Title: RATIONAL USE OF ANTIBIOTICS
1RATIONAL USE OF ANTIBIOTICS
- R. Anita Indriyanti
- Pharmacological Department
- Bandung Islamic University
-
2References
- 1. Lippincotts Illustrated Reviews
- Pharmacology, 2nd ed
- (Chapter 28)
- 2. Buku Pedoman Kuliah Farmakoklinik
- Farmakologi III
- Jilid 1 edisi 2
- Prof. DR. Herri S. Sastramihardja, dr., SpFK
3- A medical doctor has to know the definite
clinical pharmacology of antibiotics, how to
select and use them rationally. - 30 of inpatient individuals has been given
antibiotics
4Resistance
Definition
Ideal antibiotics
AB
Spectra
In vitro
Classification
Chemical structures
Mechanism of action
5DEFINITION
- AB are chemical substances obtained from
microbes/microorganisms (bacteria, fungi,
actinomycetes) that able to inhibit or eradicate
the growth of the other microorganisms. - Antimicrobial all antiinfections
- semisynthetic
- synthetic
- nature ? antibiotics
6IDEAL ANTIBIOTICS CRITERIA
- Most selective, most effective to infectied
microorganisms - More bactericidal effect in the site of action
- Antibacterial effect is not interfered by body
fluid, exudate, plasma protein or enzymes and
persist for a long duration in the blood - Minimal toxicity
- Resistance develops slowly
- Given by any route
- Reachable cost
7In vitro
- 1. Primary bacteriostatic effect ? inhibit the
- growth of m.o
- Sulfonamide, tetrac, chloramph, erythromycin
(low concentration), lincomycin, clindamycin and
fusidic acid - 2. Primary Bactericidal Effects ? Eradicate/kill
- Pen, cef, aminoglic, erythromycin (high
concentration), cotrimazol. Rifampisin and
vankomycin. - Those classification is not absolute but relative
8SPECTRUM OF AB EFFECTS
- 1. Narrow spectrum antibiotics (NSAB)
- Main effect sensitive for gram positive
bacteria and bacil - e.g. Pen. G, Pen. Resistent penicillinase
semisynthetics, bacitracin, macrolides,
lincomycin, vancomycin - 2. Broad Spectrum Antibiotics (BSAB)
- Main effect sensitive for gram positive and
gram negative bacteriae - e.g. Pen. (ampicillin and amoxycillin),
cefalosporins, tetracyclins, chloramphenicol,
trimetroprim and sulfonamides
9- Widely used of BSAB ? an umbrella in treating the
unidentified bacterial infection - ? resistance ?
- RESISTANCE and
- MECHANISM OF ACTION recall in
- microbiology
10SIDE EFFECTS
- ALLERGIC REACTION
- TOXIC REACTION
- Direct effects in unproper dose e.g.
aminoglycosides - SUPERINFECTION new infection caused by pathogen
microbes or fungi during AB therapy to primary
infection. - SUPERINFECTION frequent
- potentially harmed risk
- Causa Enterobacter, Pseudomonas, Candida and
other fungi. Those agents are difficult to be
eradicated by today available antibiotics.
11AVOIDING SUPERINFECTION
- Stop the giving antibiotics
- Treatment according to bacterial identification
and sensitivity test - The specimen was taken from feces and secretion
of upper respiratory tract, to be analyzed
12RATIONAL THERAPY OF ANTIBIOTICS
HOST
ANTIBIOTICS
- PHARMACOKINETICS
- PHARMACODINAMICS
13HOST ASPECTS BIOCHEMICAL PHYSIOLOGICAL
PATHOLOGICAL CONDITIONS
- CHARACTERISTIC
- OF ANTIBIOTICS
14DEFINITION OF RATIONAL USE OF ANTIBIOTICS (WHO)
- PROPER INDICATION
- PROPER DRUG
- PROPER DOSAGE
- SE MONITORING
15- RATIONAL USE OF AB
- PROCEDURES
- STEPS TO PROCEDURES
Define the patient problems specify the
therapeutic objectives Verify the suitable of
your personal treatment Start the treatment Give
information, instruction and warning Monitoring
and stop treatment
Clinical diagnosis Identification, sensitivity
test of bacteria Pharmacodynamics Pharmacokinetics
Host factors
16RATIONAL USE OF ANTIBIOTICS
PREVENTION IN HIGH SUSCEPTIBILITY TO GET INFECTION
- THERAPY ERADICATING
- M.O
-
- DEFINITIVE THERAPY
- EMPIRIC THERAPY
PROPHYLAXIS IN NON SURGICAL CONDITIONS IN
SURGICAL CONDITIONS
17DEFINITIVE THERAPY
- It is the most effective, least toxicity and the
narrowest selection - Based on
- identification of bacteria
- sensitivity test
- interpretation in the content of the
- overall clinical picture
- the AB of choice directed to M.O
18EMPIRIC AB THERAPY
- Giving AB directly without identification and
sensitivity test of bacteria, but obtaining
specimen for lab. analysis before giving AB. - Empiric AB therapy based on local
epidemiological data - What is the pathogen M.O potentially infected
- AB given based on susceptibility pattern
- Initiated after obtaining specimen
- Started with AM combination or single BSAB
19SELECTING AB IN EMPIRIC THERAPY
- The site of infection
- There are barriers inside the body
- brain, prostate, bone
- Other foreign bodies
- local factors
- Patients history
20PATIENT HISTORY
- Age ? baby, child, adult, old age !
- Immune system ? immunocompromised! Who?
- Renal dysfunction ? accumulation! How ?
- Hepatic dysfunction ?metabolism! How ?
- Genetic factors ? G6-PD. Attention,
contraindication ! - Pregnancy ? teratogenic, embryogenic
- Lactation ? vulnerable AB for new born
21INDICATION IN EMPIRIC THERAPY
- Infection of unknown origin
- Neutropenic patients
- Characteristic symptoms of meningitis
- MISUSE of AB
- Treatment of untreatable infection
- Therapy of fever of unknown origin
- Improper dosage
- Inappropiate reliance on AB alone
- Lack of adequate bacterial information
22 STRATEGIC FOR EMPIRIC THERAPY
- Empiric therapy
- Coverage by a combination of antibiotics such
as - Clindamycin plus gentamycin
- Effective against gram positive, gram
negatives and anaerobes - Or
- A single broad spectrum AB
- Such as imipenem/cilastatin
-
- Receive culture report
- With sensitivities
-
- If gram positive only if mixed
- ? ?
- Continue gram pos. continue therapy
- Coverage, discontinue as initiated
- Gram neg. and anaerobic
- Coverage
-
-
Chapter 28, Fig.28.1 Lippincotts ed.2nd
23- PROPHYLAXIS
- SURGICAL
- Contaminated op.
- Clean contaminated op
- Selected op ? may suffer
- post-op.infection
- NON SURGICAL
- PREVENT
- Streptococcal infection in patient with a history
of RHD - In pre-dental extraction who have implanted
prosthetic devices - TB/meningitis in close contact individual
- Protect fetus from infection in HIV-infected
pregnant woman
24- Common Error in AB prophylaxis
- Selection of wrong AB
- The initial therapy too early or too late
- Excessive duration
- Inappropriate use of BSAB
25- DISADVANTAGES TO PROPHYLACTIC AB
- Toxic/allergic reaction
- Superinfection with more resistant flora
- The infection may be temporarily masked
- Ecology of the hospital flora may be altered
26- COMMON CAUSES OF FAILURE OF AB THERAPY
- DRUGS ? inappropriate drug
- ? inadequate dose
- ? improper route of administration
- ? accelerated inactivation
- ? poor penetration
- HOST ? poor host defence
- ? undrained pus
- ? retained infected foreign bodies
- ? crusta/necrotic tissues
27- Cont.
- - Pathogen
- ? drug resistence
- ? superinfection
- ? dual infection initially
- - Laboratory
- ? erroneous report of susceptible
- pathogen
28- AB COMBINATION
- Synergisme (3)
- 1) Blockade of sequential steps in
- a metabolit sequence
- - Trimethoprim - sulfamethoxazol
- 2) Inhibition of enzymatic inactivation
- - Amoxycillin - clavulanat
- 3) Enhancement - Aminoglycosides
- - Penicillins - Aminoglycosides
29- Antagonism (2)
- 1. Inhibition of cidal activity by static agent
- - Tetracyclines Betalactam AB
- 2. Induction of enzymatic inactivation
- - Ampicillin - Piperacillin
30- CLINICAL INDICATION OF AB COMBINATION
- ? Mixed infection
- ? Synergism effect
- ? Risk of developing resistant
- organism lt
- ? Increase AB coverage or
- ? Infection of unknown origin
31- DISADVANTAGES OF AB COMBINATION
- - Increase risk of toxicity
- - Increase MDR-pathogens
- - Increase cost
- - Increase antagonism (bacteriostatic
- bactericide)
32Thank You