Evolution of antibiotic resistance. October 10, 2005

Similar documents
Combating antibiotic resistance. October 23, 2006

Combating antibiotic resistance

WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT?

Consequences of Antimicrobial Resistant Bacteria. Antimicrobial Resistance. Molecular Genetics of Antimicrobial Resistance. Topics to be Covered

MID 23. Antimicrobial Resistance. Consequences of Antimicrobial Resistant Bacteria. Molecular Genetics of Antimicrobial Resistance

Antimicrobial Resistance

Antimicrobial Resistance Acquisition of Foreign DNA

Mechanism of antibiotic resistance

Antimicrobial Resistance

ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE. Syed Ziaur Rahman, MD, PhD D/O Pharmacology, JNMC, AMU, Aligarh

10/15/08. Activity of an Antibiotic. Affinity for target. Permeability properties (ability to get to the target)

Challenges Emerging resistance Fewer new drugs MRSA and other resistant pathogens are major problems

Antibiotic. Antibiotic Classes, Spectrum of Activity & Antibiotic Reporting

Burton's Microbiology for the Health Sciences. Chapter 9. Controlling Microbial Growth in Vivo Using Antimicrobial Agents

ESCMID Online Lecture Library. by author

Antibiotics. Antimicrobial Drugs. Alexander Fleming 10/18/2017

Selective toxicity. Antimicrobial Drugs. Alexander Fleming 10/17/2016

European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

RCH antibiotic susceptibility data

Inhibiting Microbial Growth in vivo. CLS 212: Medical Microbiology Zeina Alkudmani

Safe Patient Care Keeping our Residents Safe Use Standard Precautions for ALL Residents at ALL times

European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

Antimicrobials. Antimicrobials

Routine internal quality control as recommended by EUCAST Version 3.1, valid from

Bacterial Resistance of Respiratory Pathogens. John C. Rotschafer, Pharm.D. University of Minnesota

EUCAST recommended strains for internal quality control

Introduction to Chemotherapeutic Agents. Munir Gharaibeh MD, PhD, MHPE School of Medicine, The university of Jordan November 2018

Infectious Disease: Drug Resistance Pattern in New Mexico

Approach to pediatric Antibiotics

Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria

Antimicrobial Resistance and Prescribing

Antimicrobial Therapy

What is multidrug resistance?

Source: Portland State University Population Research Center (

Antibiotics (2): - Before you start: this lecture has a lot of names and things get entangled together, but I

Chemotherapy of bacterial infections. Part II. Mechanisms of Resistance. evolution of antimicrobial resistance

Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery. Better understanding of the mechanisms of antibiotic resistance

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION

An#bio#cs and challenges in the wake of superbugs

CONTAGIOUS COMMENTS Department of Epidemiology

Antibiotic Resistance. Antibiotic Resistance: A Growing Concern. Antibiotic resistance is not new 3/21/2011

Antibiotic resistance and what can be done

MICRONAUT MICRONAUT-S Detection of Resistance Mechanisms. Innovation with Integrity BMD MIC

EUCAST Expert Rules for Staphylococcus spp IF resistant to isoxazolylpenicillins

ANTIBIOTICS USED FOR RESISTACE BACTERIA. 1. Vancomicin

number Done by Corrected by Doctor Dr Hamed Al-Zoubi

Int.J.Curr.Microbiol.App.Sci (2018) 7(8):

Antimicrobial Resistance in the Intensive Care Unit: Mechanisms, Epidemiology, and Management of Specific Resistant Pathogens

Microbiology. Multi-Drug-Resistant bacteria / MDR: laboratory diagnostics and prevention. Antimicrobial resistance / MDR:

What s next in the antibiotic pipeline?

Mechanisms and Pathways of AMR in the environment

Antimicrobials & Resistance

Intrinsic, implied and default resistance

Principles of Antimicrobial Therapy

2016 Antibiotic Susceptibility Report

Medicinal Chemistry 561P. 2 st hour Examination. May 6, 2013 NAME: KEY. Good Luck!

The β- Lactam Antibiotics. Munir Gharaibeh MD, PhD, MHPE School of Medicine, The University of Jordan November 2018

2017 Antibiogram. Central Zone. Alberta Health Services. including. Red Deer Regional Hospital. St. Mary s Hospital, Camrose

Q1. (a) Clostridium difficile is a bacterium that is present in the gut of up to 3% of healthy adults and 66% of healthy infants.

number Done by Corrected by Doctor Dr. Malik

Exploring simvastatin, an antihyperlipidemic drug, as a potential topical antibacterial agent

ANTIBIOTIC Resistance A GLOBAL THREAT Robero JJ

Concise Antibiogram Toolkit Background

BACTERIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY REPORT: 2016 (January 2016 December 2016)

2015 Antibiotic Susceptibility Report

2016 Antibiogram. Central Zone. Alberta Health Services. including. Red Deer Regional Hospital. St. Mary s Hospital, Camrose

Suggestions for appropriate agents to include in routine antimicrobial susceptibility testing

GENERAL NOTES: 2016 site of infection type of organism location of the patient

Help with moving disc diffusion methods from BSAC to EUCAST. Media BSAC EUCAST

Ca-MRSA Update- Hand Infections. Washington Hand Society September 19, 2007

Two (II) Upon signature

Antimicrobial Resistance Strains

Staph Cases. Case #1

Antibiotic Stewardship Program (ASP) CHRISTUS SETX

ENTEROCOCCI. April Abbott Deaconess Health System Evansville, IN

Beta-lactam antibiotics - Cephalosporins

Antibacterial therapy 1. د. حامد الزعبي Dr Hamed Al-Zoubi

Frank Møller Aarestrup

Antimicrobial use in poultry: Emerging public health problem

Multi-drug resistant microorganisms

Rise of Resistance: From MRSA to CRE

2015 Antibiogram. Red Deer Regional Hospital. Central Zone. Alberta Health Services

General Approach to Infectious Diseases

جداول میکروارگانیسم های بیماریزای اولویت دار و آنتی بیوتیک های تعیین شده برای آزمایش تعیین حساسیت ضد میکروبی در برنامه مهار مقاومت میکروبی

Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing: Advanced Course

What s new in EUCAST methods?

Aminoglycosides. Spectrum includes many aerobic Gram-negative and some Gram-positive bacteria.

An Approach to Appropriate Antibiotic Prescribing in Outpatient and LTC Settings?

TACKLING THE MRSA EPIDEMIC

Mechanisms of Antimicrobial Action and Resistance. Alan L. Goldin, M.D./Ph.D.

What bugs are keeping YOU up at night?

2012 ANTIBIOGRAM. Central Zone Former DTHR Sites. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Antibiotics: mode of action and mechanisms of resistance. Slides made by Special consultant Henrik Hasman Statens Serum Institut

CONTAGIOUS COMMENTS Department of Epidemiology

Protein Synthesis Inhibitors

Treatment of Respiratory Tract Infections Prof. Mohammad Alhumayyd Dr. Aliah Alshanwani

Antimicrobial Resistance and Molecular Epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus in Ghana

Antimicrobial Susceptibility Patterns

Antimicrobial agents

Origins of Resistance and Resistance Transfer: Food-Producing Animals.

Transcription:

Evolution of antibiotic resistance October 10, 2005

Causes of death, 2001: USA 6. Population: 6,122,210,000 Deaths: 56,554,000 1. Infectious and parasitic diseases: 14.9 million 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 2. Heart diseases: 11.1 million 3. Cancers: 7.3 million 4. Stroke: 5.5 million 5. Respiratory diseases: 3.6 million 6. Accidents, fires, drowning, etc.: 3.5 million 7. Maternal and perinatal: 3.0 million 8. Violence (war, homicide, suicide): 1.6 million World Health Organization World Health Report 2002

3 October 2005 Infectious diseases in the news

Deaths from infectious diseases in the US: 1900-1994 1918 flu epidemic 1900-1937: public health clean water, good sewers 1937-1953: vaccines, antibiotics 1953-1980: antibiotics, antivirals 1980-1994: still more drugs, but...

Deaths from infectious diseases in the US: 1900-1996 1980-1994

Antibiotic discovery and resistance development Antibiotic Discovered First clinical use Resistance Penicillin 1940 1943 1940 Streptomycin 1944 1947 1947 Tetracycline 1948 1952 1956 Erythromycin 1952 1955 1956 Vancomycin 1956 1972 1987 Gentamicin 1963 1967 1970

Penicillin β-lactams

Bacterial cell surface structure

Cell wall molecular structure

Transpeptidase reaction and penicillin inhibition

Antibiotic targets: mostly cell wall and ribosome (resistance mechanisms) (resistance mechanisms)

Modes of antibiotic resistance Destroy or covalently modify the drug Change the target so the drug no longer binds Actively export the drug from the cytoplasm by a specific or non-specific efflux pump (MDR = multi-drug resistant) Prevent drug uptake by altering membrane permeability (rare) Selective pressures caused by human misuse: Physician overprescription Agricultural use as a growth enhancer Domestic misuse (compare the hygiene hypothesis )

Penicillin resistance Alteration in the transpeptidase (PBP) Usually generates cross-resistance to all β-lactams Mechanism found in MRSA (meca gene acquired laterally from unknown source) Expression of β-lactamases At least 255 different kinds Derived from transpeptidases!!! Rate of hydrolytic deacylation increased from 1 per hour to 1500 per second Can be partially overcome by coadministration of clavulanic acid (augmentin)

Nosocomial infections >10 per 1000 patient-days in the hospital Most common in intensive care units, acute care surgical and orthopedic units Increasing in frequency and severity Populations are more immunocompromised Antibiotic resistance is becoming more prevalent Frequently opportunistic Gram-positives from normal flora (Staphylococcus, Enterococcus, Streptococcus) MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) are often resistant to all antibiotics except vancomycin MRSA increasingly found in community-acquired infections as well as hospital-acquired infections TWO CLINICAL PAPERS FOR FRIDAY

PENICILLIN RESISTANCE IN STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS 1940 Virtually all strains susceptible to penicillin (worldwide) 1940-1946 (Finland, BCH) <1% Resistant 1947 1951 (Finland, BCH) (Finland, BCH) 32% Resistant 73% Resistant All from hospitalized patients (outpatient isolates susceptible) 1967 (Moellering, MGH) 83% Outpatient isolates resistant 84% Inpatient isolates resistant Currently 90% Resistant worldwide Murray BA, Moellering RC Jr. Med Clin N Am. 1978;62(5):899-923.

METHICILLIN-RESISTANT S. AUREUS Methicillin resists most β-lactamases HISTORICAL ASPECTS 1959 First clinical use of methicillin 1961 First description of MRSA 1967 First report of nosocomial infection in the US (2 cases) 1968 Increase in MRSA in the UK 1968-1979 Rise and subsequent wane of prevalence of MRSA (especially nosocomial infections) in Europe, Australia, and elsewhere (except US) 1975-1980 First reports of problems with MRSA in the US; most occurred in large tertiary care hospitals (especially burn units and ICUs) 1980-1991 MRSA increase in prevalence in US nursing homes; community-acquired MRSA infections in the US 1 Jevons. BMJ 1961;1:124 2 Westh H et al. Clin Infect Dis. 1992;14:1186-1194. 3 Chambers HF. Clin Microbiol Rev. 1997;10:781-791. 4 Bradley SF. Am J Med. 1999;106(5A):2S-10S.

Pandemic MRSA around the world Oliveira et a., 2002, Lancet Inf Dis. 2: 180

Vancomycin 20-50% of a typical hospital antibiotic budget is spent on vancomycin

Vancomycin resistance in enterococci 12 species cause bacteremia, mostly E. faecalis and E. faecium Vancomycin resistance described in 1986; currently 25% of clinical isolates are resistant (VRE) High mortality rate (10-50%) US: Reservoirs are hospital staff and patients (farm animals in Europe due to use of avoparcin) Genotypic classification of resistance: vana - inducible, cross resistance to teicoplanin, >1000 µg/ml vanb - inducible, teicoplanin-sensitive, >1000 µg/ml vanc, vand - constitutive, teicoplanin-sensitive, 30-100 µg/ml

vana: Organization of transposon Tn1546 orf1 - transposase orf2 - resolvase vanr - response regulator (transcriptional activator) vans - histidine protein kinase (sensor) vanh - D-specific α-keto acid reductase (makes D-lactate) vana - D-Ala-D-lactate peptide ligase vanx - D-Ala-D-Ala dipeptidase vany - D-D carboxypeptidase

Induction of resistance genes by vancomycin via two-component response regulator

Change of cell wall peptide from D-Ala-D-Ala to D-Ala-D-lactate removes one hydrogen bond...enough! CH 3 HO C COOH H lactate

Mechanisms of genetic exchange and spread of resistance determinants Known cross-species routes of exchange VRE can transfer Tn1546 to MRSA in vitro (samples immediately autoclaved)

Well, has transfer occurred? June 2002: 40 yo woman in Michigan Hypertension, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, chronic renal failure Recurrent foot ulcers due to diabetic neuropathy; right foot amputated Treated with vancomycin, gentamicin, ampicillin-sulbactam, piperacillin-tazobactam, levofloxacin, clindamycin, cefazolin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxyzole, tobramycin and metronicazole prior to amputation Cultured MRSA in April 2002, VRE in June 2002 VRSA appeared in June 2002: Tn1546 transferred from VRE on a conjugative plasmid (plw1043) Chang et 1l., 2003, NEJM 348: 1342 Weigel et al., 2003, Science 302: 1569

Other paths to resistance: genomic mutation, particularly important for quinolones F O CO 2 H F O CO 2 H HN N N N S N N N N H Ciprofloxacin A-692345 Inhibits DNA Topoisomerase Point mutations in GyrA give resistance Inhibits protein synthesis (S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae) Dandliker, et. al. AAC (2003), 47, 3831.

Bacterial stress response: SOS lexa discovered by Paul Howard-Flanders and Lee Theriot in 1966 Screen for mutants involved in DNA repair after UV or X-ray treatment and in DNA recombination lexa required for repair but not recombination PAPER FOR FRIDAY: GyrA inhibition by Cipro induces SOS response and mutagenesis (shades of Lamarck)