Title: Today
1Todays talk
- Dimensions of AB resistance
- History of AB resistance
- Biology of AB resistance
- Biology of antibiotic action and measurement
- Genetics
- Biochemistry
- Selection
- Some guiding questions and concepts
2Dimensions of Antibiotic Resistance
- Bacterial species
- Type of transmission hospital or community
- Antibiotic
- Genetic mechanism of resistance how does the bug
get the genes to be resistant? - Biochemical mechanism of resistance what does
the bug do to be resistant? - Mechanisms of selection for resistance
- Individuals
- Populations
- Study design to assess these mechanisms
3History of Antimicrobial Resistance
4Early principles Paul Ehrlich
- The therapia sterilisans magna consists in this,
that by means of one or at most two injections
the body is freed from the parasites. Here,
therefore, the old therapeutic remedy is
applicable . frapper fort et frapper vite - A further advantage of combined therapy is, that
under the influence of two different medicines
the danger of rendering the parasites immune to
arsenic, which naturally would be a very great
obstacle in connexion with further treatment, is
apparently greatly minimized.
51930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990
2000
Sulfa Penicillin
Strept Tetra
Chlora
Erythro
Oxa/amp/ceph
Vanco
Genta
Trimethoprim
3rd gen cephalosporins
Fluroquinolones
Carbapenems
ESBLs
AmpCs
6Resistance comes fast
J. Davies 1997
7Resistance increases quickly
P. aeruginosa resistant to imipenem
P. aeruginosa resistant to quinolones
K. pneumoniae non-susceptible to 3rd
cephalosporins
Source NNIS DATA Clinics Chest Med. 20303-315
8Resistance goes up quickly (2)
Methicillin-resistant Coagulase-negative Staph
Methicillin-resistant S. aureus
Vancomycin-Resistant enterococci
Source NNIS DATA Clinics Chest Med. 20303-315
9Still growing Resistance in Streptococcus
pneumoniae in US
G Doern et al., Clin Inf Dis. 2005
10Geographic variation in antibiotic resistance
H. Goossens et al. 2005 Lancet
11Geographic Variation Resistancein 1999
12The Tragedy of The Commons
13Resistance goes down slowly, if at all
39 R
45 R
V Enne et al., Lancet 2001
14Resistance goes down slowly, if at all
Hennessy et al. 2002, CID
30 decline in prescribing after initial
intervention 25 after expanded
15But in hospitals, changes can move faster
Dunkle et al. Amer J Med 1981
16Biology of Antimicrobial Resistance
17How do antibiotics kill?
- Static v. cidal
- Bacteriostatic prevent cell division (e.g. by
preventing protein synthesis) - Bactericidal kill bacteria directly
- Cidal drugs often kill only dividing bugs
- Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
- Others
- This makes treatment of latent infection
especially difficult (TB)
18Antibiotics and the immune system
- Immune responses required to kill alongside
bactriostatic drugs - Also for many bactericidal drugs phenotypic
resistance
Wiuff et al. AAC 2005
19Normal Flora
S. pneumoniae H. influenzae N. meningitidis
20Normal flora Consequences
- Treatment exerts selection on innocent
bystanders - Most of the harm done by use of a drug may be on
species OTHER than the target of treatment - Optimal dosing for treatment ? optimal to prevent
resistance - Most of the exposure of a given species to a
given drug may be due to treatment of OTHER
infections
21Measuring resistance Minimal Inhibitory
Concentration (MIC)
22MIC is a simplification
Regoes et al. AAC 2004
23Limitations of MIC
- Subpopulations
- Depends on in vitro conditions pH, etc not
necessarily same as in vivo - One parameter summary of the curve
- Ignores physiologic variation
Regoes et al. AAC 2004
24Biological Aspects of Resistance
- Genetics how is drug resistance coded?
- And how can it move from one bug to another?
- Think of floppy disk, memory stick, punch card
- Biochemistry/mechanism what does a bug do to
become resistant? - Think of iTunes, RealPlayer, Microsoft Media
Player - How resistance is selected how do we increase
the frequency of resistant bugs? - Block that metaphor!
25Intrinsic resistance
- All members of a species are resistant, and have
been since before clinical use - Tuberculosis and penicillin naturally encodes
beta-lactamase - Vancomycin-producing species and vancomycin
alters its cell wall to be insensitive (same as
resistance in targets!) - Dont activate prodrug
- Isoniazid or pyrazinamide and non-mycobacteria
not chemically altered to become active
26Genetic Mechanisms of Resistance Acquisition
27Implications
- Mutation easy to get a resistant strain in
almost any patient mutation frequencies 10-7
10-10 - Unless multiple mutations are required to confer
resistance! - Examples Tuberculosis, HIV
- Other mechanisms
- Very complex mechanisms of resistance can evolve,
because they can move as a block from one bug to
the next - Can even transfer from one species to another
- Emergence of a resistant bug in a single host is
unlikely, unless a mix of resistant bugs and
sensitive bugs is present
28Epidemic Plasmids
Courtesy Tom OBrien, BWH
29Integrons
- System for combining resistance (and other) genes
- Can take up new genes via integrase and add them
to the package - Often on transposons or plasmids
www.mmb.usyd.edu.au/coleman/
30Biochemical mechanisms
- Reduced permeability
- Efflux
- Degradation
- Detoxification
- Target alteration enzyme
- Target alteration mutation
- Target amplification
- Inactivate the activator of the prodrug
31Mechanisms their consequences
- Most mechanisms are quite specific to one drug or
class of drugs - Enzymes to alter drug or target
- Target changes or amplification
- A few mechanisms confer resistance to more than
one class of drug - Efflux pump MDR transporter
32Mechanisms
- High-level resistance completely resistant to
any achievable concentration - Partial resistance small change in MIC
33Mechanisms of selection
34How Antimicrobial Use Increases Resistance
Mechanisms
- Acquired Resistance selection within host
- Patient infected with a susceptible organism
- Treatment selects a resistant variant
Rx
Emerg Inf Dis 2002 8347
35How Antimicrobial Use Increases Resistance
Mechanisms
- Primary Resistance Selection in host
population - Patient infected with a resistant organism
- Competitive mechanism Treatment selects by
reducing transmission of susceptible infections
36How Antimicrobial Use Increases Resistance
Mechanisms
- Increasing susceptibility to colonization
- Patient carries a normal flora
- Treatment increases susceptibility to
colonization by opening ecologic niche
37Summary of Mechanisms of Selection of Resistance
by Abx
38Is antibiotic use harmful to individuals?
39Co-selection
- Dental fillings installed and removed from
experimental monkeys
Summers 1993 AAC
40Concepts and questions
- Antibiotic resistance is interesting how bad is
it? - How can we measure the costs? Compared to what?
41What can we do to/for an individual patient to
prevent resistant infections?
42Why have some kinds of drug resistance increased
fast, others slowly or not at all?
43What can we do to the population as a whole to
reduce the risk of reistant infections?
44In what circumstances does doing what is best for
the patient
- Increase the burden of resistance in the
community? - Reduce the burden of resistance in the community?
- Both but on different time scales?
45What would happen if we stopped using antibiotics
tomorrow?
- To disease?
- To resistance?
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