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Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections Jesús Rodríguez Baño, MD PhD FESCMID Infectious Diseases Division, Hospital Universitario Virgen Macarena Biomedicine Institute of Seville (IBiS), University of Seville Spanish Network for Reearch in Infectious Diseases (REIPI)

Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

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Page 1: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Therapeutic challenge of MDR-Enterobacteriaceae infections

Jesús Rodríguez Baño, MD PhD FESCMID

Infectious Diseases Division, Hospital Universitario Virgen Macarena

Biomedicine Institute of Seville (IBiS), University of Seville

Spanish Network for Reearch in Infectious Diseases (REIPI)

Page 2: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Conflicts of interest

• Honoraria for accredited educational activities (Merck), 2016

• Honoraria for design and coordination of a research project, unrelated to products (AstraZeneca), 2015

• Funds for research from IMI, COMBACTE projects (EU+EFPIA)

Page 3: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Resistance in Enterobacteriaceae

• Fluoroquinolones

– 2+ chromosomal mutations

– Low level: 1 mutation or plasmid-mediated mechanisms

• Cephalosporins

– ESBLs (CTX-M most frequent)

– AmpC

• Carbapenems

– β-lactamases + permeability

– Carbapenemases (KPC, MBL, OXA-48)

Page 4: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Clinical epidemiology

• Reservoirs

– Bowel of persons, animals

– Environment

• Transmission

– Person-to-person (K. pneumoniae: HCA; E. coli: household)

– Contaminated food, water

– Facilitated by antibiotics (cephs, FQ, carbapenems, etc)

Page 5: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Molecular epidemiology

• Microorganisms

– E. coli: policlonal (but some succesful clones – ST131)

– K. pneumoniae: frequently clonal – eg, KPC “high-risk clones” (STs 258, 11, 512)

• Resistance genes – succesful mobile genetic elements

Page 6: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

EARS-net 2016. E. coli

Fluoroquinolone-R Third gen. ceph-R

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Third gen. ceph-R

EARS-net 2016. K. pneumoniae

Carbapenem-R

Page 8: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Penicillinases

Cephalosporinases (ESBLs, AmpCs)

Carbapenemases (MLBs, KPC, OXA)

Broad spectrum penicillinases (TEM-1, SHV-1)

The β-lactamases staircase

… and then colistin-resistance!

Page 9: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

FEP AZT FOX AMC TZP MER

>75% R

Enterobacteriacae: susceptibilty to β-lactams according to β-lactamases

>25% R <25% R

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Van Boeckel et al

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Clin Infect Dis 2016 N=37. Mortality 24% 10 microbiological failure 3 resistance

Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2017

Ceftazidime-avibactam: development of R

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Challenges

• When is it neccesary to empirically cover ESBL/AmpC and carbapenemase-producers?

• Are there carbapenem-spare options for empirical or targeted therapy of ESBL/AmpC?

• What is the best treatment for carbapenemase-producers?

• How can we preserve new drugs?

Page 13: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Challenges

• When is it neccesary to empirically cover ESBL/AmpC and carbapenemase-producers?

• Are there carbapenem-spare options for empirical or targeted therapy of ESBL/AmpC?

• What is the best treatment for carbapenemase-producers?

• How can we preserve new drugs?

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Predictors for invasive infection due to ESBL producers

• A) Highly predictive

– Colonization/infection with ESBL1,2

– Recent antibiotics (mainly cephs, FQ)1,2,3

• B) Moderately predictive

– Healthcare-associated (LTCF, recent admission)1,3

– Recent procedure 1,2,3

• Proposal

– If severe sepsis/shock: 1 (A) or 2 (B)

– Non-severe: 2 (A) or 1 (A) + 2 (B)

1. Godman et al, Clin Infect Dis 2016

2. Augustine et al, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2016

3. Lee et al, Medicine 2017

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Challenges

• When is it neccesary to empirically cover ESBL/AmpC and carbapenemase-producers?

• Are there carbapenem-spare options for empirical or targeted therapy of ESBL/AmpC?

• What is the best treatment for carbapenemase-producers?

• How can we preserve new drugs?

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Candidates as carbapenems-spare regimens

• Beta-lactams – BLBLI – Cephamycins – Cephalosporins – Temocillin – Pivmecillinam

• Aminoglycosides • Fluroquinolones • TMP/SMX • Fosfomycin

Clin Infect Dis 2017

Clin Microbiol Rev 2018

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PS-adjusted HR for mortality (reference= carbapenem): 0.65 (0.23-1.65) PS-matched pairs: mortality carbapenem 16.4% vs BLBLI 7,3%

Antimicrob Agents Chemthr 2016

Page 18: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Meta-analyses for BLBLI in ESBLs

• Muhammed et al, OFID 2017

– Empirical: RR=1.05 (95% CI: 0.83–1.37)

– Definite: RR=0.62 (95% CI: 0.25–1.52)

• Son et al, J Antimicrob Chemother 2018

– Empirical: RR=1.01 (95% CI: 0.74, 1.38)

– Definite: RR=0.67 (95% CI: 0.37, 1.20)

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• Meropenem vs piptazo for targeted treatment of bloodstream infection due to ceph-R Enterobacteriaceae

• Trial stopped because of non-inferiority of piptaz – Mortality 3.7% v 12.3%

• Limitations – Piptaz susceptibility by E-test (EUCAST warning)

– Potental disbalance between groups

– Mortality unrelated to infection

– Higher mortality wit piptazo in low-middle income countries

JAMA 2018

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Empirical therapy No. deaths/ treated (%)

High-risk score (%)

Low-risk score (%)

Carbapenems 51/249 (20.4) 41/81 (50.6) 11/168 (6.5)

Other active drugs 16/87 (18.3) 14/28 (50) 2/59 (3.3)

Cephalosporin as only active drug 2/7 (28.6) 1/2 (50) 1/5 (20)

Aminoglycoside as only active drug 9/41 (21.9) 8/16 (50) 1/25 (4)

Fluoroquinolone as only active drug 2/19 (10.5) 2/2 (100) 0/17 (0)

TMP-SMX as only active drug 0/4 (0) 0/1 (0) 0/3 (0)

Tigecycline as only active drug 1/2 (50) 1/2 (50) 0

Others used as only active drug 2/10 (20) 2/4 (50) 0/6 (0)

Other combinations 0/4 (0) 0/1 (0) 0/3 (0)

Adjusted HR (mortality) = 0.75 (95% CI: 0.38-1.48) p=0.42 HR in propensity-score matched pairs: 0.68 (95% CI 0.31–1.48; P = 0.33).

Page 21: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

BMJ Open 2015

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Challenges

• When is it neccesary to empirically cover ESBL/AmpC and carbapenemase-producers?

• Are there carbapenem-spare options for empirical or targeted therapy of ESBL/AmpC?

• What is the best treatment for carbapenemase-producers?

• How can we preserve new drugs?

Page 23: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Clin Microbiol Infect 2011

Page 24: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Clin Microbiol Rev 2012

Page 25: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Clin Microbiol Rev 2012

AG Carb

TIG

COL Inactive

Comb (-carba)

Comb (+carba)

Page 26: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

BSI due to CPE Combination vs monotherapy - Cohort studies

• Not associated with mortality

– Capone, CMI 2013

– De Oliveira, CMI 2015

– Satlin, AAC 2015

– Gomez-Simmonds, AAC 2016

• Associated with lower mortality

– Qureshi, AAC 2012

– Tumbarello, CID 2012

– Daikos, AAC 2014

– Tofas, IJAA 2016

– Trecarichi, Am J Hematol 2016

– Machuca, AAC 2017

– Papadimitrou, EJCMID 2017

Reviewed at Clin Microbiol Rev 2018

Page 27: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

aHR=

Page 28: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –
Page 29: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

aOR=1.21 (0.56-2.56) p=0.62 aHR=0.56 (0.34-0.91) p=0.02 Absolute difference 14% Absolute difference -4%

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Page 31: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

COL COL+MER RR comb (95% CI) P Absolute difference

RCT (Paul et al, TLID 2018)

Page 32: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

COL COL+MER RR comb (95% CI) P Absolute difference

Observational, high-risk (Gutierrez-Gutierrez et al, Lancet Infect Dis 2017) Enterobacteriaceae 64 (62%) n=103 30 (48%) n=63 0.56 (0.34-0.91) 0.002 14%

14%

RCT (Paul et al, TLID 2018)

Page 33: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Some problems

• Inclusion allowed until 6 days after susceptibility was available

• Only 3% of isolates with meropenem MIC <16 mg/L

• Colistin MIC performed at each site – method??

• Not applicable to P. aeruginosa or Enterobacteriaceae

Page 34: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

• Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC)

– <7 (low risk of infection): no intervention

– 7-11 (moderate risk): consider decolonization with gentamicin*

– ≥12 (high risk): decolonization with gentamicin*

• Infection, empirical therapy: GR and INCREMENT (risk of mortality)

– GR <7, INCREMENT <7: standard treatment (no KPC coverage)

– GR ≥7 , INCREMENT<7: monotherapy with KPC coverage

– INCREMENT ≥7: combination with KPC coverage

Clin Infect Dis 2018

*Machuca et al, JAC 2016

Page 35: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Inhibition of beta-lactamases: new compounds

Ambler class

Enzime Ceftolozane/ tazobactam

Ceftazidime/ avibactam1

Meropenem/ vaborvactam2

A ESBL Yes Yes Yes

KPC No Yes Yes

B MBL No No No

C AmpC Variable Yes Yes

D OXA-48 No Yes No

Page 36: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Ceftazidime-avibactam N=38

Colistin N=99

BSI 15 (39.4) 48 (48.4)

Combination therapy 24 (63.1) 93 (93.3)

In-hospital mortality 3 (7.8) 33 (33.3)

DOOR:IPTW-adjusted probability (95% CI)

Efficacy 0.64 (0.57-0.71)

Safety 0.62 (0.52-0.72)

Benefit:risk 0.64 (0.53-0.75)

Van Duin et al, Clin Infect Dis 2017

Page 37: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

IDWeek 2017

Page 38: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Isolate susceptibility High risk: COMBINATION therapy

Susceptible to a β-lactam (use according to susceptibility)

Backbone: CAZ-AVI, MER-VAB Alternatives: MER (MIC ≤8 mg/L) or CAZ or ATM

Accompanying drug: COL or TIG or AG or FOS (CAZ-AVI or MER-VAB might not need combination)

Resistant to all β-lactams (MER >8 mg/L), susceptible to at least 2 drugs including colistin

Backbone: COL

Accompanying drug: TIG, AG (high risk of nephrotoxicity), FOS

Resistant to all β-lactams and colistin, susceptible to at least 2 drugs

Backbone: TIG or AG

Accompanying drug: TIG, AG, FOS

Pandrug-resistant or susceptible only to one drug

(MER + ERT) or (CAZ-AVI + ATM) Consider: any active drug (CLO, RMP…), investigational drugs, in vitro testing for synergy

Low risk: MONOTHERAPY

According to susceptibility CAZ-AVI, MER-VAB, MER, CAZ, ATM, COL, TIG, AG

TIG: mostly for cIAI; for HAP/VAP, consider double dose AG: mostly for cUTI; for HAP/VAP, consider high dose. TDM recommended. FOS: mostly for cUTI

Rodríguez-Baño J, Gutiérrez B, Machuca I, Pascual A. Clin Microbiol Rev 2018

Page 39: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Drug Usual/standard doses Dosing for CRE and comments

Meropenem 1 gr/8 hours 2 g/8 hours in EI (isolates with MIC 2-8 mg/L) Ertapenem 1 g/24 hours Consider 2 g/day for double-carbapenem regimens

Colistin1 EMA: Loading dose, 6-9 MU; 9 MU/day in 2-3 doses FDA: 2.5-5 mg of colistin-base activity/kg/day

EMA dose is recommended for severe CRE infections. Need for loading dose and high continuation dose in patients without severe infection/shock is controversial

Polymyxin B2 FDA: 1.5-2.5 mg/Kg/day in 2 doses.

Mild infections and isolates with MIC ≤1 mg/L: FDA dose is probably appropriate. Severe infections and MIC up to 4 mg/L: loading dose 2-2.5 mg/kg followed by 3 mg/kg/day in 2 doses recommended (controversial).

Tigecycline 100 mg loading dose, then 50 mg/12 hours

If HAP, cUTI, BSI or shock: consider 200 mg loading dose, then 100 mg/12 hours

Gentamicin, tobramycin 5-7 mg/kg/day If HAP or shock without other options, higher dose (10-15 mg/kg) might be considered, but risk of toxicity is high. TDM recommended

Amikacin 15-20 mg/kg/day If HAP or shock without other options, higher dose (25-30 mg/kg) might be considered but risk of toxicity is high. TDM recommended

Fosfomycin 4 g/6 hours to 8 g/8 hours Use in combination. High sodium concentration. Temocillin 2 g/8-12 hours KPC producers occasionally susceptible. Continuous

infusion improves PK-PD target attainment Aztreonam 1-2 g/8 hours MBL producers susceptible if not ESBL or AmpC

Ceftazidime 1-2 g/8 hours OXA-48-producers susceptible if not ESBL or AmpC Ceftazidime-avibactam 2.5 g/8 hours KPC- and OXA-48-producers frequently susceptible Meropenem-vavorbactam 2/2 g/8 hours KPC-producers frequently susceptible

Rodríguez-Baño J, Gutiérrez B, Machuca I, Pascual A. Clin Microbiol Rev 2018

Page 40: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Challenges

• When is it neccesary to empirically cover ESBL/AmpC and carbapenemase-producers?

• Are there carbapenem-spare options for empirical or targeted therapy of ESBL/AmpC?

• What is the best treatment for carbapenemase-producers?

• How can we preserve new drugs?

Page 41: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Newcomers looking for…

Already here… • Ceftolozane-tazobactam

• Ceftazidime-avibactam • Meropenem-vaborbactam Soon to come (?) • Imipenem-relebactam • Aztreonam-avibactam • Cefepime-zidebatam • Plazomycin • Eravacycline • Cefiderocol • Murepavadine

Page 42: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Retrospective cohort, KPC-Enteroacteraceae infections treated with CAZ-AVI (Shields et al, AAC 2018)

• Clinical failure

HAP (33) 64%

BSI (20) 25%

UTI (8) 12%

IAI (7) 57%

Others (9) 67%

• Microbiological failure: 25 (32%)

• Development of resistence: 8 (10%), 22% of KPC-3 Kp.

Predictors: HAP (OR=3.1) RRT (OR=4.7)

Predictor: HAP (OR=2.7)

Predictors: RRT (and KPC-3)

Page 43: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Can we avoid development of R to new drugs?

• It will happen… but may be delayed

• Avoid use if not absolutely needed

• Hypothetical – to be investigated for each drug

– Combination for high bacterial load infections?

– Higher dose in difficult patients?

– Avoid if R subpopulations?

Page 44: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Do we need a new paradigm?

• Individualised treatment

Clin Microbiol Rev 2018

Page 45: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Problems for individualised antimicrobial therapy

• Generating “evidence” is difficult/imposible

– RCT cannot be performed for individual conditions

– RCT for “individualised vs stantard” would need to include only problematic patients/infections/organisms challenging!!

• Who is deciding individualised therapy? Can we extrapolate?

Page 46: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Conclusions

• Empirical therapy is no longer simple

• Carbapenem-spare regimens are still possible for low risk patients (more research is needed)

• Therapy of CPE must be individualised (drug/s, dosing)

• Judicious use of new drugs

• Expertise needed (ID + CM + CC + Ph)

Page 47: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Ackowledgements

• HUVM/IBiS team working in this area

– Infectious Diseases staff: P Retamar, LE López-Cortés, B Gutiérrez, J Sojo, Z Palacios

– Microbiology staff: A Pascual, M de Cueto, L López-Cerero, JM Rodríguez, F. Docobo, I López, M Delgado

– Pharmacy staff: V Merino, M Camean

– ICU staff: J Garnacho-Montero, A Arenzana

– PhD students: J Bravo-Ferrer, M Paniagua, P Martínez, J Lanz, S Pérez-Galera, J Girón, I Morales, L Cantón

– Data managers: M Barrio, V Palomo, A Sánchez, MD Navarro

• Funding institutions

– Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Spanish Network for Research in Infectious Diseases)

– IMI (EU + EFPIA)

– JPI-AMR

• Investigators from international groups and consortia (ESGBIS, INCREMENT, COMBACTE…)

Page 48: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

@jesusrbano

Sevilla 2018 ESCMID Course on Research Methodology (November 7-9)

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Page 50: Therapeutic challenge of MDR- Enterobacteriaceae infections · •Asymptomatic carrier, follow-up: GR score (risk of infection due to KPC) –

Goodman et al, Clin Infect Dis 2016

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ESBL-producers: 5.7% of 1,141 episodes

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ESBL-producers: 4.6% of 910 episodes

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http://www.eucast.org/ast_of_bacteria/warnings/

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P=0.05

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Cause of death with piptazo

• Terminal/palliative care 8

• Other comorbidity 8

• Other infection 1

• Unclear 2