4.7 Article

Optimization of Synergistic Combination Regimens against Carbapenem- and Aminoglycoside-Resistant Clinical Pseudomonas aeruginosa Isolates via Mechanism-Based Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Modeling

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 61, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AAC.01011-16

Keywords

imipenem; tobramycin; amikacin; synergy; mathematical modeling; Monte Carlo simulations; population pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics

Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [APP1045105, APP1101553, APP1062040]
  2. Monash Institute of Graduate Research
  3. NHMRC career development fellowship [APP1062509]

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Optimizing antibiotic combinations is promising to combat multidrugresistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This study aimed to systematically evaluate synergistic bacterial killing and prevention of resistance by carbapenem and aminoglycoside combinations and to rationally optimize combination dosage regimens via a mechanism-based mathematical model (MBM). We studied monotherapies and combinations of imipenem with tobramycin or amikacin against three difficult-to-treat double-resistant clinical P. aeruginosa isolates. Viable-count profiles of total and resistant populations were quantified in 48-h static-concentration time-kill studies (inoculum, 10(7.5) CFU/ml). We rationally optimized combination dosage regimens via MBM and Monte Carlo simulations against isolate FADDI-PA088 (MIC of imipenem [MICimipenem] of 16 mg/liter and MICtobramycin of 32 mg/liter, i.e., both 98th percentiles according to the EUCAST database). Against this isolate, imipenem (1.5 x MIC) combined with 1 to 2 mg/liter tobramycin (MIC, 32 mg/liter) or amikacin (MIC, 4 mg/liter) yielded >= 2-log(10) more killing than the most active monotherapy at 48 h and prevented resistance. For all three strains, synergistic killing without resistance was achieved by >= 0.88x MICimipenem in combination with a median of 0.75 x MICtobramycin (range, 0.032 x to 2.0 x MICtobramycin) or 0.50 x MICamikacin (range, 0.25 x to 0.50 x MICamikacin). The MBM indicated that aminoglycosides significantly enhanced the imipenem target site concentration up to 3-fold; achieving 50% of this synergistic effect required aminoglycoside concentrations of 1.34 mg/liter (if the aminoglycoside MIC was 4 mg/liter) and 4.88 mg/liter (for MICs of 8 to 32 mg/liter). An optimized combination regimen (continuous infusion of imipenem at 5 g/day plus a 0.5-h infusion with 7 mg/kg of body weight tobramycin) was predicted to achieve > 2.0-log(10) killing and prevent regrowth at 48 h in 90.3% of patients (median bacterial killing, > 4.0 log(10) CFU/ml) against double-resistant isolate FADDI-PA088 and therefore was highly promising.

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