VANCOMYCIN, LINEZOLID, NITROFURANTOIN, AND METRONIDAZOLE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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VANCOMYCIN, LINEZOLID, NITROFURANTOIN, AND METRONIDAZOLE

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Title: VANCOMYCIN, LINEZOLID, NITROFURANTOIN, AND METRONIDAZOLE


1
VANCOMYCIN, LINEZOLID, NITROFURANTOIN, AND
METRONIDAZOLE
  • Alan M. Stamm, M.D.
  • astamm_at_uabmc.edu
  • October 23, 2002

2
Outline
  • vancomycin (Vancocin)
  • linezolid (Zyvox)
  • quinupristin/dalfopristin (Synercid)
  • nitrofurantoin (Macrodantin, Macrobid)
  • metronidazole (Flagyl)
  • topical antibacterials
  • antiseptics

3
VANCOMYCINMechanism of Action
  • A glycopeptide.
  • Interferes with cell wall synthesis complexes
    with D-alanine-D-alanine precursors and inhibits
    peptidoglycan polymerase.
  • Bactericidal bacteriostatic versus enterococci.

4
VANCOMYCINMechanism of Resistance
  • Alteration of cell wall precursor decreased
    affinity, less effective competitive inhibition.
  • e.g., VRE with Van A resistance
  • cluster of gt7 genes encoding synthesis of
    peptidoglycan precursor
  • production of pentapeptide ending with
  • D-alanine-D-lactate
  • No cross-resistance with beta-lactams.

5
VANCOMYCINPharmacology
  • Absorption poor orally usually administered
    intravenously by slow infusion.
  • Half-life 6 hours.
  • Serum levels desired peak at 1-2 hours
  • 20-40 mcg/ml, and desired trough 5-10.
  • Elimination primarily by glomerular filtration
    reduce dose and/or increase dosing interval if
    creatinine clearance lt100 ml/min not removed by
    hemodialysis.

6
VANCOMYCINEfficacy
  • A principal determinant is the proportion of time
    the vancomycin at the site of infection exceeds
    the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the
    pathogen, TgtMIC.
  • Also has a postantibiotic effect continues to
    exert activity for 2 hours after level falls ltMIC.

7
VANCOMYCINAdverse Effects
  • Red-man syndrome tingling/pruritus, erythema of
    face, neck thorax hypotension too rapid
    infusion histamine release.
  • Fever, chills, phlebitis at infusion site.
  • Maculopapular or diffuse erythematous rash in
    4-5 hypersensitivity.
  • Auditory nerve damage tinnitus, high-tone
    hearing loss, deafness dose-related.
  • Selection of vancomycin resistant bacteria.

8
VANCOMYCINSpectrum of Activity
  • Gram-positive bacteria
  • Streptococci
  • including drug resistant S. pneumoniae
  • Staphylococci
  • including methicillin resistant S. epidermidis
    (MRSE) and S. aureus (MRSA)
  • Enterococcus fecalis
  • Clostridium difficile

9
VANCOMYCINClinical Uses 1
  • Meningitis
  • ampicillin ceftriaxone vancomycin (loading
    maintenance doses) IV initially pending results
    of culture and susceptibility (C S) tests
  • Nosocomial infections
  • vancomycin piperacillin/tazobactam empirically
    pending results of C S

10
VANCOMYCIN Clinical Uses 2
  • Treatment of methicillin resistant staphylococcal
    disease
  • e.g., bacteremia due to MRSE
  • e.g., pneumonia due to MRSA
  • Treatment of serious gram-positive disease with
    intolerance of beta-lactams.
  • Prevention of surgical site infection
  • e.g., 1 gm IV 1-2 hours before cardiac surgery

11
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12
LINEZOLIDMechanism of Action
  • An oxazolidinone.
  • Interferes with initiation of protein synthesis
    attaches to 50S ribosome.
  • Bacteriostatic versus staphylococci and
    enterococci.

13
LINEZOLIDMechanism of Resistance
  • Mutation in the 23S rRNA gene.
  • No cross-resistance with other protein synthesis
    inhibitors.

14
LINEZOLID Pharmacology
  • Absorption well orally available for PO and IV
    administration.
  • Half-life 5 hours.
  • Elimination slow nonenzymatic oxidation 30
    excreted unchanged in urine no dose adjustment
    with renal impairment.
  • Postantibiotic effect 3-4 hours.

15
LINEZOLIDAdverse Effects
  • Diarrhea, nausea, tongue discoloration.
  • Headache.
  • Anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia.

16
LINEZOLIDSpectrum of Activity
  • Gram-positive bacteria
  • Streptococci
  • including drug resistant S. pneumoniae
  • Staphylococci
  • including methicillin resistant S. epidermidis
    (MRSE) and S. aureus (MRSA)
  • Enterococci
  • including E. fecalis
  • including vancomycin resistant E. faecium (VRE)

17
LINEZOLID Clinical Uses
  • Treatment of vancomycin resistant enterococcal
    (VRE) disease
  • e.g., bacteremia with 600 mg IV/PO
  • q 12 hours

18
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19
Quinupristin/Dalfopristin-1
  • Streptogramins, derived from pristinamycins.
  • Inhibit protein synthesis by irreversible binding
    to 50S ribosome resistance due to methylation of
    binding site.
  • Bacteriostatic versus enterococci.
  • Administered by slow infusion through central
    venous catheter.
  • Eliminated by biliary excretion.

20
Quinupristin/Dalfopristin-2
  • Adverse effects pain and phlebitis at the
    injection site arthralgias myalgias
    hyperbilirubinemia nausea diarrhea.
  • Active in vitro against a wide variety of
    gram-positive bacteria.
  • except Enterococcus fecalis
  • Used for treatment of vancomycin resistant
    Enterococcus faecium (VRE) disease
  • e.g., bacteremia with 7.5 mg/kg IV q 8 hours

21
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22
NITROFURANTOINMechanism of Action
  • A nitrofuran.
  • Inhibits intracellular metabolism mechanism is
    ill defined activity may depend on a reduced
    derivative.
  • Bactericidal.

23
NITROFURANTOINPharmacology
  • Absorption orally 40-50, enhanced by food.
  • Serum levels low-undetectable.
  • Elimination predominantly by glomerular
    filtration and tubular secretion do not
    prescribe with creatinine clearance lt40 ml/min.

24
NITROFURANTOINAdverse Effects
  • Nausea vomiting in 17.
  • Rash in 1.
  • Pulmonary hypersensitivity acute fever, cough,
    dyspnea, myalgias, eosinophilia, infiltrates.
  • Pulmonary fibrosis insidious onset,
    nonproductive cough, dyspnea, interstitial
    infiltrates.
  • Hemolytic anemia.
  • Peripheral neuropathy.

25
NITROFURANTOINSpectrum of Activity
  • Urinary pathogens
  • Escherichia coli
  • Klebsiella pneumoniae
  • Staphylococcus saprophyticus
  • Enterococcus fecalis

26
NITROFURANTOIN Clinical Uses
  • Empiric treatment of uncomplicated cystitis
  • e.g., Macrobid 100 mg PO bid x 7 days
  • Prevention of recurrent urinary tract infection
  • e.g., nitrofurantoin 100 mg PO q hs

27
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28
METRONIDAZOLEMechanism of Action
  • A nitroimidazole.
  • Intracellular reduction creates short-lived
    compounds or free radicals that produce damage by
    interaction with DNA or other macromolecules.
  • Bactericidal.
  • Resistance rarely develops.

29
METRONIDAZOLEPharmacology
  • Absorption rapid and complete orally also
    administered intravenously.
  • Penetration excellent into all tissues.
  • Half-life 8 hours.
  • Elimination metabolized reduce dose by 50 in
    patients with significant hepatic disease no
    change in dose with renal impairment.

30
METRONIDAZOLEAdverse Effects
  • Nausea, diarrhea, metallic taste.
  • Disulfiram-like reaction with alcohol.
  • Dark or red-brown urine.
  • Neutropenia.
  • Maculopapular rash or urticaria.

31
METRONIDAZOLESpectrum of Activity
  • Anaerobic bacteria
  • particularly gram-negative
  • Helicobacter pylori.
  • Gardnerella vaginalis.
  • Trichomonas vaginalis.
  • Giardia lamblia.

32
METRONIDAZOLE Clinical Uses 1
  • Treatment of anaerobic infections or the
    anaerobic portion of mixed infections.
  • e.g., 1 g loading dose 500 mg IV q 6-8 hours x
    2-4 weeks along with other agent(s)
  • Treatment of Clostridium difficile colitis.
  • e.g., 500 mg PO q 8 hours x 10-14 days

33
METRONIDAZOLE Clinical Uses 2
  • Treatment of Helicobacter pylori gastro-duodenal
    disease.
  • e.g., 500 mg PO bid x 10 days in combination with
    2-3 other agents
  • Treatment of Trichomonas vaginitis.
  • e.g., 500 mg PO bid x 7 days
  • Treatment of bacterial vaginosis.
  • e.g., 5 g of 0.75 gel intravaginally bid x 5
    days (or 500 mg PO bid x 7 days)

34
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35
Topical Antibacterial Agents
  • Erythromycin ophthalmic ointment to treat
    bacterial conjunctivitis.
  • Mupirocin (Bactroban) ointment to eliminate nasal
    carriage of S. aureus.
  • Bacitracin-neomycin-polymixin B (Neosporin)
    ointment to prevent infection of minor cuts,
    scrapes, burns.
  • Silver sulfadiazine (Silvadine) or mafenide
    (Sulfamylon) cream to prevent infection of burn
    wounds.

36
Antiseptics
  • Agents
  • Alcohol
  • Chlorhexidine
  • Povidone-iodine
  • Uses
  • Hand disinfection between patient contacts
  • Preparation of operative/procedure sites
  • Surgical scrub

37
Summary
  • Vancomycin is a very important drug in the
    initial treatment of nosocomial infections and
    for the definitive therapy of MRSA disease.
  • Linezolid is the drug of choice for treatment of
    VRE disease.
  • Metronidazole is a key drug in the therapy of
    anaerobic bacterial disease.
  • Antibiotic use leads to resistance be judicious.
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