Activity of novel lactone ketolide nafithromycin against multicentric invasive and non-invasive pneumococcal isolates collected in India
Author(s) -
Balaji Veeraraghavan,
Rosemol Varghese,
Karnika Saigal,
Sundaram Balasubramanian,
Pengze Bai,
Binesh Lal Y,
Ayyanraj Neeravi,
Pavithra Baskar,
Kavipriya Anandhan,
C. P. Girish Kumar,
Yuvraj Jayaraman,
Vijaya Lakshmi Nag,
Sujata Baveja,
J Bhavana,
Shrikrishna Joshi,
Ranganathan Iyer
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jac-antimicrobial resistance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-1823
DOI - 10.1093/jacamr/dlab066
Subject(s) - ketolide , microbiology and biotechnology , erythromycin , streptococcus pneumoniae , multilocus sequence typing , penicillin , biology , azithromycin , antibiotics , agar dilution , telithromycin , antibiotic resistance , minimum inhibitory concentration , gene , genotype , biochemistry
Background India is among the nations reporting substantial healthcare burden linked to pneumococcal infections. Nafithromycin is a novel lactone ketolide antibiotic, which recently entered Phase 3 development in India for the indication of community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (CABP). Objectives To assess the in vitro activity of nafithromycin against serotyped invasive and non-invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates, collected from nine medical centres across India. Methods A total of 534 isolates of S. pneumoniae were collected during 2015–20 and serotyped as per CDC protocol. A subset of erythromycin-non-susceptible S. pneumoniae (n = 200) was screened for the presence of erm(B) and mef(A/E) genes. A subset of MDR isolates (n = 54) were also subjected to MLST. The MICs of antibiotics were determined by the reference agar-dilution method (CLSI). Susceptibilities of the comparators were interpreted as per CLSI criteria. Results Fifty-nine distinct serotypes were identified among the 534 isolates. Among erythromycin-non-susceptible isolates, erm(B) and mef(A/E) genes were found in 49% and 59% strains respectively, while MLST showed clonal diversity. Azithromycin (67.6% non-susceptible) and clindamycin (31.8% non-susceptible) showed limited activity. Penicillin (for non-meningitis) or quinolone non-susceptibility was low (<11% and <6%, respectively). Nafithromycin showed potent activity with MIC50 and MIC90 of 0.015–0.03 and 0.06 mg/L, respectively, regardless of the macrolide resistance mechanisms. Conclusions Indian pneumococcal isolates show poor susceptibilities to macrolides, in concordance with the global trend. Nafithromycin overcomes erm as well as mef-mediated macrolide resistance mechanisms expressed individually or concurrently in S. pneumoniae. This study supports continued clinical development of nafithromycin for pneumococcal infections including CABP.
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