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Evaluation Strategies for Triple‐Drug Combinations against Carbapenemase‐Producing Klebsiella Pneumoniae in an In Vitro Hollow‐Fiber Infection Model

Authors :
Cely S. Abboud
Gauri G. Rao
Patrick O. Hanafin
John K. Diep
Keith S Kaye
Estefany Garcia
Jian Li
Tony Velkov
Rajnikant Sharma
Source :
Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Mounting antimicrobial resistance to carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (CPKP) highlights the need to optimize currently available treatment options. The objective of this study was to explore alternative dosing strategies that limit the emergence of resistance to preserve the utility of last-line antibiotics by: (i) evaluating the pharmacodynamic (PD) killing activity of simulated humanized exposures to monotherapy and two-drug and three-drug combinations against CPKP bacterial isolates with different resistance mechanisms; and (ii) optimizing polymyxin B (PMB) exposure simulated in the three-drug combination regimens to maximize the killing activity. Two CPKP clinical isolates (BAA2146 (NDM-1) and BRKP76 (KPC-2)) were evaluated over 168 hours using a hollow-fiber infection model simulating clinically relevant PMB, fosfomycin, and meropenem dosing regimens. PMB-based three-drug combinations were further optimized by varying the initial exposure (0-24 hours) or maintenance dose received over the duration of treatment. The area under the bacterial load-versus-time curve (AUCFU) was used to determine PD activity. Overall reductions in PMB exposure ranged from 2 to 84%. BAA2146 and BRKP76 had median (range) AUCFUs of 11.0 (10.6-11.6) log10 CFU hour/mL and 7.08 (7.04-11.9) log10 CFU hour/mL, respectively. The PMB "front loaded" 2.5 mg/kg/day + 0.5 mg/kg maintenance dose in combination with meropenem and fosfomycin was a promising regimen against BRKP76, with an overall reduction in PMB exposure of 56% while still eradicating the bacteria. Tailored triple-combination therapy allows for the optimization of dose and treatment duration of last-line agents like PMB to achieve adequate drug exposure and appropriate PD activity while minimizing the emergence of resistance.

Details

ISSN :
15326535 and 00099236
Volume :
109
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....70f56976d557f721f132009861e24ad0