In Vitro Resistance Studies with Bacteria That Exhibit Low Mutation Frequencies: Prediction of “Antimutant” Linezolid Concentrations Using a Mixed Inoculum Containing both Susceptible and Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Author(s) -
Alexander A. Firsov,
Maria V. Golikova,
Ele. Strukova,
Yury A. Portnoy,
Andrey V. Romanov,
Mikhail V. Edelstein,
Stephen H. Zinner
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.04214-14
Subject(s) - linezolid , staphylococcus aureus , microbiology and biotechnology , minimum inhibitory concentration , dosing , antibiotics , pharmacodynamics , pharmacokinetics , antibacterial agent , cross resistance , chemistry , micrococcaceae , biology , bacteria , pharmacology , vancomycin , genetics
Bacterial resistance studies usingin vitro dynamic models are highly dependent on the starting inoculum that might or might not contain spontaneously resistant mutants (RMs). To delineate concentration-resistance relationships with linezolid-exposedStaphylococcus aureus , a mixed inoculum containing both susceptible cells and RMs was used. An RM selected after the 9th passage of the parent strain (MIC, 2 μg/ml) on antibiotic-containing media (RM9; MIC, 8 μg/ml) was chosen for the pharmacodynamic studies, because the mutant prevention concentration (MPC) of linezolid against the parent strain in the presence of RM9 at 102 (but not at 104 ) CFU/ml did not differ from the MPC value determined in the absence of the RMs. Five-day treatments with twice-daily linezolid doses were simulated at concentrations either between the MIC and MPC or above the MPC.S. aureus RMs (resistant to 2× and 4× MIC but not 8× and 16× MIC) were enriched at ratios of the 24-h area under the concentration-time curve (AUC24 ) to the MIC that provide linezolid concentrations between the MIC and MPC for 100% (AUC24 /MIC, 60 h) and 86% (AUC24 /MIC, 120 h) of the dosing interval. No such enrichment occurred when linezolid concentrations were above the MIC and below the MPC for a shorter time (37% of the dosing interval; AUC24 /MIC, 240 h) or when concentrations were consistently above the MPC (AUC24 /MIC, 480 h). These findings obtained using linezolid-susceptible staphylococci supplemented with RMs support the mutant selection window hypothesis. This method provides an option to delineate antibiotic concentration-resistance relationships with bacteria that exhibit low mutation frequencies.
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