Literature DB >> 26998609

Antimicrobial Combinations against Pan-Resistant Acinetobacter baumannii Isolates with Different Resistance Mechanisms.

Gleice Cristina Leite1,2, Maura Salaroli Oliveira1,3, Lauro Vieira Perdigão-Neto1,2,3, Cristiana Kamia Dias Rocha2, Thais Guimarães4, Camila Rizek2, Anna Sara Levin1,2,3, Silvia Figueiredo Costa1,2,3.   

Abstract

The study investigated the effect of antibiotic combinations against 20 clinical isolates of A. baumannii (seven colistin-resistant and 13 colistin-susceptible) with different resistance mechanisms. Clinical data, treatment, and patient mortality were evaluated. The following methods were used: MIC, PCRs, and outer membrane protein (OMP) analysis. Synergy was investigated using the checkerboard and time-kill methods. Clonality was evaluated by PFGE. Based on clonality, the whole genome sequence of six A. baumannii isolates was analyzed. All isolates were resistant to meropenem, rifampicin, and fosfomycin. OXA-23 and OXA-143 were the most frequent carbapenemases found. Four isolates showed loss of a 43kDa OMP. The colistin-susceptible isolates belonged to different clones and showed the highest synergistic effect with fosfomycin-amikacin. Among colistin-resistant isolates, the highest synergistic effect was observed with the combinations of colistin-rifampicin followed by colistin-vancomycin. All colistin-resistant isolates harbored blaOXA-23-like and belonged to CC113. Clinical and demographic data were available for 18 of 20 patients. Fourteen received treatment and eight patients died during treatment. The most frequent site of infection was the blood in 13 of 14 patients. Seven patients received vancomycin plus an active drug against A. baumannii; however, mortality did not differ in this group. The synergistic effect was similar for colistin-susceptible isolates of distinct clonal origin presenting with the same resistance mechanism. Overall mortality and death during treatment was high, and despite the high synergism in vitro with vancomycin, death did not differ comparing the use or not of vancomycin plus an active drug against A. baumannii.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26998609      PMCID: PMC4801211          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151270

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Infections caused by multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii have emerged as a serious problem throughout the world [1]. Old antibiotics, such as fosfomycin and polymyxins, are now considered potential treatment alternatives to overcome the lack of new antibiotics [2-4]. Studies have demonstrated that fosfomycin is a promising drug, particularly in combination with other antimicrobials for the treatment of infections due to multidrug-resistant (MDR) Gram-negative bacilli. However, there is concern about its use against A. baumannii, due to intrinsic resistance to fosfomycin [5-6]. On the other hand, although polymyxins B and E (colistin) are generally active against multidrug-resistant A. baumannii (MDRAB) [3] and have been used to treat infections, colistin resistance among A. baumannii has been reported and has clearly increased in the last years [4]. In this scenario, treatment with combination therapy, using two or more antibacterial drugs, appears to be the only remaining option [7]. Two of the most frequent in vitro methods used to evaluate interactions between drugs are the checkerboard technique and time-kill kinetics. The checkerboard method only evaluates the inhibitory activity, not bactericidal activity. Additionally, it shows different results when different methods of interpretation are used [8]. Thus, its results may require confirmation using a more dynamic interaction method such as time-kill kinetic studies. To date, few studies have evaluated the antimicrobial combinations against pan-resistant A. baumannii isolates using both methods, and correlations between in vitro and in vivo results are often controversial. There is also some concern as to whether the synergistic effect of antibiotics is related to the resistance mechanism or to the clonality of isolates, or both [9]. Thus, data on the synergistic effect of antibiotic combinations and their efficacy in the treatment of infections caused by Acinetobacter are needed. The objective of this study was to evaluate the in vitro activity of antibiotic combinations against twenty MDRAB, including pan-resistant isolates with different resistance mechanisms and clonal origins. In addition, clinical and demographic data of patients submitted to different treatments against these infections were evaluated.

Methods

Bacterial Isolates

Twenty A. baumannii isolates were obtained from the bacterial collection of the Laboratory of Bacteriology (LIM-54) of the Department of Infectious Diseases of the School of Medicine, University of São Paulo. Thirteen isolates were colistin-susceptible (at 0.5 mg/L to 2 mg/L) and seven were colistin-resistant (at 8 mg/L to 64 mg/L). Isolates had been stored at -80°C and were subcultured on 5% sheep blood agar before being tested.

Susceptibility testing

Minimal Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs) of colistin (USP-Reference Standard, Rockville, MD, USA), rifampicin, imipenem, gentamycin, amikacin, tigecycline, fosfomycin, vancomycin (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA), and meropenem (Astra Zeneca, Cotia, SP, Brazil) were determined using the broth microdilution method in duplicate according to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) protocol [10]. Breakpoints for fosfomycin were used according to EUCAST criteria for Enterobacteriaceae [11]. These antibiotics were selected based on local therapeutic protocols used at the Hospital das Clínicas of the University of São Paulo. Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853 and Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 were used as controls for susceptibility testing. Pan-resistance was defined as resistance to all antimicrobials tested, and multidrug-resistance was defined as resistance to at least three antimicrobials tested.

Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

The PCR techniques for carbapenemase genes (blaOXA-23-; blaOXA-51-; blaOXA-58-like; blaOXA-24-like; blaOXA-143-like; blaIMP; blaSPM; blaVIM; blaSIM; blaNDM), and the genes that encode the omp33-36 porin and carO were performed in duplicate; other genes described in A. baumannii were verified by whole genome sequence. DNA were extracted using Illustra bacteria genomicPrep Mini Spin Kit (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences Corp, USA). For each reaction, a positive internal control was used. The primers used in the study are listed on Table 1.
Table 1

DNA sequences of oligonucleotides used in polymerase chain reactions to detect carbapenemase and outer-membrane proteins of A. baumannii isolates.

OligonucleotidesSequence (5’-3’)Size (bp)Reference
blaOXA51—FTAATGCTTTGATCGGCCTTG353[22]
blaOXA51—RTGGATTGCACTTCATCTTGG
blaOXA23—FGATCGGATTGGAGAACCAGA501[22]
blaOXA23—RATTTCTGACCGCATTTCCAT
blaOXA24—FGGTTAGTTGGCCCCCTTAAA246[22]
blaOXA24—RAGTTGAGCGAAAAGGGGATT
blaOXA58—FAAGTATTGGGGCTTGTGCTG599[22]
blaOXA58—RCCCCTCTGCGCTCTACATAC
blaOXA143—FAGTTAACTTTCAATAATTG604[23]
blaOXA143—RTTGGAAAATTATATAATCCC
blaSPM—FCCTTTTCCGCGACCTTGATC798[24]
blaSPM—RATGCGCTTCATTCACGCAC
blaSIM—FGTACAAGGGATTCGGCATCG569[24]
blaSIM—RGTACAAGGGATTCGGCATCG
blaIMP—FTTGGAAAATTATATAATCCC188[24]
blaIMP—RCCAAACCACTAGGTTATC
blaVIM—FTTTGGTCGCATATCGCAAAG382[24]
blaVIM—RCCATTCAGCCCAGATCGGCAT
blaNDM—FGGCGGAATGGCTCATCACGA375[25]
blaNDM—RCGCAACACAGCCTGACTTTC
omp33-36—FCATCGATGGCACTAACATGG175[25]
omp33-36—RAGTGTGACCACCCCAAACAT
carO—FGGTTACGGTGGTGCTTTGTT118[25]
carO—RGGTGCGAAACCAAAACCTAA

Analysis of outer membrane proteins

Bacterial cells were obtained from overnight Brain Heart Infusion (BHI) cultures of A. baumannii. Extraction of outer membrane proteins as well as the analysis of PAGE was performed in duplicate, using a previously described method [12]. Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 was used as a control.

Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)

Clonality of A. baumannii isolates was evaluated using PFGE with ApaI endonuclease (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, California, USA) and chromosomal DNA Ultrapure Agarose (Invitrogen™, Life Technologies) [13]. Restriction fragments were obtained by separation using a CHEF DR®III system (Bio-Rad, Hercules, California, USA). Patterns were interpreted according to Bionumerics version 7.1 (Applied-Maths, Sint-Martens-Latem, Belgium). Results from our previous study [12] allowed us to select distinct clones of colistin-susceptible isolates, and to examine the possible different synergistic effects. Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC 19606 were used as controls.

Whole genome sequencing

Genomic DNA was extracted using the Illustra bacteria genomicPrep Mini Spin Kit (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences Corp, USA). An Ion Torrent adapter-ligated library was made following the manufacturer's Ion AmpliSeq Library Kit (Life Technologies). The whole-genome sequence was determined using Ion Torrent Personal Genome Technology MachineTM (PGM) system with a 318 chip (Life Technologies, Foster City, CA). Raw sequencing reads were quality-controlled using Trimmomatic [14]. Draft genomes were de novo assembled using MIRA [15]. Genome annotation was performed using Prokka [16], and rRNA was identified using RNAmmer [17]. The ResFinder 2.0 server (http://cge.cbs.dtu.dk/services/ResFinder/) was used to identify antibiotic resistance genes. Comparative analysis were made using BLAST (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/) by alignment and by MAFFT (http://mafft.cbrc.jp/alignment/server/) to verify amino acid replacement [18].

MLST (Multilocus sequence typing)

MLST was determined by in silico analysis of the draft genomes using the A. baumannii MLST database (http://pubmlst.org/abaumannii), and Clonal Complexes were analyzed by eBURST software (http://eburst.mlst.net/) [19].

Checkerboard microdilution

The MDR A. baumannii isolates were exposed to combinations of two drugs, and checkerboard microdilution testing was performed in duplicate and evaluated after 20–24 hours of incubation at 35°C. Growth and sterility controls were tested in all plates. Colistin, imipenem, fosfomycin, and tigecycline were combined with amikacin, gentamycin, rifampicin, vancomycin, and meropenem at the respective minimum inhibitory concentrations determined by microdilution. The antimicrobial agents were diluted from the stock solution, and left at concentrations 4 times higher than the final concentration in plate, and then a serial dilution was performed. FICI and 2-well interpretation methods were used as described by Eliopoulos et al. [20]. FICIs were calculated as [(MIC of drug A in combination)/(MIC of drug A alone)] + [(MIC of drug B in combination)/(MIC of drug B alone)]. Synergy was defined as a FICI of ≤0.5, indifference as a FICI of >0.5<4, and antagonism as a FICI of ≥4. The second method used was the 2-well method, with synergy defined as the absence of growth in wells containing 0.25 x MIC of both drugs and 2 x MIC of both drugs [8, 20].

Time-Kill assay

Time-kill assays were performed in duplicate for all isolates at concentrations based on the MIC determined from the checkerboard testing of isolates as follows: drugs alone and combined at 1 x MIC and 0.5 x MIC. For isolates with indifferent effect and for colistin-resistant isolates, they were performed combined at 0.125 x MIC, 0.25 x MIC, 2 x MIC, and 4 x MIC. Time-kill analysis was performed based on a previously published method [9]. The tests were repeated for the third time with the isolates that had grown at 24 hours. Synergism was interpreted as a ≥ 2 log10 decrease in colony count with the antimicrobial combination when compared to the most active single agent. The drug combination was considered to be antagonistic if there was a ≥2 log10 increase in counts, and the combination was considered to be indifferent if there was a < 2 log10 increase or decrease in colony count with the combination when compared with the most active drug alone [9].

Clinical and demographic data

The following clinical and demographic data from the medical records of patients hospitalized at Hospital das Clínicas of the University of São Paulo, Brazil, were registered: age, gender, underlying diseases, site of infection, length of stay in the Intensive Care Unit, APACHE II score, and treatment of A. baumannii infection (with at least 48 hours of use of a specific antibiotic with activity against A. baumannii). Definitions for the infections were those used by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [21]. The in vitro antimicrobial combinations of vancomycin plus colistin, and vancomycin plus imipenem or meropenem against A. baumannii were compared using demographic data. We also evaluated patient mortality during treatment (if the patient was receiving specific treatment for A. baumannii) and during hospitalization as outcomes. An Epi Info™ database was built, and results were expressed as means (standard deviation) or median (interquartile range), depending on normality. Statistical analysis was not done due to the limited number of patients. All data were analyzed anonymously and confidentially, with approval by the Research Ethics Committee of the FM-USP (School of Medicine, University of São Paulo).

Results

All 20 isolates of A. baumannii were resistant to meropenem, rifampicin, and fosfomycin. All isolates of A. baumannii harbored blaOXA-51-like, 10 carried the blaOXA-23-like gene, seven carried blaOXA-143-like, and three carried the blaIMP gene. The blaSPM, blaVIM and blaSIM genes were not identified by PCR. The blaSPM, blaVIM and blaSIM genes were not identified. Sixteen isolates carried the opm33-36 gene and all isolates carried the carO gene. For all the isolates harboring blaOXA-23-like, the combination of colistin-vancomycin was synergistic. Synergism was present in 80% with the colistin-imipenem combination, and in 80% with fosfomycin-amikacin. For all the isolates that harbored blaOXA-143-like, the fosfomycin-amikacin combination was synergistic, and 85.7% presented synergism for the tigecycline-amikacin combination. The absence or decrease of outer-membrane proteins of 43 kDa, 33–36 kDa, and 29 kDa of the 20 isolates were compared with A. baumannii ATCC 19606. In four colistin-susceptible isolates, a total absence of the protein of 43kDa was observed. These four isolates presented with high MICs for carbapenem and harbored blaOXA-51-like, blaOXA-143-like, and blaIMP. Table 2 shows the MIC of the antibiotics tested and the resistance mechanisms of A. baumannii isolates determined by PCR and OMP evaluation. The interpretation criteria for antimicrobial susceptibility established by CLSI and EUCAST are shown on S1 Table.
Table 2

Minimum inhibitory concentration of antibiotics and resistance mechanisms of 20 A. baumannii isolates.

IsolatesMIC (mg/L)PCR (OXA/Metallo)OMP (kDa)
ColImiTigGenAmiMeraRifbFos5123143IMP2933–3643
12256132128644128PAAA+++++++++
22320.5321281284128PAAA+++++++
311121281284128PAAA+++++++++
42320.5641281284128PAPA+++++
5216412864644128PAAA++++++++++
611281321281284128PAPP+++A
90.5128116128648256PAAP+++++++++
110.5640.52128164128PPPA++++A
130.5640.2564128324128PAPAA+++A
140.5640.564128644128PAPP++++++
150.5128264128642128PAAA+++
181160.52256164128PPPA+++++++++
200.51280.5642561284128PPPA++++A
2216322425632464PPAA++++++++
23163224256322128PPAA++++++++
2432322451232264PPAA++++++++
256464161651232432PPAA++++++++
2632322412832264PPAA++++++++
2732640.522164>256PPAA++++++++
288322825616464PPAA++++++++

Abbreviations: Col: colistin; Imi: imipenem; Tig: tigecycline; Gen: gentamycin; Ami: amikacin; Mer: meropenem; Rif: rifampicin; Fos: fosfomycin; P: presence; OMP: Outer Membrane Protein; MIC: Minimum Inhibitory Concentration;

aRif: rifampicin, criteria established by EUCAST (breakpoint ≤0.006 mg/L),

bFos: fosfomycin (breakpoint ≤32 mg/L).

Abbreviations: Col: colistin; Imi: imipenem; Tig: tigecycline; Gen: gentamycin; Ami: amikacin; Mer: meropenem; Rif: rifampicin; Fos: fosfomycin; P: presence; OMP: Outer Membrane Protein; MIC: Minimum Inhibitory Concentration; aRif: rifampicin, criteria established by EUCAST (breakpoint ≤0.006 mg/L), bFos: fosfomycin (breakpoint ≤32 mg/L). The colistin-susceptible A. baumannii isolates showed eight distinct profiles and the colistin-resistant isolates showed three distinct profiles by PFGE. There were two distinct ST profiles among colistin-susceptible isolates; two colistin-susceptible isolates were assigned to ST236 (CC103), and one to ST406 (singleton). The three colistin-resistant isolates were assigned to ST233, a member of the CC113. These ST are unrelated to international clones I, II, and III (Table 3).
Table 3

Determination of minimum inhibitory concentration by microdilution, resistance genes, and molecular profile of six A. baumannii isolates.

Isolates*MIC (μg/mL)MOLECULAR PROFILE
Unit/YearIsolation SiteColImiMerTigAmiGenRifFosGenesClusterSTCC
03Clinical ICU**2003Blood11128112824128OXA-51, ampC, adeABC, adeIJK, aph(3´)-VlaC236103
06Nursery I2002Blood11281281128324128OXA-51, OXA-182, ampC, IMP, adeABC, adeIJK, aph(3´)-Vla, aadA1C236103
18Nursery II 2004Blood116160.525624128OXA-51, OXA-23, OXA-72, ampC, adeABC, adeIJK, aph(3´)-VlaD407St
23Surgical ICU2012Rectal Swab163232225642128OXA-51, OXA-23, OXA-27, ampC, TEM, adeABC, adeIJK, aph(3´)-Vla, aadA1, strA, strBA233133
25Neurological ICU2011Blood6464321651216432OXA-51, OXA-23, OXA-88, ampC, TEM, adeABC, adeIJK, aph(3´)-Vla, aadA1, strA, strBA2233133
28Surgical ICU2011Blood8321622568464OXA-51, OXA-23, ampC, TEM, adeABC, adeIJK, aph(3´)-Vla, aadA1, strBB233133

*According to CLSI, 2013 and EUCAST, 2013. St: singletons,

**ICU: intensive care unit

*According to CLSI, 2013 and EUCAST, 2013. St: singletons, **ICU: intensive care unit Based on the FICI method, the synergistic effect was observed only in one isolate for the colistin-vancomycin combination, and in all colistin resistant isolates (n = 7) for the colistin-rifampicin combination. All the isolates harboring blaOXA-23-like displayed a synergistic effect of the colistin-vancomycin combination. Four isolates of A. baumannii, in which the protein of 43 kDa was absent, had a high MIC for imipenem, and the combinations with carbapenems were indifferent. Also, all isolates presented synergism for the fosfomycin-amikacin and tigecycline-amikacin combinations. Table 4 shows the effect of antimicrobial combinations by the checkerboard (FICI and 2-well) and time-kill methods of the combinations tested that showed the largest number for synergic effect. In these antimicrobial combinations, synergism was observed in 100% of isolates by the time-kill assay. Antagonism was not noted.
Table 4

Results of the three different methods (FICI, 2-well, and time-kill assay) used to evaluate in vitro synergism of antibiotic combinations against 20 A. baumannii isolates.

IsolatesMain results
Col+ImiCol+VanCol+MerCol+RifFos+GenFos+Ami
aFICI2wellbTKaFICI2wellbTKaFICI2wellbTKaFICI2wellbTKaFICI2wellbTKaFICI2wellbTK
11.5/II2/2h0.75/IS3/2h1.25/IS2/2h0.31/SS6/2h1/IS3/2h1.5/IS2/2h
22/II2/2h1/IS4/2h2/II2/2h0.5/SS3/2h2/IS3/2h1.25/IS2/2h
33/II6/4h1.5/II3/2h1/II2/2h0.5/SS6/2h2/IS6/2h1.25/IS2/2h
41.5/II2/2h0.75/II3/2h2/IS2/2h1.5/IS3/2h2/IS4/2h1.25/IS2/2h
52/II6/2h0.75/IS3/2h2/II2/2h1/IS2/2h1.5/II3/2h1.5/IS3/2h
61.5/II2/2h1.5/IS4/2h1.25/IS2/2h1/IS4/2h1.5/IS4/2h1.25/IS2/2h
91.5/IS2/2h1.5/IS4/2h2/II2/2h1/II2/2h0.562/IS4/2h1.25/IS2/2h
112/II2/2h1/IS4/2h2/II2/2h0.75/II2/2h2/II3/2h1.25/IS2/2h
131.5/II6/2h2/II4/2h2/II2/2h1/II2/2h1.5/IS4/2h1.5/IS2/2h
142/II2/2h1.5/II3/2h2/II2/2h1/II2/2h1.25/IS4/2h2/IS2/2h
152/II2/2h1.5/IS4/2h2/II2/2h1.5/II2/2h1.5/IS2/2h1.5/IS2/2h
181.5/IS2/2h2/IS4/2h2/II2/2h1.25/II2/2h2/II4/2h1.5/IS2/2h
202/II2/2h0.75/IS4/2h2/II2/2h1.5/II2/2h1.5/IS3/2h1/IS2/2h
220.75/IS3/2h0.625/IS4/2h1.25/IS6/2h0.135/SS6/2h2/II4/2h1.25/IS2/2h
230.625/IS2/2h0.507/IS4/2h1.125/IS2/2h0.155/SS5/2h2/II4/4h1.5/IS2/2h
241.5/IS3/2h0.625/IS6/2h1.25/IS2/2h0.132/SS6/2h2/II4/4h1.5/IS2/2h
252.25/IS2/2h1.125/IS6/2h1/IS6/2h0.135/SS3/2h0.75/IS3/2h1.5/IS2/2h
260.75/IS2/2h1.062/IS5/2h1/IS5/2h0.135/SS6/2h2/II4/2h1.5/IS2/2h
271.25/IS4/2h1.25/IS4/2h1/IS6/2h0.135/SS6/2h1.5/IS4/2h2/II2/2h
280.75/IS2/2h0.122/SS4/2h1.062/IS2/2h0.185/SS3/4h1.03/IS3/2h2/II2/2h

Abbreviations: Col: colistin; Imi: imipenem; Mer: meropenem; Gen: gentamycin; Ami: amikacin; Rif: rifampicin; Fos: fosfomycin; I: indifferent; S: synergism; h: hour.

aFICI (Fractional Inhibitory Concentration Index): value/effect;

bTK (Time-Kill): log decrease/bactericidal effect hour.

Abbreviations: Col: colistin; Imi: imipenem; Mer: meropenem; Gen: gentamycin; Ami: amikacin; Rif: rifampicin; Fos: fosfomycin; I: indifferent; S: synergism; h: hour. aFICI (Fractional Inhibitory Concentration Index): value/effect; bTK (Time-Kill): log decrease/bactericidal effect hour. The percentage of synergistic effect using FICI and 2-well for all antimicrobial combinations against A. baumannii isolates is shown on Table 5.
Table 5

In vitro synergistic effect, according to two different methods (FICI and 2-well) of antimicrobial combinations against 20 isolates of multi-drug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.

AntibioticAntibiotic tested in combinationColistin-Susceptible (n = 13)Colistin-Resistant (n = 7)
*Synergism (%)*Synergism (%)
**FICI2-Well**FICI2-Well
Colistin
Imipenem0150100
Tigecycline01500
Gentamycin02300
Amikacin015014
Meropenem0230100
Vancomycin06914100
Rifampicin2377100100
Fosfomycin05400
Imipenem
Tigecycline031043
Gentamycin054029
Amikacin046014
Vancomycin0000
Rifampicin03900
Fosfomycin02300
Tigecycline
Gentamycin08029
Amikacin046014
Meropenem08029
Vancomycin0800
Rifampicin0000
Fosfomycin0000
Fosfomycin
Gentamycin077043
Amikacin0100071
Meropenem023029
Vancomycin023014
Rifampicin03900

*Synergism is a positive interaction; the combined effect of the drugs being examined is significantly greater than the expected result. The isolates that showed no synergistic effect showed indifference; antagonism was not observed for any combination against any isolate tested.

**FICI—Fractional Inhibitory Concentration Index.

*Synergism is a positive interaction; the combined effect of the drugs being examined is significantly greater than the expected result. The isolates that showed no synergistic effect showed indifference; antagonism was not observed for any combination against any isolate tested. **FICI—Fractional Inhibitory Concentration Index. The time-kill results confirmed a synergistic effect for all isolates with a synergistic effect by checkerboard. The synergistic effect was observed for almost all isolates by time-kill assay, except for combinations with tigecycline, whose synergistic effect was observed with tigecycline and colistin combinations only for susceptible-colistin isolates. The tigecycline with amikacin combination occurred against 17/20 isolates, and tigecycline with meropenem against ten isolates. For fosfomycin combinations, the synergistic effect was not observed when tested with vancomycin and with meropenem. Fig 1 shows the time-kill curve results.
Fig 1

Time-kill curve of isolates using drugs alone and in combination at 1 x MIC and 0.5 x MIC, respectively, against an A. baumannii isolate.

(A) Isolate 23 –Colistin (16 and 8 mg/L)/Vancomycin (64 and 32mg/L), (B) Isolate 28—Colistin (8 and 4 mg/L)/Rifampicin (4 and 2mg/L), (C) Isolate 1—Imipenem (256 and 128mg/L)/Tigecycline (1 and 0.5mg/L), (D) Isolate 5—Fosfomycin (128 and 64mg/L)/Amikacin (64 and 32mg/L).

Time-kill curve of isolates using drugs alone and in combination at 1 x MIC and 0.5 x MIC, respectively, against an A. baumannii isolate.

(A) Isolate 23 –Colistin (16 and 8 mg/L)/Vancomycin (64 and 32mg/L), (B) Isolate 28—Colistin (8 and 4 mg/L)/Rifampicin (4 and 2mg/L), (C) Isolate 1—Imipenem (256 and 128mg/L)/Tigecycline (1 and 0.5mg/L), (D) Isolate 5—Fosfomycin (128 and 64mg/L)/Amikacin (64 and 32mg/L). For all isolates there was a synergistic effect of antibiotic combinations at 2 x MIC and 4 x MIC, except for one isolate using tigecycline-gentamicin and one isolate using colistin-gentamicin. For combinations at 0.125 x MIC and 0.25 x MIC, the synergistic effect was observed only for colistin-vancomycin and colistin-rifampicin. A wide diversity of OXA-genes (OXA-51, OXA-23, OXA-72, OXA-88, and OXA-182) was found by whole genome sequencing as well as aminoglycoside resistance genes and genes encoding a series of proteins for the resistance-nodulation-division (RND) family and their regulators (Table 3). This Whole Genome Shotgun project was deposited at the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank under the accession LMZH00000000 (Ab03), LMBM00000000 (Ab06), LMBN00000000 (Ab18), LMBO00000000 (Ab23), LMBP00000000 (Ab25), and LMBQ00000000 (Ab28). The carbapenem-resistant isolate with the highest MIC for carbapenem co-harbored OXA types and IMP. On the other hand, less diversity of OXA genes was found among colistin-resistant isolates. Clinical, demographic, and treatment data of 18 patients were evaluated. Of these, three patients were colonized, and one died before the culture result; thus, a total of 14 patients received antibiotic therapy. Eight patients died during treatment and five during hospitalization; therefore, five continued in the investigation. The most frequent site of infection was the blood, in 13/14 patients. Seven patients received vancomycin plus specific therapy (colistin and or ampicillin/sulbactam) against A. baumannii; however mortality did not differ for this group compared with the group that did not receive vancomycin, despite the high in vitro synergism of colistin-vancomycin (Table 6).
Table 6

Clinical, demographic, and vancomycin time-kill synergism data of 18 patients colonized and infected by multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.

Patients N = 18Surviving during treatment N = 6Death during treatment N = 8
Age (years), mean (range)43 (15–68)38 (16–59)44 (15–69)
Female651
Underlying diseases
Hematologic cancer404
Cirrhosis330
Abdominal surgery211
Trauma220
Kidney transplant110
Others523
Intensive Care Unit642
Apache II, median161513
Colonization3--
No treatment4*--
Infection1468
Blood1367
Tracheal secretion1-1
Treated A. baumannii infection1468
In vitro synergism with vancomycin plus colistin by time-kill1468
In vitro synergism with vancomycin plus imipenem by time-kill945
Received vancomycin plus A. baumannii treatment725

*Three colonization (one blood specimen collected by central venous catheter and two fecal specimens) and one patient with a bloodstream infection that died before treatment.

*Three colonization (one blood specimen collected by central venous catheter and two fecal specimens) and one patient with a bloodstream infection that died before treatment.

Discussion

The combinations of colistin plus rifampicin, and colistin plus vancomycin showed the highest synergistic effect against colistin-resistant A. baumannii isolates. The synergistic effect in vitro by time-kill analysis occurred at a concentrations lower (0.5 and 1.0 x of the MIC values) than those used in clinical treatment (2.0 to 8.0 x the MIC values). Mortality among patients during treatment of infections due to MDRAB was high, despite high in vitro synergism with vancomycin, considering the use of vancomycin plus an active drug against A. baumannii. Different interpretation procedures can be used to determine the effect of the antimicrobial combinations, but these methods may lead to different results. Therefore, we chose FICI and 2-well, the most frequently used methods in literature, and the time-kill method, which is considered the gold-standard [26]. We found different results comparing 2-well and FICI as demonstrated by other authors [27]. Bonapace et al. [27] demonstrated a 72% (range 42–97%) agreement between the time-kill test and Etest, and 51% (range 30–67%) between the time-kill and checkerboard tests. Thus, it seems that for clinical purposes, it may be important to confirm checkerboard results with time-kill testing. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study that evaluated the synergistic effect of fosfomycin using the time-kill assay against well-characterized colistin-susceptible and resistant A. baumannii isolates. We found a synergistic effect with fosfomycin and aminoglycoside against colistin-susceptible and resistant Acinetobacter isolates. However, we could not evaluate the use of fosfomycin in our patients because it is not yet approved to be used as systemic treatment in Brazil. A recent study showed that patients who received combination therapy with colistin and fosfomycin had a significantly more favorable microbiological response and a trend towards more favorable clinical outcomes and lower mortality than those who received colistin alone [28-29]. Nevertheless, the use of fosfomycin to treat infections due to Acinetobacter is controversial. Data using intravenous fosfomycin are scarce, Acinetobacter usually shows high MICs, and breakpoints are not well defined by CLSI [10] or EUCAST [11]. Few studies have evaluated the synergistic effect of fosfomycin combined with colistin against A. baumannii [30-31], which may vary from 37.5% to 75% [30-31]. Despite all limitations, our data demonstrated a high rate of synergy of fosfomycin-aminoglycoside combinations against colistin-susceptible and resistant Acinetobacter isolates. This suggests that these combinations may be clinically useful. In the present study, all colistin-resistant A. baumannii isolates harboring blaOXA-23-like belonged to CC113 (ST233). This differed from prior reports that identified colistin-resistance in ST2 of the international clone II [32] and ST375 [33] in Italy and in Korea [32-33]. On the other hand, the colistin-susceptible A. baumannii isolates in our study that harbored blaOXA-23-like belonged to CC103 (ST236). This CC has already been reported by Coelho-Souza et al. [34] in 2003 in another state of Brazil. Most OXA-23- producing A. baumannii isolates in Latin America belong to CC113, in contrast with studies in many countries around the world that showed that A. baumannii harboring OXA-23 isolates were related to specific clones belonging to CC92 [35-42]. OXA-23 and OXA-143 were the most frequent resistance mechanisms found in our isolates. A. baumannii harboring OXA-23 has been reported in many countries including Brazil, and it is associated with resistance to imipenem [43-47]. This is the first report of OXA-88 and OXA-182 among clinical isolates of A. baumannii in Brazil. OXA-88 sequences differ from OXA-51 by five to eight amino acids. It has been described among clinical isolates in Singapore [48]. OXA-182 has been reported among A. baumannii isolates in Korea and revealed 93% nucleotide identity with blaOXA-143 [49]. Other carbapenemase found in our isolates was OXA-72, already described in Brazil [50-52]. Outer-membrane proteins of 43 kDa previously associated with carbapenem resistance in Acinetobacter spp. [53] were absent in four isolates analyzed in the present study. These isolates showed a high MIC for imipenem and an indifferent effect of combinations with carbapenem. However, in all isolates, fosfomycin-amikacin and tigecycline-amikacin combinations were synergistic. In our study, the combination of colistin with rifampicin showed the highest synergistic effect against colistin-resistant A. baumannii. This combination has already been suggested for treatment of MDRAB by both in vitro and in vivo studies, mainly in case series [54]. There is only one prospective small randomized trial that showed a higher rate of microbiological cure in the colistin and rifampicin combination group (71% of 15 patients) compared to the colistin group (59% of 13 patients) [55]. However, due to the high incidence of tuberculosis infection in our country, the use rifampicin is restricted and not used to treat A. baumannii infections. In this study, we detected a synergistic effect of colistin associated with vancomycin in 80% of isolates by using the 2-well method. These results were confirmed by the time-kill assay, considered the gold standard. Three previous studies reported the activity of a combination of colistin with vancomycin against MDRAB; however, they analyzed a very small number of A. baumannii isolates [56-58]. One study evaluated six A. baumannii isolates by the checkerboard method [56], and synergism was detected in four. The other study included only three colistin-resistant A. baumannii isolates and showed a synergistic effect for all [58]. A study conducted by Vidaillac et al. [57] showed that all tested combinations including colistin-vancomycin were synergistic against four isolates of A. baumannii. According to these authors, colistin would disrupt the outer membrane and could facilitate glycopeptide penetration across the outer membrane, thus exposing the target site in the cell wall. The synergistic effect of colistin and vancomycin may be clinically useful in the intensive care setting because the empiric combination for septic patients usually includes a beta-lactam plus vancomycin. In hospitals with high MDR rates, polymyxin is added. On the other hand, this combination may involve risks such as acute kidney damage, and its impact on mortality has not yet been clearly demonstrated [58]. Although we found a high in vitro rate of synergism with vancomycin, death among patients who received vancomycin did not differ from that of those who did not receive it. These results could be due to the small number of patients evaluated, as well as the site of infection. The types of resistance mechanism among A. baumannii isolates could explain, at least in part, why combination regimens reported as successful in literature were not successful in our assays. In our study, although we found a high rate of susceptibility to tigecycline (only 5% of isolates were resistant to this antibiotic), few antibiotic combinations using tigecycline showed a synergistic effect. The highest synergistic effect achieved with tigecycline was in combination with amikacin, similar to a prior study reported by Petersen et al. [9]. Thus, it would seem that tigecycline is not a good option to use in a combination to treat infection due to A. baumannii harboring OXA-23 and OXA-143, the most frequent resistance mechanisms identified in our isolates. Our study has several limitations, such as the retrospective design of the study and the number of patients evaluated. We tried to evaluate the impact of “in vitro synergism” of vancomycin on death; however, we only had information on 18 patients, and only seven received vancomycin plus specific treatment against A. baumannii. The colistin-resistant isolates were closely related, the colistin-susceptible isolates belonged to different clones, but the synergistic effect was similar for isolates showing the same resistance mechanism. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that colistin plus rifampicin, and colistin plus vancomycin showed the highest synergistic effect against colistin-resistant A. baumannii isolates. Among colistin-susceptible isolates, the highest synergistic effect was achieved with fosfomycin combined with amikacin or with gentamycin, and colistin combined with rifampicin or with vancomycin. Moreover, the synergistic effect against MDRAB appears to be related to the resistance mechanism and not to the clonality of isolates. Despite the high synergism in vitro with vancomycin, mortality of patients did not differ when comparing the use or not of vancomycin plus an active drug against A. baumannii.

Antimicrobials susceptibility established by CLSI and EUCAST.

(DOCX) Click here for additional data file.
  51 in total

1.  Evaluation of antibiotic synergy against Acinetobacter baumannii: a comparison with Etest, time-kill, and checkerboard methods.

Authors:  C R Bonapace; R L White; L V Friedrich; J A Bosso
Journal:  Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 2.803

2.  Spread of a carbapenem- and colistin-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii ST2 clonal strain causing outbreaks in two Sicilian hospitals.

Authors:  A Agodi; E Voulgari; M Barchitta; A Quattrocchi; P Bellocchi; A Poulou; C Santangelo; G Castiglione; L Giaquinta; M A Romeo; G Vrioni; A Tsakris
Journal:  J Hosp Infect       Date:  2014-02-20       Impact factor: 3.926

3.  CDC/NHSN surveillance definition of health care-associated infection and criteria for specific types of infections in the acute care setting.

Authors:  Teresa C Horan; Mary Andrus; Margaret A Dudeck
Journal:  Am J Infect Control       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 2.918

4.  In vitro activity of colistin or sulbactam in combination with fosfomycin or imipenem against clinical isolates of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii producing OXA-23 carbapenemases.

Authors:  Wichai Santimaleeworagun; Payom Wongpoowarak; Pantip Chayakul; Sutthiporn Pattharachayakul; Pimpimon Tansakul; Kevin W Garey
Journal:  Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 0.267

5.  In vitro synergy of colistin combinations against colistin-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates.

Authors:  Céline Vidaillac; Lothaire Benichou; Raphaël E Duval
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2012-07-02       Impact factor: 5.191

6.  MAFFT multiple sequence alignment software version 7: improvements in performance and usability.

Authors:  Kazutaka Katoh; Daron M Standley
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2013-01-16       Impact factor: 16.240

7.  Activities of vancomycin-containing regimens against colistin-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii clinical strains.

Authors:  Jessica A O'Hara; Lauretta A Ambe; Leila G Casella; Bethany M Townsend; Mark R Pelletier; Robert K Ernst; Robert M Q Shanks; Yohei Doi
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2013-02-19       Impact factor: 5.191

8.  First occurrence of bla OXA-58 in Acinetobacter baumannii isolated from a clinical sample in Southern Brazil.

Authors:  Carolina de Souza Gusatti; Lauren Martins Bertholdo; Letícia Muner Otton; Desirée Padilha Marchetti; Alessandra Einsfeld Ferreira; Gertrudes Corção
Journal:  Braz J Microbiol       Date:  2012-06-01       Impact factor: 2.476

9.  Colistin vs. the combination of colistin and rifampicin for the treatment of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii ventilator-associated pneumonia.

Authors:  H Aydemir; D Akduman; N Piskin; F Comert; E Horuz; A Terzi; F Kokturk; T Ornek; G Celebi
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  2012-09-07       Impact factor: 4.434

Review 10.  Update on the Epidemiology, Treatment, and Outcomes of Carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter infections.

Authors:  Uh Jin Kim; Hee Kyung Kim; Joon Hwan An; Soo Kyung Cho; Kyung-Hwa Park; Hee-Chang Jang
Journal:  Chonnam Med J       Date:  2014-08-20
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1.  Evaluation of the Bactericidal Activity of Fosfomycin in Combination with Selected Antimicrobial Comparison Agents Tested against Gram-Negative Bacterial Strains by Using Time-Kill Curves.

Authors:  Robert K Flamm; Paul R Rhomberg; Jill M Lindley; Kim Sweeney; E J Ellis-Grosse; Dee Shortridge
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2019-04-25       Impact factor: 5.191

2.  Dual Role of gnaA in Antibiotic Resistance and Virulence in Acinetobacter baumannii.

Authors:  Qingye Xu; Tao Chen; Biyong Yan; Linyue Zhang; Borui Pi; Yunxing Yang; Linghong Zhang; Zhihui Zhou; Shujuan Ji; Sebastian Leptihn; Murat Akova; Yunsong Yu; Xiaoting Hua
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2019-09-23       Impact factor: 5.191

Review 3.  Clinical Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Colistin.

Authors:  Nicolas Grégoire; Vincent Aranzana-Climent; Sophie Magréault; Sandrine Marchand; William Couet
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 6.447

4.  Synergistic Effect of Ceftazidime-Avibactam with Meropenem against Panresistant, Carbapenemase-Harboring Acinetobacter baumannii and Serratia marcescens Investigated Using Time-Kill and Disk Approximation Assays.

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Review 5.  In search for a synergistic combination against pandrug-resistant A. baumannii; methodological considerations.

Authors:  Stamatis Karakonstantis; Petros Ioannou; Diamantis D Kofteridis
Journal:  Infection       Date:  2022-01-04       Impact factor: 3.553

6.  Selection and Identification of a DNA Aptamer for Multidrug-Resistant Acinetobacter baumannii Using an In-House Cell-SELEX Methodology.

Authors:  Marina Farrel Côrtes; Taniela Marli Bes; Beatriz Ribeiro Deo; Beatriz Barbosa Dos Anjos; Andrés Jimenez Galisteo; Ester Cerdeira Sabino; Carlos Santos; Silvia Figueiredo Costa
Journal:  Front Cell Infect Microbiol       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 6.073

Review 7.  Rescuing the Last-Line Polymyxins: Achievements and Challenges.

Authors:  Sue C Nang; Mohammad A K Azad; Tony Velkov; Qi Tony Zhou; Jian Li
Journal:  Pharmacol Rev       Date:  2021-04       Impact factor: 25.468

8.  Selectable Markers for Use in Genetic Manipulation of Extensively Drug-Resistant (XDR) Acinetobacter baumannii HUMC1.

Authors:  Brian M Luna; Amber Ulhaq; Jun Yan; Paul Pantapalangkoor; Travis B Nielsen; Bryan W Davies; Luis A Actis; Brad Spellberg
Journal:  mSphere       Date:  2017-04-26       Impact factor: 4.389

Review 9.  Insights on the Horizontal Gene Transfer of Carbapenemase Determinants in the Opportunistic Pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii.

Authors:  Gabriela Jorge Da Silva; Sara Domingues
Journal:  Microorganisms       Date:  2016-08-23

10.  Targeting the Type II Secretion System: Development, Optimization, and Validation of a High-Throughput Screen for the Identification of Small Molecule Inhibitors.

Authors:  Ursula Waack; Tanya L Johnson; Khalil Chedid; Chuanwu Xi; Lyle A Simmons; Harry L T Mobley; Maria Sandkvist
Journal:  Front Cell Infect Microbiol       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 5.293

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