59
Views
2
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Review

Drug resistance in community-acquired respiratory tract infections: role for an emerging antibacterial

, &
Pages 35-43 | Published online: 18 Jun 2010

Abstract

The nasopharynx is the ecological niche where evolution towards resistance occurs in respiratory tract isolates. Dynamics of different bacterial populations in antibiotic-free multibacterial niches are the baseline that antibiotic treatments can alter by shifting the competitive balance in favor of resistant populations. For this reason, antibiotic resistance is increasingly being considered to be an ecological problem. Traditionally, resistance has implied the need for development of new antibiotics for which basic efficacy and safety data are required prior to licensing. Antibiotic development is mainly focused on demonstrating clinical efficacy and setting susceptibility breakpoints for efficacy prediction. However, additional information on pharmacodynamic data predicting absence of selection of resistance and of resistant subpopulations, and specific surveillance on resistance to core antibiotics (to detect emerging resistances and its link with antibiotic consumption in the community) are valuable data in defining the role of a new antibiotic, not only from the perspective of its therapeutic potential but also from the ecologic perspective (countering resistances to core antibiotics in the community). The documented information on cefditoren gleaned from published studies in recent years is an example of the role for an emerging oral antibacterial facing current antibiotic resistance in community-acquired respiratory tract infections.

Nasopharyngeal colonization and prevalent isolates

Mucosal surfaces are simultaneously colonized by multiple species, with an intricate balance in the nasopharynx between Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, Haemophilus influenzae, and other nasopharyngeal flora. These bacterial species share three characteristics, ie, they colonize the nasopharynx of humans as their exclusive host, are exogenously transmitted to colonize the nasopharynx of new hosts, and are common etiological agents (most prevalent isolates) of bacterial community-acquired respiratory tract infections when they endogenously migrate to different ecosystems or when changes within their natural ecosystem occur. Thus the upper respiratory tract, with its commensal flora, acts both as a colonization defense mechanism and as a primary bacterial source for respiratory tract infections, S. pyogenes being the etiologic agent of tonsillitis, and S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae being the causative agents of otitis media, sinusitis, and lower respiratory tract infections, ie, acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis (AECB) and pneumonia.

Carriage of these common respiratory isolates depends on multiple factors, such as active or passive smoking, crowding, age, bacterial fitness, specific vaccination, and bacterial interference in antibiotic-free niches.Citation1Citation3 Approximately 80% of healthy individuals carry H. influenzae,Citation4 with multiple strains in 50% positive samples and a high turnover of strains.Citation2,Citation5 In the case of S. pneumoniae, carriage ranges from 10% to 40% in an age-dependent manner,Citation6 with lower percentages of multiple strains in the same sampleCitation7 and a duration of nasopharyngeal carriage depending on age, seasonality, resistance to penicillin, serotype, and simultaneous carriage by other family members.Citation8,Citation9 S. pyogenes frequently colonizes the nasopharynx of asymptomatic persons, with carriage rates of 15%–20% in school children (crowding favors interpersonal spread), but this is considerably lower in adults.Citation10

Bacterial evolution towards resistance in respiratory tract isolates

The nasopharynx is the ecological niche where evolution towards resistance occurs in respiratory tract isolates. The evolution of antibiotic resistance involves two processes, ie, emergence and spread.Citation11,Citation12 Resistance to β-lactams and macrolides is mostly due to acquisition of exogenous resistance genes, and has been described in S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae (in both cases, resistance to both β-lactams and to macrolides) and in S. pyogenes (resistance to macrolides),Citation13Citation16 with de novo resistance occurring rarely within a given host in a susceptible bacterial population.Citation13 In contrast, resistance to fluoroquinolones in S. pneumoniae arises within a given host due to point mutations.Citation13

Evolution is based on production of variation, management of variation, and natural selection of variants.Citation17 Dynamics of different bacterial populations in antibiotic-free niches are the baseline that antibiotic treatments can alterCitation18,Citation19 by shifting the competitive balance in favor of resistant populations. For this reason, antibiotic resistance is increasingly regarded as an ecologic problem. Once resistance has emerged, physiologic concentrations of different antibiotics may select resistant strains by eradicating the susceptible ones (thus unmasking resistant populations),Citation19 or by selecting intrastrain-resistant subpopulations.Citation20 Because multiple individuals harbor multiple bacterial populations exhibiting different degrees of antibiotic resistance at the community level, the prevalence of resistance is directly related to antibiotic consumption in the community.Citation21

Antibiotic consumption as the driver of resistance: a global problem

Infection, mainly of the respiratory tract,Citation22,Citation23 is the most frequent reason for seeking medical attendance in the community. Around 85%–90% of antibiotic consumption occurs in the community, and 80% of this consumption is for the treatment of respiratory tract infections.Citation24 Antibiotic consumption has been associated with resistance selection.Citation21 Consumption of β-lactams and macrolides has been associated with penicillin/erythromycin resistance in S. pneumoniae, both temporallyCitation25 and geographically,Citation26 with high correlations between penicillin/erythromycin resistance and consumption of long half-life macrolides and second-generation oral cephalosporins.Citation25,Citation26 Associations between ampicillin/amoxicillin resistance in H. influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis and consumption of aminopenicillins (with or without clavulanic acid),Citation27,Citation28 as well as the association between erythromycin resistance in S. pyogenes and consumption of long half-life macrolides, have also been described.Citation29,Citation30

Because antibiotic consumption in the community has been associated with resistance prevalence, in geographic locations with high antibiotic consumption, eg, Spain, associations between the resistance rates found in different bacterial species of respiratory tract isolates could be expected. In Spain, penicillin resistance in S. pneumoniae has been significantly associated with erythromycin resistance (due to the coresistance selection phenomenon),Citation31,Citation32 and with ampicillin resistance in H. influenzae (due to the phenomenon of coselection of resistance). In addition, geographically, erythromycin resistance in S. pyogenes was significantly related to penicillin and/or erythromycin resistance in S. pneumoniae and to ampicillin resistance in H. influenzae.Citation13 Considering these associations, in Spain, as in other countries, resistance should be considered as a global problem with regard to respiratory isolates in the community.

Current resistances in respiratory isolates in the community

Streptococcus pneumoniae

Penicillin/erythromycin nonsusceptibility in S. pneumoniae is mainly clustered in a reduced number of serotypes. In invasive isolates, the increase in the prevalence of antibiotic nonsusceptibility and of certain serotypes that occurred in the 1980s and 1990s related to antibiotic consumption reversed in the 2000s when the seven-valent conjugate pneumococcal vaccine (PCV7) (including serotypes most associated with penicillin/erythromycin nonsusceptibility) was introduced for childhood immunization.Citation33,Citation34 The introduction of PCV7 produced not only a dramatic reduction in the incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease, but also a marked decrease in PCV7 serotypes which consequently affected penicillin and erythromycin nonsusceptibility in invasive isolates.Citation34,Citation35

With respect to noninvasive isolates in Spain, surveillance including high number of isolates has shown that nonsusceptibility to penicillin was 45%–50% from 1998 to 2002, with full oral penicillin resistance rates of approximately 20%.Citation31,Citation36 Amoxicillin nonsusceptibility remained around 10% in this period but, among full penicillin-resistant isolates, this rate increased to around 40%.Citation31,Citation36 These penicillin-resistant isolates exhibited nearly 100% resistance to oral second-generation cephalosporins, eg, cefaclor or cefuroxime, and 55% resistance to macrolides.Citation31 In a worldwide surveillance (1999–2004) of isolates from community-acquired infections in patients ≥65 years (including a high number of noninvasive isolates), penicillin nonsusceptibility was approximately 22% in Eastern Europe and North America, and up to about 60% in Far East.Citation37

The emergence of amoxicillin resistance within pre-existing penicillin-resistant clones has also been related to macrolide and ciprofloxacin resistance,Citation31,Citation36,Citation38 with reports of spread of troublesome clones with MIC values of amoxicillin higher than those of penicillin,Citation39 mainly the four Spanish multiresistant ones (Spain23F-1, Spain6B-2, Spain9V-3, and Spain14-5).

Erythromycin resistance in pneumococci has remained relatively stable in Spain, with rates of around 35% between 1996 and 2002 in surveillances including high numbers of noninvasive isolates.Citation31,Citation36,Citation40 The main resistant phenotype is MLSB (approximately 90%), with M-efflux representing approximately 10%,Citation31 thus erythromycin resistance also implies clarithromycin and azithromycin resistance. Similar resistance rates are found in the US (30.0%–35.3%), with an increase in highly resistant strains in recent years, and a decrease in M-efflux-mediated resistant strains.Citation41

In the same surveillance, ciprofloxacin resistance (MIC ≥ 4 μg/mL) was around 5%–7%,Citation31,Citation37 but >85% of these isolates were susceptible to levofloxacin and moxifloxacin. From these data it is deduced that rates of nonsusceptibility to respiratory fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin and moxifloxacin) are not >1%.Citation36 Worldwide, a 2.2% nonsusceptibility rate has been reported for levofloxacin.Citation37

Multiple resistance, defined as full resistance to two or more of the six classes of antibacterials represented by penicillin, erythromycin, cefuroxime, tetracyclines, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and levofloxacin, has been reported in S. pneumoniae, with rates as high as 19.1% in North America, 27.7% in Western Europe, and 80.4% in the Far East.Citation37

Streptococcus pyogenes

S. pyogenes is highly susceptible to all β-lactams. Prevalence of resistance to erythromycin was 37% in 2001–2002 in Spain,Citation31 with the M-efflux phenotype being the most prevalent (86%), and with 14% of strains from the MLSB phenotype showing constitutive resistance.Citation31 Since both mechanisms imply resistance to 14- and 15-membered macrolides, erythromycin resistance implies resistance to azithromycin and clarithromycin.Citation42

In the last few years, S. pyogenes isolates showing low-level resistance to fluoroquinolones have been reported,Citation43Citation45 with infrequent high-level resistance to date. However, due to the high prevalence of isolates harboring parC mutation, in the near future the frequency of high-level resistance may increase because only one new mutation in gyrA is required.Citation46 In Spain, there has been a marked increase in the number of isolates with low-level resistance, and isolates showing high-level resistance have also been detected.Citation47

Haemophilus influenzae

The basic problem of resistance in this species is defined by ampicillin as the resistance marker. According to successive surveillance studies carried out from 1996 to 2002, approximately 25% of H. influenzae isolates are resistant to ampicillin in Spain.Citation31,Citation48,Citation49 Up to 80% of these ampicillin-resistant isolates produce β-lactamases (TEM-1, TEM-2, and with lower frequency ROB-1) that are inhibited by clavulanic acid. The remaining 20% ampicillin-resistant isolates (5% of all H. influenzae isolates in Spain) are resistant to ampicillin due to mutations in the ftsI gene that cause alterations in the amino acid sequences of penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP3).Citation50 This resistance genotype defines BLNAR (β-lactamase negative ampicillin-resistant) strains and since alterations in PBP3 preclude the adequate binding of ampicillin and amoxicillin, BLNAR strains are also resistant to amoxicillin–clavulanic acid, ampicillin–sulbactam, cefaclor, and cefuroxime.Citation51

Both mechanisms of resistance, ie, β-lactamase production and mutations in the ftsI gene, are present in BLPACR (β-lactamase positive amoxicillin–clavulanic acid resistant) strains. Among Spanish isolates, according to data from different studies, there is an increasing prevalence of BLNAR (from 10% in 1997–1998 to approximately 30% in 2004–2005) and to a lesser extent BLPACR phenotypes,Citation52,Citation53 in relation to β-lactam consumption over time, mainly amoxicillin with or without clavulanic acid.Citation53

Efficacy prediction for commonly used antibiotics

While “microbiologic breakpoints” detect wild-type bacterial populations that do not harbor any acquired or selected resistance to the antibacterial examined, “pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) breakpoints” have been associated with microbial killing as an endpoint to predict bacterial eradication and clinical outcome.Citation54Citation56 By relating pharmacokinetic variables and susceptibility data (ie, antibiotic drug exposure relative to in vitro MIC), PK/PD breakpoints indicate the highest MIC value that produces the adequate value for the relevant PK/PD parameter. In the case of S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae, and β-lactams or macrolides, the time (expressed as the percentage of the dosing interval) that antibiotic concentrations exceed the value of MIC (T > MIC) is the parameter predicting efficacy, with a cutoff value of 40%, but in the case of fluoroquinolones, the parameter is the relationship between the area under the serum concentration-time curve (AUC) and the MIC (AUC/MIC), with a cutoff value of 30.

In a multicenter surveillance study in Spain, similar susceptibility rates were found for S. pneumoniae by applying the breakpoints defined by the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) and PK/PD breakpoints for amoxicillin (approximately 92%), cefuroxime–axetil (about 67%), erythromycin and azithromycin (about 64%), but not for cefaclor (61.7% versus 40.5%).Citation31

For H. influenzae, the use of CLSI or PK/PD breakpoints does not influence susceptibility rates of ciprofloxacin (100%), ampicillin (about 75%) or amoxicillin–clavulanic acid (about 97%), but changes the rates of susceptibility to cefuroxime–axetil (from 100% to 72.8%) and cefaclor (from 82.1% to 1.4%), with lower rates when applying PK/PD breakpoints.Citation31 In the case of macrolides, differences are clearly evident, with reductions in susceptibility rates to clarithromycin and azithromycin from 72% 100%, respectively, by applying CLSI breakpoints, to 2.2% and 1.2%, respectively, by applying PK/PD breakpoints.Citation31

Management strategies to overcome resistance

Under circumstances of a global problem of resistance among prevalent isolates in community respiratory pathogens, there is a need for strategies countering resistance, ie, selection of coresistance within the same species and coselection of resistances between species. One possible strategy is based on increasing oral doses for the treatment of respiratory tract infections in the community that, although not adequate for macrolides (high-level resistance), has been used in the case of amoxicillin–clavulanic acid, with the development of new formulations adequate to minimize amoxicillin resistance in S. pneumoniae, but inadequate to counter BLNAR and BLPACR diffusion among H. influenzae. Another possible strategy is the development of new antibiotics with adequate pharmacokinetics and high in vitro activity against community prevalent isolates, achieving values of pharmacodynamic parameters predicting bacterial eradication. The need for new antibiotics in the community is mainly defined by antimicrobial activity against the prevalent resistance phenotypes rather than the activity against phenotypes susceptible to antibiotics previously used in the community. For this reason new antibiotics for the treatment of respiratory tract infections should demonstrate in vitro activity against S. pneumoniae not susceptible to previous antibiotics (with specific phenotypes of resistance and clones) and H. influenzae nonsusceptible to ampicillin (BLNAR, BLPACR).

Cefditoren for community-acquired respiratory tract infections

In vitro activity

Cefditoren is an oral, third-generation aminothiazolyl cephalosporin with structural components similar to those of first- and third-generation cephalosporins.Citation57 In general, cephalosporins differ from one another mainly in the two side chain components attached to the cephem scaffold. In cefditoren, the group attached at the C-7 position affords activity against Gram-negative microorganisms, whereas the one attached at the C-3 position affords activity against Gram-positive bacteria (not seen in other non-first-generation cephalosporins).

In vitro studies carried out to explore the activity of cefditoren included not only a high number of strains isolated in the community but also a significant number of strains with troublesome resistance phenotypes/genotypes. Cefditoren exhibited potent intrinsic activity, inhibiting all penicillin-susceptible S. pneumoniae at concentrations of 0.12 μg/mL (MIC90 of ≤0.03 μg/mL).Citation58 At concentrations of 0.5 μg/mL, cefditoren inhibited 92.6% of cefotaxime nonsusceptible pneumococci and >97% of strains nonsusceptible to the other antibiotics (penicillins, cephalosporins, macrolides, ketolides, and quinolones).Citation59 With respect to Spanish multiresistant clones, cefditoren exhibited an MIC90 of ≤0.5 μg/mL against strains belonging to Spain23F-1 (with susceptibility rates to amoxicillin–clavulanic acid of 4.2%, to macrolides of 66.7%, and to cefotaxime of 95.8%), Spain9V-3 (with susceptibility rates to amoxicillin–clavulanic acid of 30%, to macrolides of 81.7%, and to cefotaxime of 85%), and Spain6B-2 (with susceptibility rates to amoxicillin–clavulanic acid of 6.8%, to macrolides of 4.5%, and to cefotaxime of 81.8%).Citation60 Against the most troublesome strains of the clone Spain14-5 (that exhibited susceptibility rates of 7.3% to amoxicillin, 4.9% to macrolides, 57.3% to cefotaxime, and only 65.9% to levofloxacin), cefditoren MIC50/MIC90 values were 0.5/1 μg/mL, one dilution lower than values for cefotaxime.Citation60

Against H. influenzae, while amoxicillin–clavulanic acid and cefuroxime MIC50/MIC90 values increased from 0.5/1 μg/mL for ampicillin-susceptible strains to 2/4 and 1/4 μg/mL, respectively, for BLNAR strains, and up to 4/8 and 4/16 μg/mL, respectively, for BLPACR strains, cefditoren exhibited similar intrinsic activity to that of cefotaxime against ampicillin-susceptible, BLNAR and BLPACR strains with MIC50/MIC90 values of 0.03/0.06 μg/mL.Citation61,Citation62 The excellent intrinsic activity of cefditoren against H. influenzae has recently been confirmed in a multicenter European study testing 665 clinical isolates, with MIC50/MIC90 for cefditoren of ≤0.06/≤0.06 μg/mL.Citation63

Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics

In a Phase I study administering a single dose of 400 mg cefditoren–pivoxil with food to 10 healthy Caucasian male volunteers, Cmax was 3.7 ± 0.7 μg/mL, Tmax was 2 hours, AUC0–α was 12.5 ± 1.6 μg × hour/mL, and the elimination half-life was 1.54 ± 0.20 hours.Citation64 In the theoretical pharmacodynamic assessment performed with these data, considering T > MIC as the relevant PK/PD parameter, the 400 mg bid regimen of cefditoren–pivoxil obtained a value of T > MIC for total drug of approximately 55% for MIC 0.5 μg/mL, 68% for MIC 0.25 μg/mL, 81% for MIC 0.12 μg/mL and 94% for MIC 0.06 μg/mL.Citation64

This pharmacodynamic analysis was performed considering the total drug. Cefditoren is a highly protein-bound antimicrobial with 88% protein binding.Citation57 It has been suggested that only the unbound fraction of an antimicrobial is active in vitro, but the reversibility of protein binding implies that limitation of activity may be far from absolute, even in highly protein-bound agents.Citation65 To explore the activity of cefditoren in the presence of human albumin, a one-compartmental in vitro dynamic model simulating the cefditoren 400 mg bid serum profile over 24 hours, using media consisting of 75% human serum and 25% broth with albumin at physiologic concentration (4.9 g/dL), was used.Citation66 Antibacterial activity was determined over time against S. pneumoniae exhibiting MICs of 0.25 and 0.5 μg/mL.Citation66 The cefditoren protein binding in the system was 87.1%, thus potentially interfering with cefditoren activity as in in vivo situations. Under these circumstances, at 24 hours, initial inoculum reductions for strains with MIC of 0.25 μg/mL was >99.9% (bactericidal activity), and ranged from 53% to 97% (an effect higher than simply bacteriostatic) for strains with MIC 0.5 μg/mL.Citation66

For extrapolation to humans, a Monte Carlo simulation, ie, the method for determining the probability to achieve a specific value of a PK/PD index in the general population, was performed using cefditoren data from a Phase I study,Citation64 and considering both total and free (calculated using the rate of protein binding) concentrations of cefditoren.Citation67 Considering the target attainment of T > MIC ≥ 40% (as predictive of efficacy),Citation68,Citation69 cefditoren covered (>90% probability to achieve this value of T > MIC) strains with MIC values of ≤0.5 μg/mL (total drug), and ≤0.12 μg/mL (free drug). When the bacteriostatic target attainment (33% T > MIC)Citation70 was considered, based on definitions of “susceptibility” by the FDACitation71 and CLSICitation51 as “pathogen likely inhibition by blood concentrations”, cefditoren had a >90% probability to achieve this bacteriostatic endpoint for MICs ≤0.5 μg/mL and ≤0.25 μg/mL for total and free drug, respectively.Citation67

Cefditoren breakpoints

Experimental data (in vitro susceptibility and PK/PD experimental data) and Monte Carlo extrapolations are valuable data for assessing potential breakpoints for cefditoren. Different values have been proposed or defined for cefditoren. While breakpoint values proposed by the FDA are ≤0.12 μg/mL for susceptibility and ≥0.5 μg/mL for resistance, some authors have suggested cefditoren susceptibility breakpoint values of ≤0.5 μg/mL or ≤1 μg/mL,Citation72Citation74 considering cefditoren MIC90 values lower than the breakpoint values for parenteral third-generation cephalosporins and the pharmacokinetics of cefditoren. Although nowadays there are no established breakpoints defined by the CLSI or the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing, experimental and Monte Carlo results are in accordance with the susceptibility breakpoint approved by the Spanish Agency during the registration procedure in Europe (susceptibility ≤0.5 μg/mL).Citation75 With this breakpoint value, 100% isolates of H. influenzae and S. pyogenes and 94% of S. pneumoniae are covered in Spain.Citation76

Clinical data on cefditoren in community-acquired respiratory tract infections

Upper respiratory tract infections

Data from all six clinical trials carried out during the clinical development of cefditoren in upper respiratory tract infections were combined in a pooled analysis.Citation77 With respect to pharyngotonsillitis, no significant differences in clinical response were found between cefditoren and penicillin V, with success rates ranging from 89.4% to 95.3% when pooling data from the three comparative multicenter studies (two previously published)Citation78,Citation79 already performed.Citation77 Eradication of S. pyogenes was higher with cefditoren at the end of therapy (90.4% versus 82.7%; P = 0.002) and at the end of follow-up (84.7% versus 76.7%; P = 0.008), although statistical significance (set at P < 0.001) was not reached.Citation77

Similarly, in acute sinusitis, no differences in clinical response were found between cefditoren and comparators (cefuroxime or amoxicillin-clavulanic acid) both at the end of therapy (80.2% versus 84.8%) and at the end of follow-up (71.2% versus 77.4%) pooling data from the three studies (one previously published)Citation80 performed during the clinical development of cefditoren.Citation77

Lower respiratory tract infections

Seven studies were carried out in the clinical development of cefditoren for the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections, four studies in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), and three studies in AECB. A pooled analysis of data was performed including a total of 4159 randomized patients.Citation81 In CAP studies (two previously published),Citation82,Citation83 no significant differences were found in pooled clinical response rates between cefditoren and comparators (amoxicillin–clavulanic acid or cefpodoxime), with percentages of responders ranging from 89.2% to 91.8% at the end of therapy, and from 85.9% to 90.4% at the end of follow-up.

In AECB, pooled data from the three published studiesCitation84Citation86 showed clinical response rates ranging from 85.8% to 91.3% at the end of therapy, and from 81.2% to 83.3% at the end of follow-up, without significant differences between cefditoren and the comparators, ie, cefuroxime or clarithromycin.

CAP and AECB data were pooled to explore microbiologic outcomes.Citation81 With respect to S. pneumoniae, there were no significant between-group differences in the rate of bacteriologic responders, with rates ranging from 88.5% to 92.0%. All penicillin nonsusceptible (MIC ≥0.12 μg/mL) isolates of S. pneumoniae in the cefditoren 400 mg group (n = 20), 16 of 19 strains (84.2%) in the cefditoren 200 mg group, and 16 of 17 strains (94.1%) in the comparator group were eradicated or presumed to be eradicated.Citation81 Among penicillin-resistant (MIC ≥2 μg/mL) isolates, 17 of 18 (94.4%) isolates in both cefditoren arms were eradicated or presumed to be eradicated compared with 10 of 11 (90.9%) in the comparator group.Citation81

No significant differences in microbiologic outcome with respect to H. influenzae were found between groups, with pooled response rates ranging from 82.7% to 86.6%.Citation81

Safety profile

Safety data from all the 13 clinical trials carried out with cefditoren in the treatment of community-acquired respiratory tract infections were analyzed in a pooled analysis.Citation87 The safety population was defined as all randomized patients with at least one dose intake, and consisted of 4592 patients for cefditoren. Cefditoren exhibited an adverse event profile similar to that of other antibiotics currently used in the treatment of community-acquired respiratory tract infections, with diarrhea being the most frequent adverse event (9.9%) followed by nausea (3.5%), abdominal pain (1.8%), and dyspepsia (1.1%).Citation87 The rate of vaginosis reported in the female population was 3.9%.Citation87

Conclusions

There is increasingly evidence confirming that bacterial eradication should be the primary goal of antibiotic therapy because eradication is the main determinant of both therapeutic outcome and prevention of resistance. In the most prevalent bacterial isolates from community-acquired respiratory tract infections, that are responsible for 80% of consumption of antibiotics in the community, there is a global problem of resistance. This means that geographic correlations of resistances are consistently found between different antibiotics in one species and in different species, due to the selection of coresistance and coselection of resistance by antibiotic pressure. Resistance has traditionally implied the development of new antibiotics for which basic efficacy and safety data are required prior to licensing. However, during the clinical development of a new compound, apart from collecting data on safety and tolerance, there is a need to explore the adequacy of pharmacodynamic parameters in predicting eradication (bacteriologic response) and subsequent clinical efficacy to establish breakpoints. Since evolution of bacteria towards resistance is a dynamic process, several issues should also be addressed after the introduction of a new antibiotic to the market. These issues will establish differences between the new compound and older antibiotics, and are mainly focused on the pharmacodynamic data needed to predict selection of resistance and of resistant subpopulations in multibacterial niches (simulating the nasopharynx as the specific site for emergence of resistance in respiratory tract isolates), followed in the postmarketing phase by specific surveillance on resistance to core antibiotics to detect emerging resistances and any link with antibiotic consumption in the community.Citation88 This will define the role of the new antibiotic, not only from the perspective of its therapeutic potential, but also from the ecologic perspective, ie, countering resistances to core antibiotics in the community. The introduction of new antibiotics with documented adequate PK/PD and ecologic potentials might impact antibiotic policies, ie, decreased use of antibiotics with high resistance selection potential.

The documented information on cefditoren gathered from published studies in recent years, including those showing its ecologic potential in multibacterial niches,Citation11,Citation89 is an example of the role for an emerging oral antibacterial facing the current antibiotic resistances in community-acquired respiratory tract infections.

Disclosures

LA and MJG have received travel grants from Tedec-Meiji Farma SA, Madrid, Spain for Congress presentation of results of research carried out at the Microbiology Department, School of Medicine, University. Complutense, Madrid, Spain.

References

  • BrookIGoberAERecovery of potential pathogens and interfering bacteria in the nasopharynx of otitis media-prone children and their smoking and nonsmoking parentsArch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg200513150951215967884
  • Sá-LeãoRNunesSBrito-AvôAHigh rates of transmission of and colonization by Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae within a day care center revealed in a longitudinal studyJ Clin Microbiol20084622523418003797
  • HammittLLBrudenDLButlerJCIndirect effect of conjugate vaccine on adult carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae: An explanation of trends in invasive pneumococcal diseaseJ Infect Dis20061931487149416652275
  • MurthyTFHaemophilus influenzaeMandellGLBennettJEDolinRPrinciples and Practice of Infectious Diseases6th edPhiladelphia, PAElsevier Churchill Livingstone2005
  • Smith-VaughanHCLeachAJShelby-JamesTMKempKKempDJMathewsJDCarriage of multiple ribotypes of non-encapsulated Haemophilus influenzae in aboriginal infants with otitis mediaEpidemiol Infect19961161771838620909
  • MusherDMStreptococcus pneumoniaeMandellGLBennettJEDolinRPrinciples and Practice of Infectious Diseases6th edPhiladelphia, PAElsevier Churchill Livingstone2005
  • Sá-LeãoRTomaszASantos SanchesIde LencastreHPilot study of the genetic diversity of the pneumococcal nasopharyngeal flora among children attending day care centersJ Clin Microbiol2002403577358512354849
  • MelegaroAChoiYPebodyRGayNPneumococcal carriage in United Kingdom families: Estimating serotype-specific transmission parameters from longitudinal dataAm J Epidemiol200716622823517517684
  • EkdahlKAhlinderIHanssonHBDuration of nasopharyngeal carriage of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae: Experiences from the South Swedish Pneumococcal Intervention ProjectClin Infect Dis199725111311179402367
  • BisnoALStevensDLStreptococcus pyogenesMandellGLBennettJEDolinRPrinciples and Practice of Infectious Diseases6th edPhiladelphia, PAElsevier Churchill Livingstone2005
  • CafiniFAguilarLSevillanoDDecrease in bacterial load versus resistance selection of pneumococcal subpopulations by β-lactam physiological concentrations over time: An in vitro pharmacodynamic simulationMicrobial Drug Res2008141321
  • SevillanoDAguilarLAlouLEffects of antimicrobials on the competitive growth of Streptococcus pneumoniae: A pharmacodynamic in vitro model approach to selection of resistant populationsJ Antimicrob Chemother20065879480116880173
  • BaqueroFModularization and evolvability in antibiotic resistanceBaqueroFNombelaCCassellGHGutierrez-FuentesJAEvolutionary Biology of Bacterial and Fungal PathogensWashington, DCASM Press2008
  • CourvalinPAntimicrobial drug resistance: Prediction is very difficult, especially about the futureEmerg Infect Dis20051115031506
  • SmithDLLaxminarayanRHuman interventions on the evolution of host-bacterium interactionsBaqueroFNombelaCCassellGHGutierrez-FuentesJAEvolutionary Biology of Bacterial and Fungal PathogensWashington, DCASM Press2008
  • KnudsenJDOdenholtIErlendsdottirHSelection of resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae during penicillin treatment in vitro and in three animal modelsAntimicrob Agents Chemother2003472499250612878511
  • CamposJAracilBGarcia-CobosSOteoJEvolution of Haemophilus influenzae and Haemophilus infectionsBaqueroFNombelaCCassellGHGutierrez-FuentesJAEvolutionary Biology of Bacterial and Fungal PathogensWashington, DCASM Press2008
  • TakahataSKatoYSanbongiYMaebashiKIdaTComparison of the efficacy of oral (beta)-lactams in selection of Haemophilus influenzae transformants with mutated fts I genesAntimicrob Agents Chemother2008521880188318347113
  • JönssonMSwedbergGMacrolide resistance can be transferred by conjugation from viridans streptococci to Streptococcus pyogenesInt J Antimicrob Agents20062810110316844354
  • AlouLGimenezMJSevillanoDA pharmacodynamic approach to antimicrobial activity in serum and epithelial lining fluid against in vivo-selected Streptococcus pneumoniae mutants and association with clinical failure in pneumoniaJ Antimicrob Chemother20065834935816782744
  • Garcia-ReyCFenollAAguilarLCasalJEffect of social and climatological factors on antimicrobial use and Streptococcus pneumoniae resistance in different provinces in SpainJ Antimicrob Chemother20045446547115269198
  • LlorCConsiderations for antibiotic prescription in primary careMed Clin Monogr (Barc)2004535257
  • MogyorosMChallenges of managed care organisations in treating respiratory tract infections in an age of antibiotic resistanceAm J Manag Care20017Suppl 6163169
  • HuovinenPCarsOControl of antimicrobial resistance: Time for action. The essentials of control are already well knownBMJ19983176136149727984
  • GranizoJJAguilarLCasalJGarcía-ReyCDal-RéRBaqueroFStreptococcus pneumoniae resistance to erythromycin and penicillin in relation to macrolide and beta-lactam consumption in Spain (1979–1997)J Antimicrob Chemother20004676777311062196
  • García-ReyCAguilarLBaqueroFCasalJDal-RéRImportance of local variations in antibiotic consumption and geographical differences of erythromycin and penicillin resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniaeJ Clin Microbiol20024015916411773111
  • GómezJRuiz-GómezJHernández-CardonaJLNuñezMLCanterasMValdésMAntibiotic resistance patterns of Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis: A prospective study in Murcia, Spain, 1983–1992Chemotherapy1994402993037956452
  • NissinenAGronroosPHuovinenPDevelopment of beta-lactamase-mediated resistance to penicillin in middle-ear isolates of Moraxella catarrhalis in Finnish children, 1978–1993Clin Infect Dis199521119311968589142
  • GranizoJJAguilarLCasalJDal-RéRBaqueroFStreptococcus pyogenes resistance to erythromycin in relation to macrolide consumption in Spain (1986–1997)J Antimicrob Chemother20004695996411102415
  • García-ReyCAguilarLBaqueroFCasalJMartínJEPharmacoepidemiological analysis of provincial differences between consumption of macrolides and rates of erythromycin resistance among Streptococcus pyogenes isolates in SpainJ Clin Microbiol2002402959296312149359
  • Pérez-TralleroEGarcía-de-la-FuenteCGarcía-ReyCGeographical and ecological analysis of resistance, coresistance, and coupled resistance to antimicrobials in respiratory pathogenic bacteria in SpainAntimicrob Agents Chemother2005491965197215855520
  • Gómez-LusRGranizoJJAguilarLBouzaEGutierrezAGarcía-de-LomasJIs there an ecological relationship between rates of antibiotic resistance of species of the genus Streptococcus? The Spanish Surveillance Group for Respiratory PathogensJ Clin Microbiol1999373384338610488213
  • FenollAGranizoJJAguilarLTemporal trends of invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae serotypes and antimicrobial resistance patterns in Spain from 1979 to 2007J Clin Microbiol2009471012102019225097
  • FenollAAguilarLGranizoJJHas the licensing of respiratory quinolones for adults and the 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV-7) for children had herd effects with respect to antimicrobial non-susceptibility in invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae?J Antimicrob Chemother2008621430143318819966
  • WhitneyCGFarleyMMHadlerJDecline in invasive pneumococcal disease after the introduction of protein-polysaccharide conjugate vaccineN Engl J Med20033481737174612724479
  • Pérez-TralleroEFernández-MazarrasaCGarcía-ReyCAntimicrobial susceptibilities of 1,684 Streptococcus pneumoniae and 2,039 Streptococcus pyogenes isolates and their ecological relationships: Results of a 1-year (1998–1999) multicenter surveillance study in SpainAntimicrob Agents Chemother2001453334334011709305
  • CantónRUnalSFarrellDJAntibacterial resistance patterns in Streptococcus pneumoniae isolated from elderly patients: PROTEKT years 1–5 (1999–2004)Int J Antimicrob Agents20073054655017931834
  • Pérez-TralleroEMarimónJMGonzálezAGarcía-ReyCAguilarLGenetic relatedness of recently collected Spanish respiratory tract Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates with reduced susceptibility to amoxicillinAntimicrob Agents Chemother2003473637363914576135
  • Pérez-TralleroEMarimónJMErcibengoaMGiménezMJCoronelPAguilarLAntimicrobial susceptibilities of amoxycillin-non-susceptible and susceptible isolates among penicillin-non-susceptible Streptococcus pneumoniaeClin Microbiol Infect20071393794017617182
  • BaqueroFGarcía-RodríguezJAGarcía de LomasJAguilarLAntimicrobial resistance of 1,113 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates from patients with respiratory tract infections in Spain: Results of a 1-year (1996–1997) multicenter surveillance study. The Spanish Surveillance Group for Respiratory PathogensAntimicrob Agents Chemother1999433573599925532
  • JenkinsSGFarrellDJIncrease in pneumococcus macrolide resistance, United StatesEmerg Infect Dis2009151260126419751588
  • PrietoJCalvoAGómez-LusMLAntimicrobial resistance: A class effect?J Antimicrob Chemother. 200250Suppl S2712
  • AlbertíSCortésGGarcía-ReyCStreptococcus pyogenes pharyngeal isolates with reduced susceptibility to ciprofloxacin in Spain: Mechanisms of resistance and clonal diversityAntimicrob Agents Chemother20054941842015616324
  • AlonsoRMateoEGalimandMGaraizarJCourvalinPCisternaRClonal spread of pediatric isolates of ciprofloxacin-resistant, emm type 6 Streptococcus pyogenesJ Clin Microbiol2005432492249315872292
  • CarapetisJRSteerACMulhollandEKWeberMThe global burden of group A streptococcal diseasesLancet Infect Dis2005568569416253886
  • Malhotra-KumarSVan HeirstraetenLLammensCChapelleSGoossensHEmergence of high-level fluoroquinolone resistance in emm6 Streptococcus pyogenes and in vitro resistance selection with ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin and moxifloxacinJ Antimicrob Chemother20096388689419279051
  • MontesMTamayoEOrdenBLarruskainJPerez-TralleroEPrevalence and clonal characterization of Streptococcus pyogenes clinical isolates with reduced fluoroquinolone susceptibility in SpainAntimicrob Agents Chemother201054939719805559
  • García-RodríguezJABaqueroFGarcía de LomasJAguilarLAntimicrobial susceptibility of 1,422 Haemophilus influenzae isolates from respiratory tract infections in Spain. Results of a 1-year (1996–97) multicenter surveillance study. Spanish Surveillance Group for Respiratory PathogensInfection19992726526710885840
  • MarcoFGarcía-de-LomasJGarcía-ReyCAntimicrobial susceptibilities of 1,730 Haemophilus influenzae respiratory tract isolates in Spain in 1998–1999Antimicrob Agents Chemother2001453226322811600386
  • MaticVBozdoganBJacobsMRUbukataKAppelbaumPCContribution of beta-lactamase and PBP amino acid substitutions to amoxicillin/clavulanate resistance in beta-lactamase-positive, amoxicillin/clavulanate-resistant Haemophilus influenzaeJ Antimicrob Chemother2003521018102114585854
  • Clinical and Laboratory Standards InstitutePerformance standards for antimicrobial susceptibility testing; nineteenth informational supplement. CLSI document M100-S19Wayne, PAClinical and Laboratory Standards Institute2009
  • JansenWTVerelABeitsmaMVerhoefJMilatovicDLongitudinal European surveillance study of antibiotic resistance of Haemophilus influenzaeJ Antimicrob Chemother20065887387716891323
  • García-CobosSCamposJLázaroEAmpicillin-resistant non-beta-lactamase-producing Haemophilus influenzae in Spain: Recent emergence of clonal isolates with increased resistance to cefotaxime and cefiximeAntimicrob Agents Chemother2007512564257317470649
  • MacGowanAPElements of design: The knowledge on which we buildClin Microbiol Infect200410Suppl 261114759228
  • DrusanoGLAntimicrobial pharmacodynamics: Critical interactions of ‘bug and drug’Nat Rev Microbiol2004228930015031728
  • TurnidgeJPatersonDLSetting and revising antibacterial susceptibility breakpointsClin Microbiol Rev20072039140817630331
  • WellingtonKCurranMPCefditoren pivoxil: A review of its use in the treatment of bacterial infectionsDrugs2004642597261815516158
  • FenollAGiménezMJRobledoOInfluence of penicillin/amoxicillin non-susceptibility on the activity of third-generation cephalosporins against Streptococcus pneumoniaeEur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis200827758017943330
  • FenollAGiménezMJRobledoOActivity of cefditoren against clinical isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae showing non-susceptibility to penicillins, cephalosporins, macrolides, ketolides or quinolonesInt J Antimicrob Agents20072922422617175141
  • Pérez-TralleroEMarimónJMErcibengoaMGiménezMJCoronelPAguilarLAntimicrobial susceptibilities of amoxycillin-non-susceptible and susceptible isolates among penicillin-non-susceptible Streptococcus pneumoniaeClin Microbiol Infect20071393794017617182
  • García-de-LomasJLermaMCebriánLInfluence of Haemophilus influenzae beta-lactamase production and/or fts I gene mutations on in vitro activity of and susceptibility rates to aminopenicillins and second- and third-generation cephalosporinsInt J Antimicrob Agents20073019019217459665
  • SevillanoDGiménezMJCercenadoEGenotypic versus phenotypic characterization, with respect to beta-lactam susceptibility, of Haemophilus influenzae isolates exhibiting decreased susceptibility to beta-lactam resistance markersAntimicrob Agents Chemother20095326727018955529
  • GraciaMDíazCCoronelPAntimicrobial susceptibility of Haemophilus influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis isolates in eight Central, East and Baltic European countries in 2005–06: Results of the Cefditoren Surveillance StudyJ Antimicrob Chemother2008611180118118316820
  • SádabaBAzanzaJRQuetglasEGPharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic serum and urine profile of cefditoren following single-dose and multiple twice- and thrice-daily regimens in healthy volunteers: A phase I studyRev Esp Quimioter200720516017530036
  • MoelleringRCEliopoulosGMPrinciples of anti-infective therapyMandellGLBennettJEDolinRPrinciples and Practice of Infectious Diseases6th edPhiladelphia, PAElsevier Churchill Livingstone2005
  • SevillanoDAguilarLAlouLHigh protein binding and cidal activity against penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae: A cefditoren in vitro pharmacodynamic simulationPLoS One200837e271718648650
  • GranizoJJSádabaBHonoratoJMonte Carlo simulation describing the pharmacodynamic profile of cefditoren in plasma from healthy volunteersInt J Antimicrob Agents20083139639818178067
  • CraigWAPharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic parameters: Rationale for antibacterial dosing of mice and menClin Infect Dis1998261109455502
  • HeffelfingerJDDowellSFJorgensenJHManagement of community-acquired pneumonia in the era of pneumococcal resistance: A report from the Drug-Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae Therapeutic Working GroupArch Intern Med20001601399140810826451
  • LodiseTPKinzig-SchippersMDrusanoGLUse of population pharmacokinetic modeling and Monte Carlo simulation to describe the pharmacodynamic profile of cefditoren in plasma and epithelial lining fluidAntimicrob Agents Chemother2008521945195117485507
  • US Food and Drug Administration www.fda.gov
  • KarlowskyJAJonesMEDraghiDCCritchleyIAThornsberryCSahmDFIn vitro susceptibility of recent clinical isolates of pneumococci to the investigational cephalosporin cefditorenDiagn Microbiol Infect Dis200242596411821173
  • JohnsonDMBiedenbachDJBeachMLPfallerMAJonesRNAntimicrobial activity and in vitro susceptibility test development for cefditoren against Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and Streptococcus speciesDiagn Microbiol Infect Dis2000379910510863104
  • JonesRNBiedenbachDJCrocoMABarrettMSIn vitro evaluation of a novel orally administered cephalosporin (Cefditoren) tested against 1249 recent clinical isolates of Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and Streptococcus pneumoniaeDiagn Microbiol Infect Dis1998315735789764398
  • Agencia Española de Medicamentos y Productos Sanitarios Available at: https://sinaem4.agemed.es/consaem/fichasTecnicas.do?metodo=detalleForm. Accessed on Apr 29, 2010.
  • GiménezMJGómez-LusMLValdésLAguilarLThe role of third-generation oral cephalosporin cefditoren pivoxil in the treatment of community-acquired infection in adultsRev Esp Quimioter20051821021616369662
  • GranizoJJGiménezMJBarberánJCoronelPGimenoMAguilarLEfficacy of cefditoren in the treatment of upper respiratory tract infections: A pooled analysis of six clinical trialsRev Esp Quimioter200821142118443928
  • KaplanELTuckerRMPolingTLMarshDChowCManaging group A streptococcal infection. A multicenter comparison of cefditoren pivoxil and penicillin VKJ Resp Dis2001228 SupplS60S64
  • GoochWMarshDSlicklerTHuntBCefditoren is safe and effective treatment for streptococcal pharyngitisAbstracts of the Fortieth Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and ChemotherapyToronto2000 Abstract 837 American Society for Microbiology. Washington, USA
  • ChowJRussellMVolkSChowCEfficacy of cefditoren pivoxil (CDTR) versus amoxicillin/clavulanate (AMX/CLV) in acute maxillary sinusitis (AMS)Abstracts of the Fortieth Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and ChemotherapyToronto2000 Abstract 835. American Society for Microbiology. Washington, USA
  • GranizoJJGiménezMJBarberánJCoronelPGimenoMAguilarLThe efficacy of cefditoren pivoxil in the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections, with a focus on the per-pathogen bacteriologic response in infections caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae: A pooled analysis of seven clinical trialsClin Ther2006282061206917296462
  • van ZylLle RouxJGLaFataJACefditoren pivoxil versus cefpodoxime proxetil for community acquired pneumonia: Results of a multicenter, prospective, randomized, double-blind studyClin Ther2002241840185312501878
  • FogartyCMCyganowskiMPaloWAHomRCCraigWAA comparison of cefditoren pivoxil and amoxicillin/clavulanate in the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia: A multicenter, prospective, randomized, investigator-blinded, parallel group studyClin Ther2002241854187012501879
  • Alvarez-SalaJLKardosPMartínez-BeltránJCoronelPAguilarLClinical and bacteriological efficacy in treatment of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis with cefditoren-pivoxil versus cefuroxime-axetilAntimicrob Agents Chemother2006501762176716641447
  • RamirezJATuckerRMBettisRBTreating acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitisJ Resp Dis200122Suppl 8S75S80
  • HenryDCPolingTLBettisRBA double-blind, randomized study of cefditoren vs cefuroxime for AECBJ Resp Dis200122Suppl 8S69S74
  • GranizoJJAguilarLGimenezMJCoronelPGimenoMPrietoJSafety profile of cefditoren: A pooled analysis of data from clinical trials in community-acquired respiratory tract infectionsRev Esp Quimioter200922576119544097
  • AguilarLGiménezMJGaps in antibiotic development; the postmarketing gapsRev Med Microbiol20081917
  • SevillanoDAguilarLAlouLBeta-lactam effects on mixed cultures of common respiratory isolates as an approach to treatment effects on nasopharyngeal bacterial population dynamicsPLoS One20083e384619052648