides melaninogenicus)
Porphyromonas
Fusobacterium nucleatum
Infections through the fascial planes usually are
polymicrobial (average 4-6 organisms).
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Efficacy
Bacteria associated with endodontic abscesses
reported to be susceptible to several
antibiotics (level 3 [lacking direct] evidence)
based on cultures of 98 species of bacteria aseptically
aspirated by needle from endodontic abscesses
Amoxicillin 91%
Amoxicillin/clavulanate 100%
Clindamycin 96%
Penicillin V 85%
Metronidazole 45%
Metronidazole with penicillin V 93%
Metronidazole with amoxicillin 99%
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J Endod 2003 Jan;29(1):44
Consensus Statement
no evidence to recommend one
antibiotic regimen over another
for management of systemic
complications of acute apical
abscess
Based on systematic review and metaanalysis
14 trials
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What is the best antibiotic?
Natural penicillin
Coverage
Gram +, anaerobes
But no staph
Products:
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IV - Aqueous Pen G, benzathine Pen G
PO - Pen VK, Vee Tids
Dose: 1 gram twice daily ( 2-500 mg tabs)
Children: 50 mg/kg/day divided into 2 doses
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Penicillinase-resistant penicillins
Examples:
IV - methicillin, nafcillin
PO - cloxacillin, dicloxacillin
Coverage
Gram + including staph,
anaerobes
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Methicillin-resistant Staph Aureus
95% of staph was resistant to penicillin by 1953
MRSA was first isolated in 1968
Methicillin was developed in 1960
incidence of infection
MRSA has risen from < 10% of all infecting staph
aureus infections in the hospital in 1983 to 64% in
2004 to 70% in the intensive care units in 2008
MRSA is prevalent
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MRSA
Drugs for treatment of community-acquired
MRSA
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Tetracycline 500 mg qid
Doxycycline 100 mg bid
Minocycline 100 mg bid
TMP/SMX 320 mg bid of trimethoprim (2 DS bid)
Clindamycin 300 to 450 mg tid
Levofloxacin 750 mg daily
Moxifloxacin 400 mg daily
Linezolid 600 mg bid
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MRSA
You can always add a second antibiotic:
Synergy with:
Rifampin 300 mg twice daily
$65 for 30 caps
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Practice Recommendations
JFP 2008;57(9):588-2
MRSA abscesses are best managed by incision and
drainage alone (90% cure rate vs 84% with antibiotics,
level A evidence).
If incision and drainage fail within 7 days, add an oral
antibiotic.
Eradication of MRSA from the nasal passages is not useful
in preventing the spread of the infection in communities
(level B evidence).
In one military study, 121 men with MRSA colonization
needed to be treated with nasal mupirocin to prevent one
MRSA infection (Antimicrob Agents Chemother.
2007;51:3591-8)
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Extended-spectrum penicillin
Aminopenicillins
Examples:
IV - Ampicillin
PO - Ampicillin, amoxicillin
Coverage
Gram + (no staph), enterococcus, anaerobes, basic gram
34% of Prevotella species are resistant to amoxicillin
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Amoxicillin
Availability - should be $12 or less for most
250 mg capsule
500 mg capsule
500 tablet
875 mg tablet ($27 for #30)
Chewables 125 mg, 250 mg
Suspension
250 mg/5 ml
400 mg/5 ml
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New Drug Formulation
Amoxicillin (Moxatag®)
Once-daily form, for Strep pharyngitis and
tonsillitis
Pulsys delivers stacccato pulses (3) over 6 hrs
775 mg tablet
1 immediate release, 2 delay-release
10 day course is $90
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Extended-spectrum penicillin
Antipseudomonal penicillins
Examples:
IV - ticarcillin, pipercillin
PO - carbenicillin
Coverage
Gram + (no staph), broad gram neg,
anaerobes
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Extended-spectrum penicillin
Beta-lactamase inhibitor penicillin
Examples:
IV - ticarcillin-clavulanate (Timentin®),
pipercillin-tazobactam (Zosyn®), ampicillinsulbactam (Unasyn®)
PO - Amoxicillin-clavulanate (Augmentin®)
Coverage
Gram +, broad gram -, anaerobes
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Augmentin® - now generic
Chewable 400-57mg ($60/#20)
Suspension (~$50 to $60)
250-62.5mg/5ml 75ml, 100 ml, 150 ml Bottle
600-42.9mg/5ml, 75ml Bottle
Tablets
250-125mg ($100/#20)
500-125mg ($46/#20)
875-125mg ($32/#20)
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Cephalosporins
Minimal utility for dental infections
First generation
Examples:
IV - Cefazolin (Ancef®)
PO - Cephalexin (Keflex®)
Coverage
Broad Gram +, including staph
No anaerobe coverage
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Cephalosporins
Second generation
Examples:
IV - cefuroxime (Zinacef®), cefoxitin (Mefoxin®)
PO - Cefaclor (Ceclor®), cefpodoxime proxetil,
cefuroxime axetil, cefprozil, loracarbef
Coverage
Broad gram +, basic gram Some have minimal anaerobe coverage
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Cephalosporins
Third generation
Examples:
IV - ceftriaxone, ceftizoxime, cefotaxime
PO - cefixime, ceftebutin, cefdinir (Omnicef®)
Coverage
Broad Gram +, broad gram Ceftazidime (Fortaz®) - only gram -, but includes
pseudomonas
Oral drugs loose gram + reliability
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Cephalosporins
Fourth generation
Examples:
IV - cefepime (Maxipime®)
PO - none
Coverage
Broad Gram +, broad gram -, including pseudomonas
Poor anaerobe coverage
Fifth generation cephalosporin due out soon ceftaroline
Added MRSA coverage
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Dental Principle
Cephalosporin - best for general cellulitis
PO
Cephalexin (Keflex®)
Cefdinir (Omnicef®)
300 mg capsule - $36 for #20
125 mg/5 ml, 60 ml, $48
IV or IM
Ceftriaxone (Rocephin®)
If you decide to use a cephalosporin, it is best to
add metronidazole for anaerobe coverage.
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Macrolides
Examples:
IV - azithromycin, erythromycin
PO - azithromycin, clarithromycin,
erythromycin, dirithromycin
Coverage
Broad gram +, minimal gram - (h.flu?),
atypicals
no anaerobes
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Azithromycin Review
Z-pak (generic $26)
Tri-pak ($44)
Zmax
1 gm powder for oral suspension
Suspension
100mg/5ml, 15 ml ($50 - brand name only)
250 mg/5ml, 15 ml, 22.5 ml, 30 ml - $32
600 mg tablet
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Clarithromycin (Biaxin®)
Tablets
250 mg ($100/#30)
500 mg
500 mg, 24 hr tablet ($160/#30)
Suspension
125 mg/5 ml, 50 ml, 100 ml
250 mg/5 ml, 50 ml ($40), 100 ml ($80)
New FDA alert: do not give with colchicine
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Sulfonamides
Examples: TMP/SMX
IV - trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole
PO - trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole,
erythromycin/sulfamethoxazole (Pediazole®)
Coverage
Great staph drug, alternative for strep and does NOT cover S
pyogenes (group A, beta-hemolytic) or enterococcus
Good gram - with some pseudomonal coverage
no anaerobes
Poor-man’s regimen - add metronidazole
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Clindamycin (Cleocin®)
Coverage
broad gram +, broad anaerobe
IV dose is larger than the oral dose
Great for the penicillin allergy patient
Dosing
PO
150 mg capsule (generic $25/#30)
300 mg capsule (generic $80/#30)
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You can always add…..
Metronidazole
Coverage
Broad anaerobe coverage
Dose twice daily
PO
Tablets ($12/#30)
250 mg
500 mg
750 mg ($200/#30) - 24 hour tablet
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Fluoroquinolones
First generation quinolone
Nalidixic acid (NegGram)
Second generation fluoroquinolone
IV and PO - ciprofloxacin
Others - ofloxacin, norfloxacin, lomefloxacin,
enoxacin
Coverage
Gram - only
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Fluoroquinolones
Third generation fluoroquinolone
IV and PO
Levofloxacin, {gatifloxacin}, gemifloxacin
moxifloxacin (respiratory quinolone)
Coverage
Broad gram +
Broad gram NO anaerobes
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SBE Prophylaxis - In who?
ACC/AHA Task Force Update 2008
Prosthetic cardiac valve
Previous infective endocarditis
Congenital heart disease (CHD)
Unrepaired cyanotic CHD, including palliative shunts and
conduits
Completely repaired congenital heart defect with prosthetic
material or device, whether placed by surgery or by catheter
intervention, during the first 6 months after the procedure
Prosthetic material for valve repair
Cardiac transplantation recipients who develop cardiac
valvulopathy
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J Am Coll Cardiol 2008;52(8):676-85
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SBE Prophylaxis - Dental
Procedure?
Dental procedures that involve manipulation
of the gingival tissue
Periapical region of the teeth
Perforation of the oral mucosa
No longer required for:
Routine anesthetic injections
X-ray
Bleeding from trauma to the lips or oral mucosa
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SBE Prophylaxis - With what?
Adults
amoxicillin 2 g PO 1 hour before procedure.
Children
amoxicillin 50 mg/kg
If by IV, administer ampicillin 2 g for adults and 50 mg/kg for
children within 30 minutes before the procedure.
For patients allergic to penicillin
Adult - Clindamycin 600 mg PO/IV 1 hour before the
procedure. Children -Clindamycin 20 mg/kg PO/IV.
Alternatively, azithromycin or clarithromycin 500 mg PO 1 hour
before the procedure may be administered for adults and 15
mg/kg PO may be administered for pediatric patients.
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Questions???
E-mail:
[email protected]
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