General Rules of Antimicrobial Therapy
Choice of Antimicrobial
- Patient characteristics
- Cost
- Maximize benefit/risk ratio
- Ideal - bacteriologic diagnosis
- Sensitivity test Petri dish /w antibacterial disks [CR?]
- Best guess
- Mixed infections
- Life-threatening -- combos and broad spectrum till pathogens identified
- Use narrow spectrum if possible
- Use bactericidal drugs if possible
Antimicrobial sensitivity patterns
- Routine monitoring aids local ad hoc choices
- Variation by locale
- Published tables
TABLE: Facultative pathogens, common infections, and antimicrobial
therapy
Name and Synonyms Usual Site of Typical Infections Effective
Infection Antibiotics
Staphylococcus Skin, upper Boils, infected Flucloxacillin,
aureus, Coagulase respiratory tract wounds, mastitis, clindamycin,
positive purulent (when sensitive,
staphylococcus parotitis, benzylpenicillin),
suppurative erythromycin,
pneumonia, vancomycin
antibiotic-induced
enterocolitis,
food poisoning,
infections
associated with
foreign bodies,
osteomyelitis
S. intermedius Skin, urinary cystitis, pyoderma amoxacillin/clavul
(dogs) tract infections anic acid,
oxacillin,
enrofloxacillin,
cephalothin
Prophylaxis and Viral Infections
- Avoid general prophylaxis
- Target prophylaxis
- Hospital strains - often resistant
- Timing important
Selection Pressure
- Varies with drug
- Piperacillin < Ampicillin
- Broad spectrum drugs > narrow spectrum
Acquired Cross-Resistance Among Antimicrobials
- Also called parallel resistance
- Difference among members of same group of drugs
- Shift to which antimicrobial if resistance?
- Sensitivity testing -- prototype drug?
- Cross resistance common
- tetracyclines
- sulfonamides
- neomycin and kanamycin (sub group of aminoglycosides)
- natural and aminopenicillins if due to penicllinase
- ampicillin and amoxicillin
- all beta-lacams if "methicillin-resistant"
- Not common or predictable
- aminoglycosides
- beta-lactams in general
Pharmacokinetic Considerations
Absorption
Distribution
Elimination
Absorption
- Drug
- Route
- Formulation
- highly soluble
- poorly soluble
- Example - trihydrate & sodium salts of ampicillin
- Tailor to target infection & site
Distribution
- Barriers
- Difficult sites
- CNS
- eye
- mammary gland
- prostate
- testis
- intracellular
- inflammatory "capsule"
Elimination
- Function of primary eliminating mechanism
- If slow -- accumulation & toxicity
- If fast -- insufficient concentration
Administration
- Route
- Dose form
- Dose
- Regimen
Route
- Considerations
- cidal vs. static
- MIC
- Post-antibiotic effect
- Induced resistance
- IV
- Serious infections
- bolus
- infusion
- PO
- Usually easy
- Most common
- Vomiting?
- Bioavailability
- IM / SC
- Widely used
- Drug residues in food
- Dose form
- NO for Irritants / vesicants
- Topical
- Not penetrate well
- Avoid with strong allergens, e.g., beta-lactams
- Patient Tolerance
- Topical -- ointment vs cream
- GI distrubance
- IV/IM > PO for serious allergic reactions
- IV best for highly irritating drugs
Dosage
- Organism
- Site of infection
- Nature of infection (chronic / acute)
- Dose form
- Route of administration
- Regimen -- Dose / Dose interval
- Patient characteristics
- Therapeutic drug monitoring
Dose form
- Ampicillin - trihydrate vs sodium
Regimen
Duration of Treatment
- As long as necessary
- Norms for certain diseases
- Client education
- Acute vs chronic
Antibiotic Combinations
- Immunocompromised
- Initial therapy severely ill patients
- Guide initial choices for combinations
- Clinical trial -- "gold standard"
- Cidal / static
Cidal/Static in Combination Antimicrobial Therapy
The guiding principle is that one should not combine a "cidal"
antibiotic with a "static" anibiotic in the therapy of the SAME
PATHOGEN.
/p>
Efficacy of Combinations Against
Klebsiella
Add-- Syner-- Ant-
% % %
Cephalothin [c]
plus --
Kanamycin [c] 9 90 0
Gentamicin [c] 5 95 0
Chloramphenicol [s]
plus --
Kanamycin [c] 26 36 38
Gentamicin [c] 13 51 36
Add = Additive Syner = Synergistic
Ant = Antagonistic
[c] = cidal [s] = static
D'Alessandri et al., '76
- Cidal + static often antagonistic
- Immunocompromised patients
- Difficulty in showing antagonism in vivo
Measuring Effects of Combinations In Vitro
- MIC
- FIC
- Assays to determine interaction
Categories for Combination of Antimicrobials
- Group I -- Bactericidal
- Rapidly growing organisms
- beta-lactams, aminoglycosides
- Group II -- Bacteriostatic
- tetracyclines
- sulfonamides
- lincosamides
- macrolides
- Effect of growth rate on antimicrobial action
- Rule
- Group I + Group I -- often synergistic
- Group I + Group II -- often antagonistic
- Exceptions
- Mixed infections
- Location of organism
- Growth rate of organism
- Increased deaths with combination
- Lepper & Dowling '51, bacterial meningitis;
Pen G alone 30% deaths
Pen G + Chlortet 79% deaths
Problems Created by Misuse of Antimicrobials
- Facilitation of Development of Resistance
- Imporoper dosage
- Improper interval
- Insufficient duration
- Poor choice of drug
- Use when not needed / prophylaxis
- Development of Hypersensitivity
- Superinfections
- Importance of commensal organisms
- Broad spectrum
- Too long therapy
- Interference with body defenses
- Tissues residues
- Drug failure
- Death of patient
Properties of an Ideal Chemotherapeutic Agent
- be selective and have effective antimicrobial activity;
- be bactericidal and not easily induce bacterial resistance;
- have a satisfactory therapeutic ratio;
- not act as a sensitizing agent or disturb vital organs or functions;
- have antibacterial efficacy that is not reduced by body fluids, exudates,
plasma proteins, or tissue enzymes;
- be water soluble and stable at room temperature (especially important
in drugs used for mass therapy);
- have efficacy via various routes of administration, especially PO;
- achieve and maintain, with cost-effective doses, cidal levels in blood,
tissue, and body fluids, e.g. CSF;
- produce bactericidal concentrations of drug in urinary tract;
- be neither carcinogenic nor have carcinogenic metabolites;
- be quickly cleared from the edible tissues and products of food producing
animals; and
- have reasonable cost.
Study Questions
- You should be able to list and discuss major problems created by the
misuse of chemotherapeutic agents. What is the mechanism by which the misuse
could contribute to each of the problems you mention? Do these apply to
all categories of chemotherapeutic agents (e.g., antiparasitics or anticancer
drugs?)
- How does one select a chemotherapeutic agent to use, initially, in
a given case? For this question, focus on how one decides on the basis
of efficacy only, ignoring safety and cost. These will be considered in
separate steps. Be able to discuss at least two different means.
- What is an important consideration, in addition to the effect on the
pathogen(s), that one must consider in the decision of whether to use a
"broad" versus a "narrow" spectrum antimicrobial?
- Be able to discuss at least 3 factors that influence the decision as
to which route is most appropriate for a certain antimicrobial agent and
a given infectious episode?
- Why would experts recommend that for treatment of serious bacterial
infections with intravenous therapy bactericidal drugs may be given by
bolus, but bacteriostatic drugs should be given by infusion?
- Why is it of value to know whether a drug is "cidal" (bactericidal)
or "static" (bacteriostatic) in its action against microorganisms?
Be able to discuss the application of the "rules" for combining
antimicrobial drugs including situations in which the rules are less applicable.
- What is meant by the terms Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC),
Minimum Bactericidal Concentration (MBC), Fractional Inhibitory Concentration
(FIC)? What relevance do these values have to the determination of the
dose that should be given to a patient?
- Is a total dose of a given antimicrobial drug "base" per
day the most important consideration or must one consider dose interval,
route, and dose form as well? Be able to discuss this issue and to provide
a graphical example. (Note: drug "base" refers to the active
portion of the drug preparation. For example, penicillin is available as
the salt of potassium, sodium, procaine, and benzathine. Dosing penicillin
on a mg/kg basis assuming that the active ingredient constitutes the same
proportion of the total in all cases would constitute a serious error.
Think about the difference between forumula weight and molecular weight.)
- Be able to discuss and apply the principles of antibacterial therapy
contained in this document. When applying these principles on in-class
and take-home exams, you should be able to explicitly identify the concept
involved.
- You should be able to list 8 of the 12 properties of an ideal chemotherapeutic
agent. Be able to describe why each of the factors is important and how
it would contribute to more effective therapy.
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Gordon L. Coppoc, DVM, PhD
Professor of Veterinary Pharmacology
Head, Department of Basic Medical Sciences
School of Veterinary Medicine
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1246
Tel: 317-494-8633Fax: 317-494-0781
Email: coppoc@vet.purdue.edu
Last modified
11:44 AM on 3/27/96
GLC