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224. Clinical Relevance of Antibiotic Tolerance in Recurrent Gram-negative Bloodstream Infections
BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infections (GNB-BSI) are common and frequently lethal. Many patients experience recurrent GNB-BSI for unclear reasons. This study explores how antibiotic tolerance may lead to infection relapse. [Figure: see text] Approximately 63% of recurrent GNB-BSI...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10679344/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.297 |
Sumario: | BACKGROUND: Gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infections (GNB-BSI) are common and frequently lethal. Many patients experience recurrent GNB-BSI for unclear reasons. This study explores how antibiotic tolerance may lead to infection relapse. [Figure: see text] Approximately 63% of recurrent GNB-BSI are due to relapse (almost genetically identical isolate) and 37% due to reinfection (genetically distinct isolate). [Figure: see text] BALB/c mice infected with paired initial or relapsed GNB-BSI isolate. 50 mg/kg ertapenem added at 3 hours post infection (hpi). Graph shows recovery of viable bacteria from liver tissue. METHODS: We used a prospective cohort of patients with GNB-BSI at Duke Hospital to identify patients with >1 episode of GNB-BSI due to the same bacterial species. We used whole genome sequencing (WGS) to distinguish reinfection (recurrent infection with different isolate) from relapse (recurrent infection with near-identical isolate). Time-kill curves with meropenem were used to determine the development of antibiotic tolerance between the initial and relapsed Escherichia coli isolates. The biological relevance of antibiotic tolerance was tested using a murine bacteremia model. RESULTS: We determined that 63% (30/48) of recurrent GNB-BSI episodes were due to relapse and 37% (18/48) were due to reinfection. We screened 10 relapsed E. coli pairs (initial and relapsed isolates) using meropenem to identify increases in antibiotic tolerance. One isolate pair showed a 100-fold increase in multidrug antibiotic tolerance. We determined the decreased antibiotic killing was due to a loss-of-function mutation in the ptsI gene encoding Enzyme I of the phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase system. To test if the in-vitro tolerance phenotype translated to decreased antibiotic efficacy in-vivo, we developed a murine model of E. coli bacteremia. In our murine bacteremia model, the ptsI mutant was equally virulent as the wild-type, but exhibited 10-fold less killing during antibiotic treatment. CONCLUSION: Our work provides a unique insight into the molecular changes occurring during GNB-BSI and how the pathogen adapts to the host through acquisition of antibiotic tolerance. We address the controversy regarding the clinical relevance of antibiotic tolerance in-vivo by providing compelling data that not only do these mutations arise during bloodstream infection in humans, but the presence of antibiotic tolerance in-vitro likely leads to decreased antibiotic efficacy in-vivo. Further work is required to determine if early detection of antibiotic tolerance could lead to alterations in medical management and ultimately improve patient outcomes. DISCLOSURES: Vance G. Fowler, MD, MHS, Amphliphi Biosciences, Integrated Biotherapeutics; C3J, Armata, Valanbio; Akagera, Aridis, Roche, Astra Zeneca: Advisor/Consultant|Genentech, Regeneron, Deep Blue, Basilea, Janssen;: Grant/Research Support|Infectious Diseases Society of America: Honoraria|MedImmune, Allergan, Pfizer, Advanced Liquid Logics, Theravance, Novartis, Merck; Medical Biosurfaces; Locus; Affinergy; Contrafect; Karius;: Grant/Research Support|Novartis, Debiopharm, Genentech, Achaogen, Affinium, Medicines Co., MedImmune, Bayer, Basilea, Affinergy, Janssen, Contrafect, Regeneron, Destiny,: Advisor/Consultant|Sepsis diagnostic: Patent pending|UpToDate: Royalties|Valanbio and ArcBio: Stock Options Joshua T. Thaden, MD, PhD, Resonantia Diagnostics, Inc: Advisor/Consultant |
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