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Management of Serious MRSA Infections

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1 Management of Serious MRSA Infections

2 Staphylococcus aureus
MSSA MRSA Cell Membrane Enzymes: Abnormal Penicillin Binding Protein (PBP2a) Β-Lactam Antibiotics Penicillins, (Methicillin) Cephalosporins, Monobactams, Carbapenems, mecA gene DNA Staphylococcal Cassette Chromosome (SCC)

3 MRSA: Resistance Genetics of Resistance MSSA MSSA MRSA MRSA HA-MRSA
PBP2a encoded by a mecA gene Located in a mobile genetic element, the Staphylococcal Cassette Chromosome mec SCCmec types I, II, III, IV, V 1990’s 1960’s SCCmec types II, III SCCmec type IV PFGE: USA 100 PFGE: USA 300 MRSA MRSA Different genetic backgrounds HA-MRSA CA-MRSA Jevons MP. Br Med J. 1961;1: Chambers HF. Clin Microbiol Rev. 1997;10: Gillet Y et al. Lancet. 2002;359: Vandenesch F et al. EID.2003; 9:978

4 MRSA: Virulence Genetics of Virulence MSSA MSSA MRSA MRSA HA-MRSA
mecA gene DNA LukSPV and LukFPV genes 1990’s 1960’s Genes that encode for Panton-Valentin leukocidin toxin (PVL) PVL exotoxin MRSA MRSA PVL (+) strains More virulent strains HA-MRSA CA-MRSA Labandeira-Rey M et al. Science. 2007;315: Vandenesch F et al. EID.2003; 9:978

5 MRSA: Clinical Manifestations
MRSA Infections HA-MRSA CA-MRSA Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia Necrotizing skin infection Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Cellulitis Abscess Catheter Related Bacteremia Necrotizing fasciitis Catheter Related UTI Bone & Joint Infections Bone & Joint Infections Necrotizing pneumonia Endocarditis Septic thrombosis Klevens M et al. JAMA. 2007;298: Moellering RC Jr. Ann Intern Med 144:368, 2006

6 UofL Guidelines for HAP/VAP
1. Selection of Empiric Therapy 2. De-escalation of Therapy 3. Duration of Therapy 4. UofL Treatment Pathway

7 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Hospital-Acquired Infections Appropriate Empiric Therapy Inappropriate Empiric Therapy Percent Mortality Study 1 Study 2 Study 3 Study 4 1.Luna C et al. Chest ;111: 2.Rello J et al. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 1997;156: 3. Kollef MH et al. Chest ;113: 4. Ibrahim EH et al. Chest ;118:

8 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Correlation of Empiric Therapy with Patient Outcome * Appropriate empiric therapy on day one * Empiric therapy based on likely organisms

9 HAP/VAP: Etiology Likely Organisms 1. Microaspiration 2. Inhalation
The etiology of VAP is closely related to the microbiology of the patient’s oropharynx 3. Aspiration of gastric content 5. Inoculation Alveolar Space 4. Hematogenous spread

10 HAP/VAP: Etiology Microbiology of the Oropharynx Resistant Normal
Nosocomial Flora Normal Community Flora Shift Days after hospitalization

11 HAP/VAP: Etiology HAP/VAP: Likely Organisms Resistant Normal
Group 1 Core Organisms Group 2 Core Plus Resistant Organisms Resistant Nosocomial Flora Normal Community Flora Shift Days after hospitalization ATS/IDSA. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2005;171:388

12 HAP/VAP: Etiology HAP/VAP: Likely Organisms Group 1 Core Organisms
Core Plus Resistant Organisms *Streptococcus pneumoniae *Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus *Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus *Pseudomonas aeruginosa *Acinetobacter species *Citrobacter freundii *Enterobacter cloacae *Morganella morganii *Haemophilus influenzae *Moraxella catarrhalis *Escherichia coli *Klebsiella pneumoniae ATS/IDSA. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2005;171:388

13 HAP/VAP: Etiology Microbiology of the Oropharynx Resistant Normal
Nosocomial Flora Normal Community Flora Shift Early Onset Late Onset Days after hospitalization Risk Factors for Resistant Organisms

14 HAP/VAP: Etiology Risk Factors for Resistant Organisms Group 1:
1. Documented MDR colonization No Yes 2. Prolonged Hospitalization ( > 7 days) No Yes 3. Prolonged Ventilation (> 3 days) No Yes 4. Prior Antibiotic Use ( > 3 days) No Yes 5. Immunosuppression No Yes Group 1: Core Organisms Group 2: Core plus MDR ATS/IDSA. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2005;171:388

15 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Group 1: Patient with no RFRO *Streptococcus pneumoniae *Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus *Haemophilus influenzae *Moraxella catarrhalis *Escherichia coli *Klebsiella pneumoniae Focus Antibiotic Therapy * Cephalosporins 3rd Generation: Ceftriaxone * Penicillin/B-lactamase inhibitor: Ampicillin-sulbactam

16 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Group 2: Patient with RFRO *Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Vancomycin vs Linezolid *Pseudomonas aeruginosa *Acinetobacter species *Citrobacter freundii *Enterobacter cloacae *Morganella morganii Monotherapy vs Combination Broad Spectrum Antibiotic Therapy ATS/IDSA. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2005;171:388

17 VAP: Empiric Therapy NAP due to S. aureus: Kaplan-Meier Survival Curve
ITT S. aureus (n = 339) 100 % Linezolid P = 0.131 Vancomycin Age < 65 yr APACHE II score < 20 Single-lobe NAP 1.7 ( ) 3.7 ( ) 0.081 0.001 0.072 Predictors P value Linezolid therapy 0.068 Logistic Regression Analysis for Survival OR (95% CI) Survival (percentage of patients) 0 % Days Wunderink R et al. Chest ;124:

18 VAP: Empiric Therapy NAP due to MRSA: Kaplan-Meier Survival Curve
ITT MRSA (n = 160) 100 % Linezolid P = 0.025 Vancomycin Survival (percentage of patients) Predictors OR (95% CI) P value Logistic Regression Analysis for Survival Linezolid therapy 2.2 ( ) 0.050 0 % Days Wunderink R et al. Chest ;124:

19 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Clinical Cure Rates for Patients with VAP Linezolid Vancomycin 80 P = 0.001 54 38 P = 0.02 62 49 35 P = 0.06 60 P = 0.07 45 (Percent of Patients) Clinical Cure 40 37 21 20 VAP (n=434) G+ VAP (n=214) Sa VAP (n=179) MRSA VAP (n=70) Patient Population Kollef MH et al. Intensive Care Med. 2004;30:

20 Vancomycin Susceptibility
MRSA: Treatment Considerations Vancomycin & MRSA: “S” “I” “R” Vancomycin Susceptibility MIC ≥ 16 Resistant (VRSA) MIC 4-8 Intermediate (VISA or GISA) MIC ≤ 2 Susceptible (VS-MRSA) Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI); 2006. Moise-Broder PA et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2004;38:

21 MRSA: Treatment Considerations
Vancomycin & MRSA: “S” “I” “R” MIC ≥ 16 “R” VRSA MIC 4-8 “I” VISA (GISA) HA-MRSA 1 2 4 21% 75% CA-MRSA 65% 35% 4% “S” hVISA “S” MIC 2 ug/ml “S” MIC 1 ug/ml “S” MIC ≤ 0.5 ug/ml Allen M et al. IDSA Meeting 2008.

22 MRSA: Treatment Considerations
Vancomycin & MRSA: “S” “I” “R” MIC ≥ 16 “R” VRSA MIC 4-8 “I” VISA (GISA) MRSA HAP/VAP “S” hVISA 63% “S” MIC 2 ug/ml Treatment Failure 37% “S” MIC 1 ug/ml 22% “S” MIC 0.5 ug/ml 0.5 1 2 Vancomycin MIC Zervos M et al. IDSA Meeting 2008.

23 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Group 2: Patient with RFRO *Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Vancomycin vs Linezolid *Pseudomonas aeruginosa *Acinetobacter species *Citrobacter freundii *Enterobacter cloacae *Morganella morganii Monotherapy vs Combination Broad Spectrum Antibiotic Therapy ATS/IDSA. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2005;171:388

24 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Gram (-) rods: Combination Therapy To obtain synergy To prevent development of resistance To provide a broad-spectrum empiric regimen *Anti-Pseudomonal Beta-lactam: Cefepime, Piperacillin-tazobactam, PLUS 2nd Antipseudomonal Agent * Aminoglycoside: Tobramycin *Quinolone: Cipro/Levo OR Meta-analysis: Monotherapy is not inferior to combination therapy in the empirical treatment of VAP Aarts MA. Crit Care Med Jan;36(1):108-17

25 HAP/VAP: Empiric Therapy
Group 2: Patient with RFRO *Anti-Pseudomonal Beta-lactam: Cefepime, Piperacillin-tazobactam, (+/-) 2nd Antipseudomonal Agent * Aminoglycoside: Tobramycin *Quinolone: Cipro/Levo OR PLUS Anti-MRSA Therapy *Glycopeptide: Vancomycin *Oxazolidins: Linezolid OR Broad Spectrum Antibiotic Therapy

26 UofL Guidelines for HAP/VAP
1. Selection of Empiric Therapy 2. De-escalation of Therapy 3. Duration of Therapy 4. UofL Treatment Pathway

27 De-Escalation of Therapy
Initial Empiric Therapy De-escalation of Therapy Positive Culture 1. Pathogen directed therapy according to C&S Negative Culture 2. No MRSA: Discontinuation of anti-MRSA therapy 3. No Pseudomonas: Discontinuation of combination therapy Clinical Improvement 4. Discontinuation of combination anti-pseudomonal therapy 5. Switch to oral antibiotic therapy

28 De-Escalation of Therapy
Initial Empiric Therapy De-escalation of Therapy 280 Patients Patients treated for HAP/VAP 233 Patients Empiric therapy for HAP/VAP 198 Patients 85% Candidates for de-escalation

29 UofL Guidelines for HAP/VAP
1. Selection of Empiric Therapy 2. De-escalation of Therapy 3. Duration of Therapy 4. UofL Treatment Pathway

30 Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia
Duration of Therapy Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia Short-course empiric antibiotic therapy for patients with pulmonary infiltrates in the intensive care unit Clinical pulmonary infection score (CPIS) Singh N et al. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2000;162:

31 NAP: Short Course Therapy
Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score (CPIS) 1. Temperature: 0 to 2 points 2. Blood Leukocytes: 0 to 1 point 3. Tracheal secretions: 0 to 2 points 4. Oxygenation, PaO2/FIO2: 0 to 2 points 5. Pulmonary radiography: 0 to 2 points 6. Progression of pulmonary infiltrate: 0 to 2 points 7. Culture of tracheal aspirate: 0 to 2 points

32 NAP: Short Course Therapy
Clinical Pulmonary Infection Score (CPIS) CPIS equal or < 6 ATB x 3 days CPIS > 6 CPIS ≤ 6 Short Course Standard Care ATB Use/Cost 3 days / $259 10 days / $640 .0001 LOS in ICU 9 days 15 days .04 Superinfection 14 % 38 % .01 Mortality 13 % (30 days) 31 % (30 days) .06 Singh N et al. Am J Respr Crit Care Med. 2000;162:

33 HAP: Duration of Therapy
Short Course Therapy 280 Patients CPIS < 6 on day 0 and day 3 Yes No immunosuppression No severe sepsis or shock No bacteremia No other site of infection 16 Patients Candidate for Short Course Therapy

34 HAP: Duration of Therapy
Recommendations Total duration of therapy of 4 days for patients that are candidates for short course therapy 4 days? 8 days? For other patients consider discontinuation of antibiotics once documented clinical improvement 10 days? 14 days? Total duration of therapy of +/- 14 days for HAP/VAP due to Pseudomonas or Acinetobacter or MRSA 21 days?

35 UofL Guidelines for HAP/VAP
1. Clinical Diagnosis 2. Selection of Empiric Therapy 3. De-escalation of Therapy 4. Duration of Therapy 5. UofL Treatment Pathway

36 HAP/VAP: UofL Treatment Pathway
Day 0: Evaluation for “Empiric Therapy” Cultures Evaluate RFRO Calculate CPIS Start ATB: Group 1 Focus therapy vs Group 2 broad spectrum Day 2/3: Evaluation for “De-escalation of Therapy” Results of cultures and sensitivity Pathogen directed therapy according to C&S Discontinue MRSA therapy if cultures (-) for MRSA Discontinue combination therapy if cultures are (-) for Pseudomonas Day ≥4: Evaluation for “Duration of Therapy” Candidate for short course therapy: 4 days Pseudomonas, MRSA, Acinetobacter: +/- 14 days Other patients: duration of therapy based on clinical response


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