| Literature DB >> 35740130 |
Stamatis Karakonstantis1,2, Maria Rousaki2, Evangelos I Kritsotakis3.
Abstract
Cefiderocol appears promising, as it can overcome most β-lactam resistance mechanisms (including β-lactamases, porin mutations, and efflux pumps). Resistance is uncommon according to large multinational cohorts, including against isolates resistant to carbapenems, ceftazidime/avibactam, ceftolozane/tazobactam, and colistin. However, alarming proportions of resistance have been reported in some recent cohorts (up to 50%). A systematic review was conducted in PubMed and Scopus from inception to May 2022 to review mechanisms of resistance, prevalence of heteroresistance, and in vivo emergence of resistance to cefiderocol during treatment. A variety of mechanisms, typically acting in concert, have been reported to confer resistance to cefiderocol: β-lactamases (especially NDM, KPC and AmpC variants conferring resistance to ceftazidime/avibactam, OXA-427, and PER- and SHV-type ESBLs), porin mutations, and mutations affecting siderophore receptors, efflux pumps, and target (PBP-3) modifications. Coexpression of multiple β-lactamases, often in combination with permeability defects, appears to be the main mechanism of resistance. Heteroresistance is highly prevalent (especially in A. baumannii), but its clinical impact is unclear, considering that in vivo emergence of resistance appears to be low in clinical studies. Nevertheless, cases of in vivo emerging cefiderocol resistance are increasingly being reported. Continued surveillance of cefiderocol's activity is important as this agent is introduced in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: cefiderocol; heteroresistance; resistance
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740130 PMCID: PMC9220290 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11060723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Flow chart. * not satisfying the eligibility criteria described in Methods.
Role of β-lactamases in cefiderocol resistance.
| β-Lactamase | Organism(s) | Findings |
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Up to 64-fold increases in cefiderocol MIC have been reported by introduction of NDM MBLs in isogenic In a In In In SIDERO-WT-2014 42% (5/12) of NDM-positive Enterobacterales were nonsusceptible to cefiderocol (MIC > 4 mg/L) [ In a multinational European collection, 49% (18/37) of NDM-positive Enterobacterales were nonsusceptible (MIC > 2 mg/L) to cefiderocol [ In a cohort from the United Kingdom, 59% and 28% of n = 61 NDM-positive Enterobacterales had an MIC > 2 mg/dL and >4 mg/dL, respectively [ In the case of in vivo emerging cefiderocol resistance (intraabdominal abscesses by NDM-5 producing NDM-1 was detected in a cefiderocol-resistant NDM-5 was detected in in a cefiderocol-resistant A combination of NDM-1 and PER-1 was detected in a pandrug-resistant A combination of NDM-1 and TMB-1 was found in a cefiderocol-resistant (MIC = 32 mg/L) | |
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Introduction of KPC-variants in Introduction of KPC-2 in Cefiderocol resistance (MIC > 2 mg/L) was considerably higher (82.5% vs. 6.7%) in ceftazidime/avibactam-resistant (n = 40) than in ceftazidime/avibactam-susceptible (n = 60) KPC-producing Enterobacterales in one cohort [ Among 17 paired (before and after ceftazidime/avibactam treatment) KPC-producing Emergence of cross-resistance between ceftazidime/avibactam and cefiderocol was reported in two clinical associates associated with mutations in KPC (KPC-41 and KPC-50). MIC was 2- to 4-fold higher (2→ 4–8 mg/L) in the KPC-41 mutant and 8-fold higher in the KPC-50 mutant (2→16 mg/L). In both strains, truncation of OmpK35 was also detected [ Emergence of cross-resistance between ceftazidime/avibactam and cefiderocol was reported in another case associated with KPC-31, resulting in a 4-fold higher cefiderocol MIC (4→16 mg/L) [ | ||
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Introduction of PER-1 in isogenic In another study [ Similarly, a 64-fold increase in MIC (0.03→2 mg/L) was demonstrated by introduction of PER-1 in isogenic PER ESBLs were detected in 25 of 28 cefiderocol-nonsusceptible In a cohort from the United Kingdom, 33% (5 of 15) and 27% (4 of 15) of PER-producing | |
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Introduction in Introduction in Iregui et al. [ Coexpression of NDM-1 and SHV was detected in four of five cefiderocol nonsusceptible | |
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32-fold increase in cefiderocol MIC (0.06→2 mg/L) by introduction of A292_L293del AmpC in 4-fold increase (0.5→2 mg/L) by introduction of A294_P295del AmpC in 4-fold increase (0.25→1 mg/L) by overexpression of AmpC in 2-fold increase (0.125→0.25 mg/L) by introduction of ACT-17-like (A313P) in In vivo emerging cefiderocol cross-resistance attributable to ACT-17-like (A313P) was detected in an in vivo emerging cefiderocol-resistant | |
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Introduction of OXA-427 in Uniform cefiderocol nonsusceptibility (based on disk diffusion) was reported among n = 26 OXA-427-producing Enterobacterales from Belgium [ |
| SPM-1, VIM-2, AIM-1, GIM-1 (MBLs) |
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In In |
| GES-6 |
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Introduction of GES-6 in |
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8-fold increase (0.125→1 mg/L) by introduction of PDC-30 in PDC-30 was detected in an in vivo emerging cefiderocol-resistant PDC-30 mutation was in a | |
| ADC variants (cephalosporinase), OXA-66, (OXA 23) |
| Acquired ADC variants and OXA-23 were detected in all six cefiderocol resistant isolates [ ADC variants were detected in all 28 cefiderocol resistant isolates, OXA-23 in 15 isolates, and OXA-66 in 24 [ ADC-30 homologues, OXA-23, and OXA-66 were detected in all 20 cefiderocol-resistant clinical isolates [ |
| BEL * |
16-fold MIC (0.03→0.5 mg/L) by BEL-2 [ 4-fold (0.5→2 mg/L) higher MIC by BEL-1 and 8-fold (0.5→4 mg/L) by BEL-2 [ | |
| CTX-M-27 * | Introduction of CTX-M-27 in |
In bold are mechanisms of resistance of which the role has been confirmed in isogenic mutant experiments (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods) and that have been detected in cefiderocol-resistant clinical isolates (group 1–3 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods). * Based only on in vitro isogenic mutant experiment (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods).
Resistance mediated by mutations affecting siderophore receptors.
| Target Gene | Organism(s) | Findings |
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Deficiency of PiuA resulted in 16-fold higher cefiderocol MIC (0.125→2 mg/L) [ Deletion of Deletion of In a collection of six cefiderocol-resistant In another collection of 12 cefiderocol-resistant |
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In an | |
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In all five resistant A mutated Comparing a cefiderocol-resistant CirA deficiency was detected in a cefiderocol-resistant | ||
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Mutations were detected in Mutation of Mutations/deletions in | |
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Among 31 mutants, 25 had mutations in |
In bold are mechanisms of resistance of which the role has been confirmed in isogenic mutant experiments (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods) and that have been detected in cefiderocol-resistant clinical isolates (group 1–3 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods). * Based only on in vitro isogenic mutant experiments (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods). ** Based only on in vitro derived mutants (group 4 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods).
Resistance mediated by mutations affecting function/expression of porins and efflux pumps.
| Target Genes/Involved Porins/Efflux Pumps | Organism(s) | Findings |
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4-fold higher MIC (0.031→0.125 mg/L) by deletion of Truncation of In two cefiderocol-resistant | |
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Alterations in | ||
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Mutation in porin Opr-D truncation was detected in two in vivo emerging (after cefiderocol treatment) cefiderocol-resistant clinical |
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| n = 7 cefiderocol-resistant (MIC > 2 mg/L) and CR | |
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| SmeT promoter mutation (resulting in overexpression of the efflux pump smeDEF) was detected in an |
| AxyABM (efflux pump) * | Overexpression of AxyABM was associated with a 3-fold higher cefiderocol MIC when comparing two |
In bold are mechanisms of resistance of which the role has been confirmed in isogenic mutant experiments (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods) and that have been detected in cefiderocol-resistant clinical isolates (group 1–3 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods). * Based only on in vitro isogenic mutant experiments (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods). ** Based only on in vitro derived mutants (group 4 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods).
Other mutations associated with cefiderocol resistance.
| Target Gene | Organism(s) | Findings |
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Introduction of either YRIN or YRIK insertion in PBP-3 resulted in 2-fold higher cefiderocol MIC (0.063→0.125 mg/L) [ In a collection of nine PBP3 mutations (including YRIN insertion at position P33) were also detected in six other cefiderocol-resistant A mutation (predicted to have a moderate likelihood of affecting functionality) in PBP-3 was detected in one of six cefiderocol-resistant Mutations in PBP-3 were found in four cefiderocol-resistant Mutation in PBP-3 (H370Y) was found in a cefiderocol-resistant | |
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In three | |
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In two In one case, in vivo emerging resistance was described in an | ||
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| Mutations in yicM were detected in two of six cefiderocol-resistant | |
| tolQ (membrane transporter), smf-1 (affects fimbriae and surface adhesion) ** | ||
| A higher prevalence of colistin resistance (29% vs. 0%) was reported in cefiderocol-resistant than in susceptible |
In bold are mechanisms of resistance of which the role has been confirmed in isogenic mutant experiments (group 5 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods) and that have been detected in cefiderocol-resistant clinical isolates (group 1–3 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods). ** Based only on in vitro derived mutants (group 4 studies, see “Eligibility criteria” in Methods).