DD - Clinical Use of Antibiotics Flashcards

1
Q

Principles determining empirical antibiotic use

A

A. What is the infectious syndrome that I will be treating/where is infection located?
- influences choice and dose of antimicrobials (ex. meningitis vs. ear infection)
B. What are the common pathogens that might be causing the syndrome?
- depends on the possible exposures/social history
C. What is the likely antibiotic resistance of the organisms being considered?
- need to consider MRSA if S. aureus is reasonable
- if Pseudomonas is involved, make sure to include anti-pseudomonal coverage
- if anaerobes are involved (unlikely to have resistance) but make sure to cover it
D. What is the most appropriate antibiotic to use?

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2
Q

When are antibiotics bactericidal?

A

When MBC/MIC < or = 4

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3
Q

When are antibiotics bacteriostatic?

A

When MBC/MIC > 4

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4
Q

MIC

A

Minimal inhibitory concentration - lowest concentration of an antimicrobial that will inhibit the visible growth of a microorganism following incubation (expressed mg/L or ug/L)

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5
Q

3 methodologies to determine MIC

A

1) Tube dilution (broth dilution): concentration of antibiotic at which broth becomes translucent
2) Disk diffusion (Kirby-Bauer): mm inhibition around disk translates to MIC
3) E test: use strip that has graded antibiotic concentration to create an ellipse on the plate. Point at which ellipse meets the strip is generally regarded as MIC.

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6
Q

MBC

A

Minimal bactericidal concentration - minimal concentration of an antibiotic that KILLS 99.9% of bacteria (less than 10 colonies on a plate)

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7
Q

Principles involved in setting antimicrobial breakpoints

A

Pharmacokinetics/dynamics of the antimicrobial
Pattern of susceptibility of a population of bacteria
Clinical experience (e.g. Vancomycin and Pip/Tazo)

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8
Q

Potential pitfalls of setting/interpreting antimicrobial breakpoints

A

Can and do change over the years, usually because clinical data accumulates suggesting a problem. Ex. vancomycin against S. aureus was lowered from 4mcg/mL to 2mcg/mL to be considered sensitive
Breakpoints are not adjusted for site of infections, number of organisms in an infection, conditions in the host, or to reflect patient’s host defenses

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9
Q

Antimicrobial breakpoints

A

MICs of antibiotics at which a particular bacterium is determined to be: susceptible, intermediately susceptible, or resistant

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10
Q

Relationship between maximal Cp and MIC in order for bacteria to be considered suscpetible

A

At normal dosages the antibiotic should have a maximal serum concentration that exceeds the MIC of the bacteria. (Cp > MIC) Most commonly via oral or IV route

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