Title: Treatment of Infection
1Treatment of Infection
2Treatment of Infection How Do Antimicrobials
Work?
- Key concept
- selective toxicity
- the antimicrobial agent blocks or inhibits a
metabolic pathway in a micro-organism which is
either absent or is radically different in the
mammalian cells of the human host
3Principle of antibiotic spectrum
- Different antibiotics target different kinds of
bacteria - i.e., different spectrum of activity
- Examples
- Penicillin G ( original pen.) mainly
streptococci (narrow spectrum) - Vancomycin only Gram-positive bacteria
(intermediate spectrum) - Carbapenems many different bacteria (very broad
spectrum)
4Treatment of Infection Anti-Microbial Drug
Targets
5Antimicrobials acting on the bacterial cell wall
- Interfere with synthesis of peptidoglycan layer
in cell wall - eventually cause cell lysis
- bind to and inhibit activity of enzymes
responsible for peptidoglycan synthesis - aka penicillin-binding proteins
6Antimicrobials acting on the bacterial cell wall
- Beta-lactams Penicillins
- benzylpenicillin
- flucloxacillin
- ampicillin
- piperacillin
7Antimicrobials acting on the bacterial cell wall
- Beta-lactams Cephalosporins
- Orally active
- cephradine
- cephalexin
- Broad spectrum
- cefuroxime
- cefotaxme
- ceftriaxone
- ceftazidime
8Antimicrobials acting on the bacterial cell wall
- Unusual beta-lactams
- Carbapenems
- Imipenem, meropenem
- very wide spectrum
- Monobactams
- Aztreonam
- only Gram-negatives
- Glycopeptides
- only Gram-positives, but broad spectrum
- vancomycin
- teicoplanin
9Antimicrobials acting on nucleic acid synthesis
- Inhibitors Of Precursor Synthesis
- sulphonamides trimethoprim are synthetic,
bacteriostatic agents - used in combination in co-trimoxazole
- Sulphonamides inhibit early stages of folate
synthesis - dapsone, an anti-leprosy drug, acts this way too
- Trimethoprim inhibits final enzyme in pathway,
dihydrofolate synthetase. - pyramethamine, an anti-toxoplasma and anti-PCP
drug acts this way too
10Antimicrobials acting on nucleic acid synthesis
- Inhibitors of DNA replication
- Quinolones (e.g ciprofloacin) inhibit DNA-gyrase
- Orally active, broad spectrum
- Damage to DNA
- Metronidazole (anti-anaerobes), nitrofurantoin
(UTI) - Inhibitors of Transcription
- rifampicin (key anti-TB drug) inhibits bacterial
RNA polymerase - flucytosine is incorporated into yeast mRNA
11Antimicrobials acting on protein synthesis
- Binding to 30s Subunit
- aminoglycosides (bacteriocidal)
- streptomycin, gentamicin, amikacin.
- tetracyclines
- Binding to the 50s subunit
- chloramphenicol
- fusidic acid
- macrolides (erythromycin, clarithromycin,
azithromycin)
12Antimicrobials acting on the cell membrane
- amphotericin binds to the sterol-containing
membranes of fungi - polymyxins act like detergents and disrupt the
Gram negative outer membrane. - Not used parenterally because of toxicity to
mammalian cell membrane - fluconazole and itraconazole interfere with the
biosynthesis of sterol in fungi
13Mechanisms of resistance
- Resistance can arise from chromosomal mutations,
or from acquisition of resistance genes on mobile
genetic elements - plasmids, transposons, integrons
- Resistance determinants can spread from one
bacterial species to another, across large
taxonomic distances - Multiple resistance determinants can be carried
by the same mobile element - Tend to stack up on plasmids
14Impact of antibiotic resistance
- Infections that used to be treatable with
standard antibiotics now need revised, complex
regimens - e.g., penicillin-resistant Strep. pneumoniae now
requires broad-spectrum cephalosporin - In some instances, hardly any antibiotics left
- e.g., Multiresistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- e.g., Vancomycin-resistant Staph. aureus
- Resistance rates worldwide increasing
15Mims C et al. Medical Microbiology. 1998.
16 Mechanisms of resistance
- Enzymes modify antibiotic
- widespread, carried on mobile elements
- beta-lactamases
- chloramphenicol-modifying enzymes
- aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes
- Permeability
- antibiotic cannot penetrate or is pumped out
- chromosomal mutations leads to changes in porins
- efflux pumps widespread and mobile
17Mechanisms of resistance
- Modification or bypass of target
- by mutation or acquisition of extrinsic DNA
- S. aureus resistance to flucloxacillin
- acquires an extra PBP2 to become MRSA
- S. aureus resistance to mupirocin
- Chromosomal mutations in low-level resistance
- Plasmid-borne extra ILTS gene in high-level
resistance - Rifampicin resistance in M. tuberculosis
- Point mutations in RNA polymerase gene
18Antibiotic susceptibility testing in the
laboratory
- Bacterial cultures tested on artificial media
- Tests the ability to grow (or be killed) in the
presence of defined antibiotics - Provides guidance for ongoing therapy
- Provides resistance rates for empiric therapy
- Problems not all results correspond with
clinical success or failure
19Determination of MIC and MBC
Mims C et al. Medical Microbiology. 1998.
20Disk diffusion testing
Cohen Powderly 2004 http//www.idreference.com
/
21Questions to ask before starting antibiotics
- Does this patient actually need antibiotics?
- What is best treatment?
- What are the likely organisms?
- Where is the infection?
- How much, how often, what route, for how long?
- How much does it cost?
- Are there any problems in using antibiotics in
this patient? - Have you taken bacteriology specimens first?!
22Clinical use of antibiotics
Gillespie SH Bamford KB. 2003. Medical
microbiology infection at a glance.
23Does this patient need antibiotics?
- Is the patient even infected?
- e.g. urethral syndrome vs UTI
- Is it a viral infection?
- e.g. the common cold
- Is the infection trivial or self-limiting?
- most diarrhoea
- Are there more appropriate treatments?
- physiotherapy for bronchitis
- treatment of pus is drainage
- treatment of foreign body infection is removing
the foreign body
24Best antibiotic(s) for these organisms ?
- For some organisms sensitivities are entirely
predictable - e.g. Streptococcus pyogenes always
penicillin-sensitive - For most organisms, sensitivity tests contribute
to rational therapy - e.g. coliforms in UTI
- Knowledge of local resistance problems
contributes to choice of empirical therapy
25Best antibiotic(s) for this site of infection ?
- Depends on penetration of antibiotic into tissues
- e.g. gentamicin given iv does not enter CSF or
gut - E.g. azithromycin accumulates in cells even
though levels low in serum - Depends on mode of excretion
- e.g. amoxycillin excreted in massive amounts in
urine
26Are there any problems with this regimen in this
patient?
- Allergy
- usually only a problem with penicillins, and,
less often, with cephalosporins (10 cross
sensitivity) - Ampicillin Rash
- develops if patient has glandular fever or
lymphoma - Not related to general penicillin allergy
27Are there any problems with this regimen in this
patient?
- Side Effects
- some occur with almost any antibiotic
- Gastric upset
- Antibiotic-associated diarrhoea
- C. difficile infection
- pseudo-membranous colitis an be fatal
- Overgrowth of resistant organisms
- Thrush in the community
- VREs, MRSAs, Candida in ITU
28Are there any problems with this regimen in this
patient?
- Organ-specific side effects
- damage to kidneys, ears, liver, bone marrow
- chloramphenicol produces rare aplastic anaemia
- vancomycin can cause "red man syndrome"
- rifampicin discolours tears, urine contact
lenses, can cause "flu-likesyndrome" - erythromycin causes gastric irritation
- ethambutol can cause ocular damage
- Aminoglycosides and vancomycin can cause ear and
kidney damage
29Are there any problems with this regimen in this
patient?
- Care needed in patients with metabolic problems
- renal failure
- liver failure
- genetic diseases
- Drug interactions
- e.g. gentamicin and frusamide
- Use in pregnancy, breast feeding, children
- Check in the BNF!
30Other Questions to Ask
- How much?
- How long for?
- How frequently?
- What route?
- In general, you should avoid overdoing it
Microbiologists spend as much time telling people
when to stop antibiotics as when to start! - Switch from i-v to oral therapy as soon as you
can - Treat UTIs for just three days