Beta-Lactam Mechanism of activity
kills bacteria by interfering with the synthesis of the bacterial cell wall
Binds to penicillin binding proteins (PBPs)
activity is limited to cells that are actively producing cell walls
Beta-Lactam mechanism of resistance
1) enzymatic destruction through beta lactamases (penicillinases in S. areus penicillin resistance)
2) alteration of penicillin-binding proteins (low-affinity PBP in MRSA called PBP2a)
Name the two major categories under Beta-Lactams.
Penicillins and Cephalosporins
Name the penicillin subclasses. What is the cellular target for all of these subclasses? What are the toxicities? Any exceptions?
Cellular target - Cell wall, inhibits cross-linking
Toxicities - rash, hypersensitivity, drug fever, antibiotic-associated diarrhea, C. difficile colitis, bone marrow suppression, seizures with high CNS levels, Coombs test, intersitital nephritis, anaphylaxis, allergic reactions
Natural penicillins
ex. penicillin G (iv) and penicillin V (po)
Beta-Lactam, Penicillin
Anti-staphylococcal penicillins
ex. axacillin (iv), nofacillin (iv), dicloxacillin (po)
Beta-Lactam, Penicillin
Aminopenicillins
ex.amoxicillin (po), ampicillin (iv and po)
Beta-Lactam, Penicillin
Anti-pseudomonal penicillins
ex. piperacillin (iv), ticarcillin (iv)
Beta-Lactam, Penicillin
Beta-lactam/Beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations
ex. amoxicillin/clavulanate (po), ampicillin/sulbactam (iv), piperacillin/tazobactam (iv)
Beta-Lactam, Penicillin
Name the cephalosporin subclasses. What is the cellular target for all of these subclasses? What are the toxicities? Any exceptions?
Cellular target - cell wall, inhibits cell-wall cross-linking
Toxicities - rash, hypersensitivity (5-10% cross-reactivity with penicillins), antibiotic associated diarrhea, C. difficile colitis, neurotoxicity/seizures
1st generation
ex. cefazolin (iv), cephalexin (po)
note: cefazolin is common agent for surgical prophylaxis given skin coverage and some gram-negative
Beta-lactams, Cephalosporin
2nd generation
ex. cefuroxime (iv and po)
Beta-lactams, Cephalosporin
3rd generation
ex. ceftriaxone (iv), cefixime (po), ceftazidime (iv)
note: ceftazidime is active against Pseudomonas and many nosocomial gram-negatives, but has no action against gram-positive or anaerobic activity
Beta-lactams, Cephalosporin
4th generation
ex. cefepime (iv) and ceftaroline (iv)
note: ceftaroline is the only beta-lactam with activity against MRSA and some activity against Enterobacteriaceae
Beta-lactams, Cephalosporin
Monobactams
ex. aztreonam
note: can be used in patients with allergy to penicillins/carbapenems
Toxicity: rash, hypersensitivity, antibiotic-associated diarrhea, C. difficile colitis, seizures with high CNS levels
Beta-lactam
Carbapenems
ex. imipenem (iv), meropenem (iv), doripenem (iv), ertapenem (iv)
note 1: ertapenem is not active against Pseudomonas
note 2: most reliable agents for Enterobacteriaceae with extended spectrum beta-lactamases
Toxicity: rash, hypersensitivity, antibiotic-associated diarrhea, C. difficile colitis, seizures with high CNS levels
Beta-lactams
Glycopeptides - Vancomycin mechanism of activity
inhibits bacterial cell wall synthesis, but at a different point than the beta-lactams
Glycopeptides - Vancomycin mechanisms of resistance
change in peptidoglycan with reduced binding to vancomycin - terminus altered to D-ala-D-lactate or D-ala-D-serine
production of thick cell wall with increased or false targets for vancomycin
Glycopeptides - Vancomycin spectrum of activity and toxicity
Toxicity: Red Man’s Syndrome/infusion reaction - not an allergy, nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, bone marrow suppression
Lincosamides - Clindamycin mechanism of activity
inhibits proteins ynthesis by binding to the 50S subunit of the ribosome
blocks peptide bond formation, binding site is close to the site for erythromycin, shared resistance
Lincosamides - Clindamycin mechanism of resistance
methylation of the 50S subunit prevents clindamycin attachment
cross resistance with macrolides
Lincosamides - Clindamycin spectrum of activity and toxicity
toxicity: rash, antibiotic-associated diarrhea, C. difficile colits, esophagitis, hepatitis
Folate Antagonists - Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole mechanism of action
blocks sequential steps in folate metabolism, synergistic combination
sulfonamides - compete with PABA for dihydropteroate synthas
trimethoprim - inhibits dihydrofolate reductase
Folate Antagonists - Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole mechanisms of resistance
increased PABA concentration
enzymes with reduced affinity
loss of permeability