Abstract

BackgroundFluoroquinolones are potent antimicrobial agents used for the treatment of a wide variety of community- and nosocomial- infections. However, resistance to fluoroquinolones in Enterobacteriaceae is increasingly reported. Studies assessing the ability of fluoroquinolones to select for resistance have often used antimicrobial concentrations quite different from those actually acquired at the site of infection. The present study compared the ability to select for resistance of levofloxacin, ciprofloxacin and prulifloxacin at concentrations observed in vivo in twenty strains of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella spp. isolated from patients with respiratory and urinary infections. The frequencies of spontaneous single-step mutations at plasma peak and trough antibiotic concentrations were calculated. Multi-step selection of resistance was evaluated by performing 10 serial cultures on agar plates containing a linear gradient from trough to peak antimicrobial concentrations, followed by 10 subcultures on antibiotic-free agar. E. coli resistant strains selected after multi-step selection were characterized for DNA mutations by sequencing gyrA, gyrB, parC and parE genes.ResultsFrequencies of mutations for levofloxacin and ciprofloxacin were less than 10-11 at peak concentration, while for prulifloxacin they ranged from <10-11 to 10-5. The lowest number of resistant mutants after multistep selection was selected by levofloxacin followed by ciprofloxacin and prulifloxacin. Both ciprofloxacin- and prulifloxacin-resistant mutants presented mutations in gyrA and parC, while levofloxacin resistance was found associated only to mutations in gyrA.ConclusionsAmong the tested fluoroquinolones, levofloxacin was the most capable of limiting the occurrence of resistance.

Highlights

  • Fluoroquinolones are potent antimicrobial agents used for the treatment of a wide variety of community- and nosocomial- infections

  • Susceptibility to fluoroquinolones Basal MICs of E. coli strains ranged from 0.016 mg/L to 1 mg/L, from 0.004 mg/L to 0.5 mg/L and from 0.016 mg/L to 0.125 mg/L for levofloxacin, ciprofloxacin and prulifloxacin, respectively

  • While no strain was able to grow at Cmax for levofloxacin and ciprofloxacin, 3 and 5 strains grew at prulifloxacin Cmax

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Summary

Introduction

Fluoroquinolones are potent antimicrobial agents used for the treatment of a wide variety of community- and nosocomial- infections. Studies assessing the ability of fluoroquinolones to select for resistance have often used antimicrobial concentrations quite different from those acquired at the site of infection. The present study compared the ability to select for resistance of levofloxacin, ciprofloxacin and prulifloxacin at concentrations observed in vivo in twenty strains of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella spp. isolated from patients with respiratory and urinary infections. Escherichia coli is worldwide the most frequent pathogen isolated from uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTI) (70 - 95%) and, in bacteremia of nosocomial or community origin, it represents about the 15.5% and 42.1% of aetiologies, respectively [1].

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