Title: Glycopeptides, Oxazolidinones, Streptogramins and Aminoglycosides
1Glycopeptides, Oxazolidinones, Streptogramins and
Aminoglycosides
- Hail M. Al-Abdely, MD
- Consultant, Adult Infectious Diseases
- King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research
Center
2AIM OF THIS PRESENTATION
- Practical use of these antibiotics
No sophisticated stuff!!
3Driving 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
4Glycopeptides
5Glycopeptides
- Vancomycin
- Licensed throughout the world
- Teicoplanin
- Not FDA approved
6Vancomycin
- 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
7Vancomycin
- 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
8When do you need Vancomycin
Nafcillin
Vancomycin
9When 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
10Disadvantages of Vancomycin
- Parentral
- Poor penetration to CSF
- Lower efficacy than penicillins
- Mild to moderate toxicity
- Resistance
- VRSA
- VRE
11(No Transcript)
12Nosocomial Enterococci Reported as Resistant to
Vancomycin, by Year
National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance
(NNIS) System Data, 1989-1999.
13Vancomycin-resistant enterococci
Non-Intensive Care Unit Patients Intensive Care
Unit Patients
Source National Nosocomial Infections
Surveillance (NNIS) System
14Due 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
15Teicoplanin
- Similar to vancomycin in spectrum
- Once daily and I.M dosing
- May retain activity against vancomycin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus - More active against enterococcus than vancomycin
16When you may need Teicoplanin
- Dosing advantages for out-patient treatment
- VRSA
- Some strains of VRE
17Lipopepetides
18Daptomycin
19Lipopepetides
- 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,
gram-positive bacteria - Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
- Vancomycin-resistant enterococci
- Glycopeptide-intermediate and -resistant S.
aureus. - Penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae
20Daptomycin
- Fast bacteriocidal action
- Concentration-dependent killing
- Post antibiotic effect
- Once daily dosing
- Excreted mainly through kidneys
21Streptogramins
22quinupristin
dalfopristin
23Streptogramins
- 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
24Synercid
- 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
25When you may ask for Synercid
- Serious VRE infection
- MRSA infection for which you can not use
vancomycin /- linezolid
26Safety of Synercid
- Safe with no major toxicities
- Thrombophlebitis, GI
- Mostly given through a CVL
27Oxazolidinones
28Oxazolidinones
- Synthetic antibiotics
- One approved (Linezolid), some are still
investigational (Eperezolid, furazolidone)
29Linezolid
30Linezolid
- 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
31Linezolid
- 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)
32Indications of Linezolid
- Mainly developed because of VRE
- first new antibiotic approved to target
methicillin-resistant staphylococci in 35 years
33Resistance to Linezolid
- linezolid-resistant VRE organisms were being
discovered in various institutions - Also some MRSA
34Safety of Linezolid
- linezolid is a non-selective inhibitor of
monoamine oxidase (MAO)
35AMINOGLYCOSIDES
36AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- Members of the Group
-
- Streptomycin Dibekacin
- Neomycin Netilmicin
- Kanamycin Sisomycin
- Gentamycin Aminosidine
- Tobramycin Paromomycin
- Amikacin Spectinomycin
- Arbikacin
37AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- Mechanism of Action
- interfere with protein synthesis
- active transport mechanism
- Mode of Action
- bactericidal
38AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- Antibacterial activity
- Spectrum
- aerobic gram (-) bacteria
- mycobacteria
- Brucella
- gram () bacteria
- Characteristics
- Highly polar cations ?? limited distribution
- Low activity in low PH
-
-
39AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- Pharmacodynamics
- Concentration dependent killing
- Postantibiotic effect
- Once daily dosing
- Similar efficacy
- Low nephrotoxicity
40AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- 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
41AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- 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
42PROBLEMS OF AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- Adverse Effects
- Ototoxicity
- Nephrotoxicity ? Monitoring
- Neurotoxicity
- Distribution ? Combined with other agents
- Resistance ? Alternatives
43Monitoring 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
44Final 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, lets 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.
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