1 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 02/17/12 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’S the news? Review of Current Evidence Learning Objectives: • Describe the epidemiology of KPCs • Identify the risk factors associated with KPC infections • Identify problems with laboratory detection of KPCs using current CLSI breakpoints • Evaluate the evidence of treatment outcomes for KPC-infections Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 |Lee, G Grace C. Lee, Pharm.D, BCPS Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 2/17/2012 2 Table of Contents Rise of KPCs Figure 1 .………………………………...................................3 The spread of KPCs Figure 2 Figure 3 .………………………………...................................4 Clinical features of KPCs .………………………………...................................5 Laboratory Detection of KPC CLSI breakpoints Treatment Options Table 1. In vitro susceptibility .………………………………...............................6-7 .………………………………...................................7 Treatment Considerations .………………………………...................................8 Review Methodology .………………………………...................................9 Study flow diagram .………………………………...................................10 Results Table 1-3 Table 1. Study characteristics Table 2. Study publication year Table 3. study characteristics .……………………………….................................11 Results Table 4-5 Table 4. Infection characteristics Table 5. Overall treatment outcome .……………………………….................................12 Results Table 6 Table 6. Treatment failure Monotherapy/Combination .……………………………….................................13 Results Table 7 Table 7. Treatment failure combination Limitations .……………………………….................................14 Querishi et al. study .……………………………….................................15 Key Points .……………………………….................................16 References .…………………………….…………….………..17-18 Appendix A Appendix B Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 3 Patient Case JK is a 30 yo male s/p multi-organ transplant including small bowel, pancreas, stomach, bilateral kidney, liver secondary to autoimmune enteritis. He has had multiple prolonged admissions in the last year and multiple courses of antibiotics due to infections in the past including C.diff colitis, VRE and ESBL-producing K. pneumoniae in the last 3 months. He was admitted from a long-term acute care hospital with respiratory failure requiring ventilator support. Now on Day 68 of admission, he becomes septic. The medical team has started him on vancomycin and meropenem. Three days later, he continues to spike fevers and clinically deteriorate. He also has a central venous catheter and urinary catheter. Preliminary blood cultures are growing 2 of 2 K. pneumoniae 1. Rise of the Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC) I. II. Two mechanisms of carbapenem resistance: 1, 2 a. Carbapenemase i. β-lactamase that can hydrolyze carbapenems b. Cephalosporinase combined with porin loss i. Cephalosporinases (e.g., AmpC-type β-lactamases or certain ESBLs i.e. CTX-M) ii. Porin loss limits entry of the carbapenem into the periplasmic space The most common mechanism of carbapenem resistance in the United States is due to Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC). a. KPC was first described in 2001, in a Klebsiella pneumoniae isolate from a hospital in North Carolina3 b. KPC is an Ambler molecular class A enzyme which utilizes serine at the active site to facilitate hydrolysis of β-lactams.2,4 i. KPCs hydrolyze all β-lactams including penicillins, cephalosporins, monobactams and carbapenems ii. Weakly inhibited by clavulanic acid and tazobactam c. KPC enzymes are found to be located on plasmids2,5 i. Additional resistance mechanisms are frequently found on the same plasmid (i.e., extended-spectrum β-lactamases, aminoglycoside resistance, and fluoroquinolone resistance genes) ii. KPC gene carried in a Tn3-based transposons, Tn4401 iii. Currently there are 10 variants of KPC (KPC-2 to KPC-11) d. KPCs have also been found in many other gram-negative species including:6 Escherichia coli, Enterobacter species, Salmonella enterica, Proteus mirabilis and Citrobacter freundii, Serratia species, Pseudomonas species, and Acinetobacter baumannii Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G ↑↑Resistance (ESBLs) ↑↑Carbapenem use Selection of Carbapenem Resistant Isolates Figure 1 The most common mechanism of carbapenem resistance in the United States is due to Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC) 4 2. The Problem Grows: the Spread of KPC KPCs were infrequently isolated in the United States until 20013,7,8 o First KPC isolate was reported in 2001 from North Carolina o KPC-producing Enterobacteriaceae were reported in several extended outbreaks in metropolitan hospitals of New York o KPC-producing organisms have continued to spread and have now been reported in 37 states in the United States (figure 2) o Reports of KPCs in Texas9,10 Post-liver transplant co-infected with Pseudomonas putida and Enterobacter cloacae in San Antonio (University Hospital) Four cases of Klebsiella pneumoniae in Houston KPCs have been reported globally o The first outbreak of KPC-producing K. pneumoniae outside of the U.S was in Israel11 o KPC have been reported in many countries including: China, Brazil, France, Greece, England, France, Sweden, Belgium, Germany, Korea, India, Italy, Denmark, Finland, Switzerland, Spain, Columbia, Argentina, Norway and Israel2,12 o Endemic in areas such as northeastern part of the US, Israel, Columbia, and Greece KPCs have been reported in hospital and non-hospital settings o The CDC recommends in areas where carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae are not endemic, acute care facilities review microbiological records for the preceding 6-12 months.13 (Appendix A) o Several investigations have described patients carrying KPC-producing organisms in post-acute care facilities (i.e., long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs))14,15 o Reports of community-onset infections with KPC-producing organisms have been documented14 o Spread of blakpc in hospital sewage systems have been reported2 Figure 2. KPC-producing bacteria are becoming increasingly prevalent in the United States Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G 1996 – 1st Case of KPC in North Carolina 2002- KPC Outbreaks reported in New York 2005- First case of KPC outside of US – in France 2006 first KPC-2 producing PSDA was found in Columbia 2007 First outbreak outside of US in Israel 2009-First outbreak report of KPC detected in LTACHs and 1st KPC-producing infection in Texas 2010 – blakpc-11 discovered Figure 3. Timeline Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 5 3. Clinical Features of KPC Risk Factors for KPC Infections: -Advanced Age -Severity of Illness -Previous antibiotic treatment -Organ or stem-cell transplantation -Mechanical ventilation -Long hospitalizations KPC-producing organisms have been associated with increased length of stay, costs, frequent treatment failures, and death16,17 Mortality rates of >50% have been reported16,18 Risk factors for infection include advanced age, being severely ill, previous treatment with antibiotics, organ or stem-cell transplantation, mechanical ventilation, and long hospital stays13,19,20 Mixed reports of whether previous carbapenem use is associated with the development of infections caused by KPC producing bacteria 21 Patel et al. Outcomes of Carbapenem-Resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae Infection and the Impact of Antimicrobial and Adjunctive Therapies Design: Two matched case control studies July 1, 2004 through June 30, 2006 Methods: Cases defined as patients with invasive carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae infection. Control defined as patients with invasive carbapenem-susceptible K. pneumoniae infection. Matching was performed at a ratio of 1:1 according to anatomic site of infection. Results: Case Control (n=99) (n=99) OR(95% CI) P Characteristics 60.67 59.39 0.70 Age -years (mean) 58 (59) 58 (59) 0.51 Men Bacteremia 56 (57) 56 (57) 41 (41) 39 (39) 34 (34) 90 (91) 65 (66) 21 14 (14) 29 (29) 23 (23) 55 (56) 22 (22) 1 5.70 (2.65–12.16) 1.67 (0.90-3.08) 1.75 (0.94-3.27) 8.32 (3.74-18.53) 6.62 (3.53–12.43) 1.09 (1.01–1.12) <.001 0.10 0.08 <.001 † <.001 † <.001 63 (64) 6 (14) 31 (31) 4 (10) 3.82 (2.11-6.91) 2.30 (1.30-4.10) <.001 <.005 36 (36) 54 (55) 6(6) 14 (14) 23 (23) 6 (6) 1(1) 3(3) 1.87 (1.00-3.48) 19.25 (7.61-48.70) 7.04 (0.82-60.68) 5.44 (1.49-19.85) 0.05 † <.001 0.08 0.01 3.2 0.8 48 38 20 12 Risk Factors Transplant recipient Liver Disease Renal Insufficiency Use of CVC Mechanical ventilation Length of stay before infection, days (Median) † Class of Prior Antibiotic Therapy “Carbapenemresistant K. pneumoniae infection is associated with numerous healthcare-related risk factors and with high mortality” Cephalosporin β-lactam and/or β-lactamase inhibitor Fluoroquinolone Carbapenem Monobactam Aminoglycoside † Clinical Outcomes Time between specimen collection to antibiotics with in vitro activity (days) Death during hospitalization (%) Death due to K. pneumoniae infection (%) <.001 3.71 (1.97-7.01) 4.5 (2.16-9.35) <.001 <.001 Conclusion Carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae infection is associated with numerous healthcare-related risk factors and with high mortality NOTE: †Statistically significant in multivariable analysis (p<0.5) performed by logistic regression. Only those variables that achieved P value of 0.02 or less in the univariable analysis were included in the multivariable analysis. CI, confidence interval; CVC, central venous catheter; OR, odds ratio. All numbers within parenthesis denotes percentage. Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G 6 4. Laboratory Detection of KPCs Problems with Detection:22-24 Some automated susceptibility testing systems fail to detect low-level carbapenem resistance o 15-60% of KPC-producing bacteria had MICs in the susceptible range Some KPC-producing isolates test susceptible, but the carbapenem MICs are elevated Carbapenem Population Ertapenem WT KPC WT KPC WT KPC Imipenem Meropenem Cumulative % inhibited at MIC (µg/mL) 0.5 1 2 4 8 100 0 97.9 0 98.9 0.5 1.2 100 0 100 0.5 4.2 10.8 20.5 4.8 14.4 39.9 8 17.6 29.3 # tested 1974 166 5989 188 5989 188 WT: wildtype Sentry; R Jones. CLSI 07. Dashed lines indicate 2009 CLSI breakpoints for Enterobacteriaceae 25 Weisenberg et al. Clinical outcomes of patients with Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemaseproducing K. pneumoniae after treatment with imipenem or meropenem Design: Historic cohort 2006 Objective: To study the clinical and microbiologic outcomes of infections caused by KPC K. pneumoniae and compare outcomes of infections with isolates initially reported as susceptible to imipenem or meropenem Methods: Retrospective review of patients infected with KPC K. pneumoniae was conducted from a convenience sample. Success or failure of treatment was determined by clinical response and/or subsequent culture results. Two physicians independently reviewed charts of all patients. Results: n=28 patients Characteristics Age -years median Hospitalized for >3 wks at time of culture 64 14/28 (50%) Class of Prior Antibiotic Therapy β-lactams Fluoroquinolones Carbapenems Glycopeptide Total 18/28 (64.3%) 10/28 (35.7%) 6/28 (21.4%) 15/28 (53.6%) KPC-producer reported as imipenem susceptible 13/28 (46.4%) KPC-producer reported as imipenem non-susceptible 15/28 (53.6%) APACHE II Score 21.1 21.1 Colonized Treated with IMI or MER 2/13(15%) 9/11 (81.8%) Reported as imipenem susceptible and contained KPC † (MIC < 4µg/mL) 4/9 (44.4%) 5/9 (55.6%) 4/15 (26.6%) Treatment Outcomes Overall Treatment success Overall Treatment failure KPC-producer reported as imipenem non-susceptible § (MIC > 4µg/mL) 8/10 (80%) 2/10 (20%) P 0.99 P 0.17 Conclusion Patients infected with KPC K. pneumoniae initially determined to be imipenem non-susceptible had a higher rate of successful treatment when compared with patients infected with KPC K. pneumoniae with initial testsusceptible test results. † NOTE: Among patients treated with IMI orRounds MER. Two of the|11Lee, in theGKPC-producer reported as imipenem susceptible group Pharmacotherapy 2012 received tigecycline (1 success /1 failure). IMI, imipenem; MER, meropenem § One patient did not receive any treatment due to comfort care measures and was excluded from outcome analysis 7 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? CLSI Carbapenem Breakpoints for Enterobacteriaceae Previous breakpoints MIC (µg/mL) New 2011 CLSI Carbapenem breakpoints for Enterobacteriaceae Agent Susceptible Intermediate Resistant Ertapenem Imipenem Meropenem <2 <4 <4 4 8 8 >8 >16 >16 Revised breakpoints MIC (µg/mL) Agent Susceptible Intermediate Resistant Ertapenem Imipenem Meropenem Doripenem <0.5 <1 <1 <1 1 2 2 2 >2 >4 >4 >4 CLSI: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute 4. Treatment Options In-vitro susceptibility o KPC-producing isolates demonstrate resistance to many agents including β-lactams, fluoroquinolones, aminoglycosides, and cotrimoxazole26,27 o Most isolates remain susceptible to tigeycline and polymyxins16,28 o Various in-vitro/in-vivo studies have documented synergistic activity of combination based regimens29-32 (Appendix B) Table 3. Susceptibility of Selected Antimicrobials Susceptible (%) Agent Amikacin Gentamicin Polymyxin B Colistin Tigecycline Neuner et al. (n=60) 45 22 86 98 7 Bratu et al. (n=62) 6 65 73 - 16 Bratu et al. (n=96) 45 61 91 100 28 Castanheira et al. (n=60) 53 58 93 100 31 Souli et al. (n=50) 14 70 86 15 33 b MICs were determined using Etest and were interpreted in accordance with the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) Case –Continued The blood culture returns both growing K. pneumoniae with the following susceptibilities: Amikacin Amoxicillin+Clav Ampicillin+Sulbactam Cefazolin Cefepime Cefotaxime Cefotetan >32 >16/8 >16/8 >16 >8 >32 >32 R R R R R R R How would you treat this patient? Moxifloxacin Piperacillin+Tazo Tobramycin Cefoxitin Ceftazidime Ceftriaxone >4 > 64 >8 >16 >16 >32 R R R R R R Cefuroxime Ciprofloxacin Ertapenem Gentamicin Meropenem Trimethoprim+Sulfa Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G >16 >2 >4 >8 16 >2/38 R R R R R R 8 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? Treatment Considerations: o Due to broad-resistance to several antimicrobial classes, treatment options are very limited o Tigeycline and polymyxins remain the most susceptible in-vitro o Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Considerations Tigecycline (Glycylcycline antibiotic)34,35 Low serum concentrations o FDA approved breakpoint 2 µg/mL o Mean Cmax 0.67-0.87 µg/mL Low urinary concentrations o 22% excreted renally unchanged Polymyxins (Colistin and Polymyxin B)36-38 Optimal dosing is not well defined Potential concern for nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicities Resistance during therapy against KPC-producing organisms have been documented 39 Lee et al. Decreased susceptibility to polymyxin B during treatment of carbapenemresistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) infection Objective: Evaluate treatment of patients with KPC-producing K. pneumoniae infections with persistent positive blood cultures despite 3 days of treatment Methods: Patients hospitalized between July 2004 and June 2006 with CRKP infections who persistently had positive cultures despite > 3 days of treatment with either polymyxin B alone or polymyxin B and tigecycline were reviewed. The history of antibiotic therapy and the duration of treatment were obtained from patients’ medical records and hospital pharmacy records. All of the subsequent CRKP isolates were recovered from blood samples. The KPC gene was present in all initial and subsequent isolates as confirmed by PCR analysis. Results: • • • N=16 patients • 12 Polymyxin B alone • 4 Polymyxin B plus Tigecycline 3 out 12 (25%) treated with polymyxin B monotherapy had significant increase in MIC • 1.5 μg/ml to 32 μg/ml • 0.75 μg/ml to 12 μg/ml • 0.75 μg/ml to 1024 μg/ml • The mean durations of treatment with polymyxin B for these three patients were not different from those for the other nine patients whose subsequent isolates did not have an increased MIC (mean, 15.7 days versus 10.8 days; P 0.46) None of the patients who received polymyxin B plus tigecycline developed resistance Conclusion Combination therapy may have prevented resistance in patients who received both polymyxin B and tigecycline The optimal therapy for infections with Enterobacteriaceae that produce KPC is not well defined Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 |Lee, G Due to broadresistance to several antimicrobial classes, treatment options for KPCinfections are very limited Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 9 Literature Review Methodology •Systematic review of case series and case reports of treatment outcomes using combination versus monotherapy for the treatment of KPCs Objective Data Source Study Selection Data Extraction Analysis •A systematic review of English articles using MEDLINE (2001-2011). Additional studies were identified by searching bibliographies and abstracts presented at Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (2008-2011). Search terms included kpc.mp, Drug Therapy/mt, mo, Treatment Outcome, Case Reports, Disease Outbreaks/pc limited to humans. •Eligibility assessment was performed by an independent reviewer in an unblinded standardized manner. All reports were reviewed in duplicate. Articles were eligible if they reported on patients with infections due to KPC-producing bacteria. Articles were excluded from further review if they fulfilled at least 1 of the following criteria: no individual patient reported, no treatment regimen specified, no treatment outcome specified, cases of colonization stated, greater than 3 antibiotics or multiple antibiotic regimen(s) directed at the KPC infection. •An electronic data collection sheet was developed. A pilot sheet was tested on randomly selected studies then refined accordingly. Several characteristics from the cases were extracted including the patient’s age, sex, medical history, site(s) of infection, type of infection, organism, KPC subtype, APACHE II score, admission to ICU, LOS before infection, LOS total, MIC (carbapenem, polymyxin, and tigeycline), antimicrobial therapy before isolation, antimicrobial therapy directed at KPC-infection, treatment outcome, and final outcome. Combination therapy was defined as two antibiotics with gram-negative activity directed at KPC infection. Clinical success and failures were defined as reported by the authors of each study. •Analysis of the proportion of clinical failures was calculated as the number of failures divided by the number of treated patients with available data. This was repeated for the various treatment subgroups. Statistical analysis was performed in an exploratory manner. Comparisons were made using the chi-square or fisher's exact test for categorical variables Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G 10 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? Eligibility Screening Identification Study Flow Diagram Citations identified in MEDLINE (n=54) Citations identified in Bibliography: (n=12) Meeting abstracts: ICAAC (n=61) keyword ‘KPC’ 127 total citations screened on basis of title and abstracts Excluded: (n=65) -No clinical information (n=54) -Duplicates (n=7) -Not related to KPC-infection (n=4) Articles eligible for inclusion (n=62) Articles excluded (n=24) -No patient specific treatment and/or outcomes (n=18) -Greater than 3 active agents (n=4) -Colonization (n=2) Included 38 Articles included Patients = 143 Patients = 105 †Individual patients excluded from case series due to insufficient data Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 |Lee, G Patients excluded† (n=34) -No Patient specific treatment and/or outcomes (n=15) -Greater than 3 active agents (n=13) -Colonization (n=10) 11 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? Descriptive Analysis: Table 1. Study Characteristics10,19,25,33,40-59,9,15,27,28,60-69 Study Type Study Source (n=38) Patient Source (n=105) 18(47%) 18 (47%) 2(5%) 18 (17%) 49 (47%) 38 (35%) Case Reports Case Series Retrospective Cohort The most common source of patient records were from case series (47%). Majority of the reports were from the US (42%), followed by Greece (10%). Table 2. Study Publication Year Year (n) 2004 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 1 1 4 3 11 7 11 Table reflects publication year (not year of the study or case occurrence) Majority of the articles were published in 2011 and 2009 which accounted for 58% of the articles Table 3. Patient Characteristics Characteristic Age – mean (SD) Male gender n(%) ICU admission n(%) APACHE II Score – mean (SD) LOS before infection – mean (SD) LOS, total – mean (SD) Data Available (n) 88 60 57 38 48 24 62 (+19) 33 (55) 41(72) 20.6(+8) 17.5(+19) 54.8(+40) Of the reported data, patients had high ICU admission status (72%), high severity of illness, and long mean length of stay. SD, Standard deviation; ICU, intensive care unit; APACHE II, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II; LOS, length of stay Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 |Lee, G Reports from different countries: USA, Greece, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, France, Germany, Italy, Korea, Switzerland, Taiwan, and Trinidad 12 Descriptive Analysis: Table 4. Infection Characteristics Characteristic Data Available (n) KPC-subtype Number of Cases (%) _______________ 98 KPC-2 KPC-3 84(86) 14(14) Organisms 104 K. pneumoniae E. coli S. marcescens Pseudomonas spp E. cloacae Site of infection Blood Pulmonary Urine Skin/Wound CSF Bone 92(89) 3(3) 3(3) 4(4) 2(2) Site of infection: The most common site of infection was blood followed by pulmonary _________________ 105 56(52) 32(30) 11(10) 4(4) 1(0.9) 1(0.9) Majority of the reports were due to blakpc-2 (86%). The most common organism reported was K. pneumoniae (89%). The most common site of infection was blood (52%) followed by pulmonary (32%) and urine (10%). Table 5. Overall Treatment Outcome Overall treatment success Overall treatment failure Blood Pulmonary Source (failure) Data Available 105 105 105 Blood Pulmonary Urine KPC-type KPC-2 KPC-3 Treatment Outcome (%) 67/105 (63) 38/105 (36) 21/38(55) 15/38(39) 22/56(39) 15/32(47) 1/11(9) 98 30/84(36) 7/14(50) Overall treatment failure was 36%. A majority of treatment failure was associated with blood as source of infection (55%) followed by pulmonary (39%). Source of infection associated with the highest rate of treatment failure is pulmonary (47%) followed by blood (39%). Infections with blakpc-3 had a higher rate of treatment failure (50%) compared to blakpc-2. Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G _________________ Over one-third of patients had treatment failure _____________ Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 13 Table 6. Treatment failure monotherapy vs. combination Overall treatment failure Source: Blood Pulmonary Urine Monotherapy (%) Combination (%) P 24/49(49) 14/56(25) 0.01 12/24 (50) 10/15(67) 1/8(13) 9/32(28) 5/17(29) 0/3(0) 0.09 0.03† 0.4 Overall treatment failure was higher in patients who received monotherapy versus combination therapy (49% versus 25% p 0.01). Pulmonary site of infection was associated with higher rates of treatment failure with monotherapy compared to combination therapy † (67% versus 29% p 0.03). Fisher’s exact test Polymyxin Treatment failure Source: Blood Pulmonary Urine 8/11(73) 10/34(29) 0.02† 6/9(67) 2/2(100) 5/18(28) 5/13(38) 0/2(0) 0.1 0.2 Polymyxin monotherapy had higher rates of treatment failure compared to polymyxin-based combination therapy (73% vs. 29% p 0.02). Both patients who received polymyxin monotherapy for pneumonia experienced treatment failure (Villegas). All colistin MICs were initially susceptible (<2 µg/mL would be considered susceptible for Acinetobacter and P. aeruginosa). The optimal dosing of polymyxins is not well-defined. Polymyxin resistance in KPC-infections have been documented. Outbreaks of colistin-resistant KPC † infections recently reported in the US and Greece. Fisher’s exact test Carbapenem Treatment failure Source: Blood Pulmonary Urine Carbapenem MIC (µg/ml): Monotherapy Combination 12/20(60) 5/19(26) 3/8(38) 7/8(88) 1/3(33) <8 7/12(58) 1/2(50) 4/14(29) 1/2(50) 0/3(0) >8 5/8(63) 1/2(50) 0.03 Carbapenem monotherapy had higher rates of treatment failure compared to carbapenem-based combination therapy (60% versus 26% p 0.03). Carbapenem MIC <8 µg/mL and MIC >8 µg/mL resulted in similar failure rates for monotherapy (58% and 63%). Of the patients who received carbapenem monotherapy with MIC <8 µg/mL, 11 out of 12 had MICs <4 µg/mL. One patient received highdose continuous infusion meropenem monotherapy (MIC =8 µg/mL) for a bloodstream infection (BSI) with success. Tigecycline Treatment failure Source: Blood Pulmonary Urine 2/7(29) 7/19(37) 0.4 1/2(50) 1/3(33) 0/2(0) 4/8(20) 3/8(37) 0.5 Total of 2 out of 7 patients who received tigecycline monotherapy experienced treatment failure. One patient was being treated for urosepsis and the other was treated for ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and empyema. Interestingly, both patients who were treated for UTI with tigecycline monotherapy had treatment success. Of the 19 patients who received tigecycline combination, 14 (74%) received polymyxin plus tigecycline. Tigecycline is bacteriostatic and low concentrations in blood and urine may be concerning. However, successful reports of tigecycline used for these indications have been reported. Aminoglycoside Treatment failure Source: Blood Pulmonary Urine 0/6(0) 4/24(17) 0/3(0) 0/1(0) 0/1(0) 4/4(100) 0/6(0) 0.6 All patients who received aminoglycoside monotherapy had success. Patients who received aminoglycoside based combination, most received treatment with amikacin. All patients who failed therapy with aminoglycoside-based therapy had BSIs. Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G 14 Table 7. Treatment failure by Combination Polymyxin plus Carbapenem Polymyxin plus Tigecycline Polymyxin plus Aminoglycoside Carbapenem plus Tigecycline Carbapenem plus Aminoglycoside β – lactam / β-lactamase inhibitor plus Aminoglycoside Aminoglycoside plus Fluoroquinolone Polymyxin plus β – lactam / β-lactamase inhibitor Polymyxin plus Fluoroquinolone Tetracycline plus Aminoglycoside Tigecycline plus Aminoglycoside Aminoglycoside plus monobactam Carbapenem plus β – lactam / β-lactamase inhibitor Carbapenem plus Cephalosporin Carbapenem plus Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole Treatment failure (%) 3/10 (30) 4/14(29) 2/8(25) 2/2(100) 0/4(0) 0/3(0) 1/5(20) 0/1 (0) 1/1(100) 0/1(0) 1/3(33) 0/1(0) 0/1(0) 0/1(0) 0/1(0) Patients who received combination-based therapy received the above regimens. Similar treatment failure were observed in the 3 most common combinations (Polymyxin+Carb, Polymyxin+Tig, Polymxin+AG) P=0.6. Both patients who received carbapenem plus tigecycline experienced treatment failure for BSI. Limitations: - Cannot determine causality on the basis of spontaneous reports (case reports) Publication bias should be considered, owing to the uncertainty inherent in estimating the degree of under-reporting Individual studies did not always define treatment failure or treatment success Antimicrobial dosing was not always reported Reports did not always detail procedures or other source control measures Retrospective analysis – residual colonization is difficult to exclude. The time at which active therapy was initiated to the time of isolation of organism was unknown. The degree to which the treatment contributed to these outcomes is still difficult to ascertain Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G _______________ No difference in success rates among combination therapy _________________ 15 Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 70 Qureshi et al. Treatment Outcome of Bacteremia due to KPC-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae: Superiority of Combination Antimicrobial Regimens Design: Objective: Methods: Statistics: Results: Retrospective cohort Evaluate the clinical outcome of patients with bacteremia caused by KPC-producing pneumoniae after various treatment regimens Cases of bacteremia due to K. pneumoniae were identified from 2005-2009. Cases whose isolates were confirmed KPC gene were included in the analysis. Appropriate therapy was defined as treatment with at least one agent for at least 48 hours to which the isolate was susceptible in vitro based on CLSI guidelines. Primary outcome measure was death within 28 days. 2 Student t-test, χ , Fisher’s exact test. OR and 95% CI were estimated. Conditional multivariate logistic regression model was used to identify independent predictors of mortality. P values <0.15 were included into the model. Alpha was set at <0.05. N=41 cases Demographics Age > 65 Male APACHE II >20 Survived (n=25) Died (n=16) Univariate analysis OR(95% CI) Multivariate analysis OR (95% CI) 14(56) 10(40) 12(48) 6(37.5) 7(43) 9(56) 0.4 (0.10-2.02) 1.1 (0.27-5.02) 0.7 (0.13-4.24) 0.34 1 0.72 21(65.6) 13(60) 11(34.3) 2(12.5) 0.2 (0.07-2.33) 0.13(0.01-0.82) 0.27 0.01 18(78.2) 10(62.5) 0.46(0.08+2.35) 0.30 3(12) 9(36) 5(20) 5(20) 7(43.7) 4(25) 1(6.2) 1(6.2) 5.7(0.98-3.68) 0.5(0.12-2.88) 0.2(0.01-2.87) 0.2(0.01-2.87) 0.03 0.51 0.38 0.38 5(20) 5(20) 2(8) 1.8(0.35-9.67) 0.5(0.06-4.16) 0(0-6.72) 0.48 0.68 0.51 n(%) 15(44) 5(31.2) 2(12.5) 0(0) Mortality n(%) 2(13.3) 5(33) 1(7) 1(7) 1(20) 0 0 Monotherapy Colistin/Polymyxin B Tigecycline Carbapenem Gentamicin Amp/sulbactam Pip/tazo n(%) 19(46) 7(36.8) 5(26.3) 4(21) 1(5.2) 1(5.2) 1(5.2) 3(20) 2(12) 0 0 1(7) 1(100) P P Therapy Inappropriate Therapy Combination definitive therapy Appropriate therapy at any time 0.07(0.009-0.71) 0.02 Source of Infection Pneumonia Line-related Urinary tract Primary bacteremia Underlying diseases Diabetes Solid organ transplant COPD Definitive treatment Combination Colistin/polymyxin B combined with Carbapenem Tigecycline Fluoroquinolone Tigecycline combined with Carbapenem Aminoglycoside Carbapenem + fluoroquinolone Conclusions Limitations Mortality n(%) 11(57.8) 4(57.1) 4(80) 2(50) 0 0 1(100) The use of combination therapy for definite therapy appears to be associated with improved survival in patients with KPC producing K pneumoniae bacteremia Retrospective, small N Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G 16 Current Situation Carbapenems are broad spectrum antibiotics that are often used as last-resort treatments for resistant gram-negative infections, such as those caused by extended spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) producing Enterobacteriaceae. The rise of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) has become a significant public health challenge in the last decade.1 Data regarding health-care-associated infections reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) indicated that 8% of all Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates were carbapenem resistant in 2007 compared with less than 1% in 2000. CREs are highly-resistant to almost, if not, all available antimicrobial agents and present clinicians with serious treatment challenges. Key Points: KPCs are rapidly spreading globally Detection has been difficult since many KPC-producing isolates fall within the susceptible range Infections caused by KPC-producing bacteria have been associated with high mortality and treatment failure Tigecycline and polymyxins remain the most active in-vitro Clinical data on treatment is limited and therapy for KPC infections is not well defined Combination therapy may be associated with less failure than monotherapy No data on which combination therapy is superior Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 | Lee, G Epidemiology and treatment of KPC’S…What’s the news? 17 References 1. Gaynes RP, Culver DH. Resistance to imipenem among selected gram-negative bacilli in the united states. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 1992 Jan;13(1):10-4. 2. Nordmann P, Cuzon G, Naas T. The real threat of klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase-producing bacteria. Lancet Infect Dis 2009 Apr;9(4):228-36. 3. 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(2011) 8 KPC-producing organisms (4 K.pneumoniae, 2 E. coli, 1 Enterobacter cloacae, 1 Serratia marcescens) 14 KPC-producing K. pneumoniae TK curves performed with TIG, COL, MER alone and in combination (TIG + COL) At most drug concentrations, TIG, COL and MER as single agents do not exhibit efficient bactericidal activity against most of the KPC-producing strains. TIG and COL were bactericidal against all strains at most time intervals and concentrations and synergistic against most strains. All monotherapy had regrowth. TKA showed synergy with all combinations of PB (1/4, 1/2, 1x MIC) in 9/14 isolates (64%) PB+MER. Pankey et al. (2011) Bratu et al. (2005) 16 KPC-producing K. pneumoniae TK performed with POLB with either MER or RIF TK POLB plus IMI or RIF Le et al. (2011) 4 KPC-producing K. pneumoniae ERT, IMI or MER in combination with AMI Pharmacotherapy Rounds 2012 |Lee, G POLB demonstrated concentration-dependent killing, and was bactericidal against most strains at 2 or 4 mg/L. The combination of POLB plus RIF was bactericidal and synergistic against 15/16 isolates. The combination of POLB (0.5 × MIC) with imipenem was synergistic for 10/16 isolates. The addition of IMI to the combination of POLB plus RIF had no effect. As monotherapy, none of the carbapenems nor AMI achieved bactericidal activity. Synergy and bactericidal activity was achieved with MER and IPM with AMI.
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