Avibactam (AVI) is a diazabicyclooctane (DBO) β-lactamase inhibitor used clinically in combination with ceftazidime. At concentrations higher than those typically achieved in vivo , it also has broad-spectrum direct antibacterial activity against Enterobacterales strains, including metallo-β-lactamase-producing isolates, mediated by inhibition of penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2). This activity is mechanistically similar to that of more potent novel DBOs (zidebactam, nacubactam) in late clinical development. We found that resistance to AVI emerged readily, with a mutation frequency of 2×10 -6 to 8×10 -5 . Whole genome sequencing of resistant isolates revealed a heterogeneous mutational target that permitted bacterial survival and replication despite PBP2 inhibition, in line with prior studies of PBP2-targeting drugs. While such mutations are believed to act by upregulating the bacterial stringent response, we found a similarly high mutation frequency in bacteria deficient in components of the stringent response, although we observed a different set of mutations in these strains. Although avibactam-resistant strains had increased lag time, suggesting a fitness cost that might render them less problematic in clinical infections, there was no statistically significant difference in growth rates between susceptible and resistant strains. The finding of rapid emergence of resistance to avibactam as the result of a large mutational target has important implications for novel DBOs with potent direct antibacterial activity, which are being developed with the goal of expanding cell wall-active treatment options for multidrug-resistant gram-negative infections but may be vulnerable to treatment-emergent resistance.
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