Title: Antibiotics 101
1Antibiotics 101
2 Beta-lactams
Core PCN structure
Core Cephalosporin structure
3Beta-lactams
- Beta-lactamases are enzymes produced by some
bacteria that provide resistance against beta
lactams through hydrolysis of the ß-lactam ring
4Natural Penicillins
- Bicillin L-A (Penicillin G benzathine) IM only
- Penicillin G (IV)
- Penicillin V PO
5Natural Penicillins- Spectra
Groups Important Organisms
Gram Positive Group A/B/C/G strep S. pneumoniae viridans streptococci gr., Strep milleri Enterococcus (feacalisgtfaecium)
Gram Negative Neisseria meningitidis Pasteuralla multocida Haemophilus ducreyi
Anaerobes Actinomyces Clostridial sp. Peptostreptococcus Fusobacterium
Other Treponema pallidum
6Natural Penicillins
- Bicillin Primary, secondary, latent and late
latent syphillis - PCN G Neurosyphillis systemic infection due to
susceptible bacteria (Streptococci) - PCN V Group A strep pharyngitis
7Anti-staphylococcal Penicillins
- Nafcillin, oxacillin, methicillin, dicloxacillin
(PO) - Penicillinase is a specific type of ß-lactamase,
showing specificity for Penicillins - First ß-lactamase to be identified PCN R in S.
aureus - Major Uses
- Methicillin-susceptible S. aureus or
Coagulase Negative Staph PCN-susceptible strains
of Streptococci - No gram negative activity
-
8Aminopenicillins
- Ampicillin/amoxicillin Augmentin (Amox-Clav)
Unasyn (Amp-Sulbactam) - Amp/amox Great for susceptible streps and
enterococcus very limited GN activity cover
anaerobes - Addition of Clavulanate or Sulbactam enhances
Gram negative activity - No activity against MSSA without the
beta-lactamase inhibitor. -
-
9Aminopenicillins
- Important holes in coverage
- Pseudomonas sp.
- Atypical gram negatives mycoplasma pneumoniae,
chlamydia pneumoniae, legionella sp. - Enterobacter sp.
- If susceptible Ampicillin is the DOC for
Enterococcus and Listeria -
10Anti-Pseudomonal Penicillins
- Ticarcillin, Ticar-Clav, Piperacillin, Pip-Tazo
-
- Generally good gram positive, gram negative and
anaerobic coverage - Ticarcillin and Piperacillin without their
beta-lactamase inhibitor DO NOT cover MSSA - Important holes in coverage MRSA (ESBL, KPC,
or other resistant GN) - Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Ticar-Clav is
second line, Pip/Tazo does not cover. -
-
11Cephalosporins
- 5 generations, increasing gram negative coverage
with each generation
12First Generation Cephalosporins
- Cefadroxil, Cephalexin (PO)
- Cefazolin (IV)
Gram Positive Group A, B, C, G Strep Strep pneumo Viridans strep MSSA
Gram Negative E. coli, Klebsiella sp., Proteus mirabilis
Anaerobes No activity
13First Generation Cephalosporins
- Important holes in coverage
- MRSA, Enterococcus, Pseudomonas, anerobes
-
14Second Generation Cephalosporins
- Cefuroxime (IV, PO), Cefotetan (IV), Cefoxitin
(IV) - In addition to the coverage of 1st generation
- - H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis, Neisseria
sp., and anearobic coverage (variable) - Important holes in coverage
- - MRSA, Enterococcus, Pseudomonas
15Third Generation Cephalosporins
- Ceftriaxone, Cefotaxime, Ceftazadime (IV)
- Cefixime, Cefdinir (PO)
- In general less active against gram-positive
aerobes than previous generations, but have
greater activity against gram-negatives - Cefotaxime and Ceftriaxone have the best gram
coverage in the group - Only Ceftazadime covers Pseudomonas
16Third Generation Cephalosporins
- Major holes in coverage
- - Enterococcus, MRSA, Pseudomonas (except
Ceftazidime), /- Acinetobacter, Listeria - Ceftazidime crosses BBB, Ceftriaxone in inflamed
meninges
17Fourth Generation Cephalosporins
- Cefepime (IV)
- gram-positives similar to first generation
- gram-negatives broad, including Pseudomonas
- Major holes MRSA, poor anaerobic coverage,
listeria - Crosses BBB
18Fifth Generation Cephalosporin
- Ceftaroline (IV)
- Major advantage
- - MRSA
- Major holes in coverage
- - Pseudomonas, enterococcus and anaerobes
- CAP, SSTI
19Cephalosporin Review
- Antipseudomonal
- Ceftazadime and Cefepime
- Anti-MRSA
- Ceftaroline
- Anti-Enterococcal
- None (Ceftaroline has in-vitro activity
against E. faecalis) - Enterobacter sp. can develop resistance to
cephalosporins during treatment, therefore not
the treatment of choice
20Carbapenems
- Ertapenem, Doripenem, Imipenem, Meropenem
- Broadest spectrum of activity
- Have activity against gram-positive and
gram-negative aerobes and anaerobes - Bacteria not covered by carbapenems include MRSA,
VRE, MR coagulase-negative staph - Additional ertapenem exceptions
- Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Enterococcus
21Carbapenems
- Major holes in coverage
- - Atypicals (Legionella, Mycoplasma) , MRSA,
VRE, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, KPC - Ertapenem does not cover
- - Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Enterococcus
22Monobactam
- Aztreonam binds preferentially to PBP 3 of
gram-negative aerobes - No gram positive or anaerobic activity
- Major uses Hospital acquired infections in
patients with anaphylaxis to any beta lactams
(does not have cross reactivity) - Important gram neg holes Acinetobacter, ESBL,
KPC
23Fluoroquinolones
- Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin
- Broad spectrum of activity, excellent
bioavailability, tissue penetration - Cipro has poor gram coverage
- Disadvantages resistance, expense, C diff
- Advantages Atypical coverage, Antipseudomonal
(Cipro, Levo)
24Aminoglycosides
- Gentamicin, Tobramycin, Amikacin
- inhibit protein synthesis by irreversibly
binding to 30S ribosome, bactericidal - For gram use in combination with cell wall
agents - Broad spectrum gram neg coverage including
Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter - Also have mycobacterial coverage
25Aminoglycosides adverse effects
- Nephrotoxicity
- Nonoligouric renal failure from damage to the
proximal tubules - Underlying CKD, Age, other nephrotixins,
duration, high troughs - Ototoxicity
- 8th cranial nerve damage - vestibular and
auditory toxicity irreversible - Related to duration of therapy (gt2wks)
26Macrolides
- Clarithromycin, Erythromycin, Azithromycin
- Inhibit protein synthesis by reversibly binding
to the 50s ribosomal unit
27Macrolides
- Gram-Positive Aerobes ClarithrogtErythrogtAzithro
- Gram-Negative Aerobes AzithrogtClarithrogtEryth
ro - No activity against any Enterobacteriaceae or
Pseudomonas - Anaerobes activity against upper airway
anaerobes - Atypical Bacteria Excellent
- Also cover Mycobacterium avium complex,
Campylobacter, Borrelia, Bordetella, Brucella. -
-
28 Anti-MRSA drugs
29Vancomycin
- Inhibits synthesis and assembly of the second
stage of peptidoglycan polymers - Gram-positive bacteria excellent coverage
- Major uses
- MRSA, MSSA (in PCN all), PCN R streptococci
- No activity against gram-negatives or anaerobes
- If MIC to Vancomycin in MRSA is 2, Do not use
30Vancomycin
- Red-Man Syndrome
- flushing, pruritus, rash
- related to rate of infusion
- resolves spontaneously
- may lengthen infusion
- NOT AN ALLERGY
31Daptomycin
- Lipopeptide binds to components of the cell
membrane and causes rapid depolarization,
inhibiting intracellular synthesis of DNA, RNA,
and protein - Major uses
- - SAB, Right-sided IE caused by S. aureus,
VRE - Indicated for SSTI, R sided IE
- Do not use for lung infections including MRSA PNA
pulmonary surfactant inhibits Daptomycin -
32Linezolid
- Binds to the 50S ribosomal subunit near the
surface interface of 30S subunit causes
inhibition of 70S initiation complex which
inhibits protein synthesis - Active against wide range of Gram bacteria,
limited to no Gram negative or anearobic activity - Major uses
- MRSA, VRE.
- Major problem
- thrombocytopenia with prolonged use (gt2wks),
bacteriostatic (cidal against Enterococcus) -
33Tigecyline
- Binds to the 30S ribosomal subunit of susceptible
bacteria, inhibiting protein synthesis. - Broad spectrum of activity including
- - MRSA, VRE, gram negatives (including
resistant GN) - Major holes-
- The 3 Ps Pseudomonas, Proteus and
doesnt get in the urine - Indicated for complicated SSTI, intra-abdominal
infections, CAP - Major problems GI issues, and shown to have
increased mortality in serious infections
monotherapy only as a last resort. -
34Clindamycin
- Inhibits protein synthesis by binding
exclusively to the 50S ribosomal subunit - Major uses
- - MRSA (some isolates), anaerobic coverage
-
-
35Clindamycin
- A positive D test indicates the presence of
macrolide-inducible resistance to clindamycin
produced by an inducible methylase that alters
the common ribosomal binding site for macrolides,
clindamycin
36Tetracylines
- Doxycyline, Minocyline
- Good gram pos, neg and anaerobic coverage
- Major uses
- MRSA, anti-malarial prophylaxis, rickettsial
infections, Borrelia burgdorferi -
-
37Trimethoprim, TMX-Sulfa
- Inhibit various steps within the folic acid
biosynthetic pathway - Good gram pos and gram neg coverage (CA-MRSA)
- Important uses Pneumocystis, Stenotrophomonas
maltophilia, Nocardia - Major holes
- Pseudomonas, anaerobes