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Emerging ID issues: Drug Resistant Bacteria & Spreading Viruses

Emerging ID issues: Drug Resistant Bacteria & Spreading Viruses. Paul S. Sehdev, MD, MS, FACP, FIDSA Infectious Disease Consultants & The Traveler’s Clinic Providence St. Vincent’s Hospital October 14, 2011. Trends in S. aureus Disease. Emergence of MRSA Emergence of VISA

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Emerging ID issues: Drug Resistant Bacteria & Spreading Viruses

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  1. Emerging ID issues:Drug Resistant Bacteria & Spreading Viruses Paul S. Sehdev, MD, MS, FACP, FIDSA Infectious Disease Consultants & The Traveler’s Clinic Providence St. Vincent’s Hospital October 14, 2011

  2. Trends in S. aureus Disease • Emergence of MRSA • Emergence of VISA • Emergence of VRSA • Emergence of hVRSA • Community acquired MRSA • Resistance to new agents • Linezolid • Daptomycin

  3. Emergence of Methicillin Resistance • 1961: Methicillin introduced • 1962: MRSA identified • 1980: 5-10% hospital isolates MRSA • 1991: 25% hospital isolates MRSA • 2003: 64% isolates in NNISS Chambers. Emerg Inf Dis;7:178

  4. Methicillin Resistance: Mechanism • MecA gene • Encodes a low affinity PBP (PBP2a) • Affects all -lactam drugs • 5 types • Variable patterns of drug susceptibilities • Acquired from unknown locus • Mobile transposon-like element • Resistance profiles continue to change

  5. http://phsnet.phsor.org/laboratory/micro/antibiotics/QTR%204%202008PSVMCMRSA.pdfhttp://phsnet.phsor.org/laboratory/micro/antibiotics/QTR%204%202008PSVMCMRSA.pdf

  6. What is an Extended-Spectrum -Lactamase (ESBL)? • Variant of standard TEM & SHV -lactamases • Result of point mutations • Mutated -lactamase has extended spectrum • Degrades 3rd generation cephalosporins • Transmitted via plasmids • Over 150 ESBLs identified to date • E.Coli & K.pneumoniae Rice LB. Pharmacotherapy. 1999;19(8 Pt 2):120S.

  7. Molecular Basis of ESBLs Rice LB. Pharmacotherapy. 1999;19(8 Pt 2):120S.

  8. ESBLs Detection Methods: Inhibition by Clavulanic Acid

  9. Inoculum Effect in K. pneumoniae Isolates Containing ESBLs Thomson KS. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2001;45:3548.

  10. Therapy of ESBL Infections • Carbapenems best option • Cephalosporins: • In vitro & in vivo discordance • Failure of Ceftazidime in bacteremic patients • Reports of Ceftriaxone & Cefotaxime success • Meningitis and bacteremia • Few patients • Little data • Trimethoprim/ sulfamethoxazole • Aminoglycosides • Fluoroquinolones Wong-Beringer A. Pharmacotherapy 2001;21:583.

  11. This is Neisseria gonorrhea

  12. Resistance in N.gonorrhea • Emerged in 1970’s • Penicillin resistance • Tetracycline resistance • DOC in 1980’s became ciprofloxacin • Fluoroquinolone resistance emerged • AsiaHawaii Californiaeverywhere else • 2007, CDC recommended cephalopsorins • Ceftriaxone im or cefixime

  13. N. gonorrhea: Cephalosporin Resistance 2000-2010 www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6026a2.htm?s_cid=mm6026a2_w#fig2

  14. New kid on the block:New Delhi metallo-ß-lactamase-1 (NDM-1) • 2009, first report • UTI after travel to India • Isolate was K. pneumoniae • Resistant to all beta-lactam drugs • E.coli possessing NDM-1 found in patient’s stool • 2010 USA • 3 cases with 3 different organisms • 2011 Cases on all continents • Except Antarctica & S. America

  15. NDM-1 • Encodes for broad spectrum B-lactamase • Resistant to all B-lactam drugs • Sensitive to tigecycline & colistin • Resides on a plasmid • Transferable between bacteria • Within a species • Across species • Prevalence rates • USA low • India 4% of enteric Gram-negative bacilli

  16. Why the easy spread?Horizontal transfer

  17. NDM-1: It’s in the water • Prevalence study from New Dehli, India • September-October 2010 • Sampled water • Seepage (puddles & rivulets) • Public tap water • 221 samples (171 seepage & 50 tap H2O • 51 of 171 (29%) & 2 of 50 (4%) positive • 11 different bacteria possessed • Including V. cholera & Shigella species • Huge implications for developing world • Worldwide interconnectedness makes further spread likely http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21478057

  18. Containing NDM-1 • This will NOT just go away! • Infection control is paramount • High index of suspicion • Contact isolation • Good hand hygiene • Active surveillance • Limiting broad spectrum antibiotic use • Reduces “pressure” that enables resistant bugs to thrive • Reserve active agents • Few (no?) new antibiotics in pipeline

  19. Chickungunya

  20. Chikungunya Background • 1st described in 1952 • Outbreaks of febrile polyarthritis • Makonde word • “that which contorts or bends up” • Virus was isolated in 1953 • Spread throughout South-Central Africa • Spread to Thailand in 1958 • Now, endemic in S. Asia • Indian Ocean outbreak ongoing since 2004

  21. Indian Ocean Outbreak Pialoux G, Lancet, 2007;7:319-27

  22. Epicurves Reunion & France Pialoux G, Lancet, 2007;7:319-27

  23. Clinical Manifestations • Primary infection features • Fever 86-100% • Arthralgias 96-100% • Hands, wrists & ankles • Headache 47% • Rash 40% • Secondary • Chronic polyarthralgia 5-10% • Persists for months to years • Mechanism for disease unknown • Mortality <1% Simon F, Med Clin N Am 2008;92:1323-43

  24. Clinical Manifestations Simon F, Med Clin N Am 2008;92:1323-43

  25. Making the Diagnosis Pialoux G, Lancet, 2007;7:319-27

  26. Treatment & Prevention • Supportive therapy • DEET to repel mosquitoes • Vaccine • Live attenuated vaccine candidate (TSI-GSD-218) • Phase II trials • Single dose vaccine • 98% developed neutralizing antibody at day 28 • 85% remained sero-positive at 52 weeks • Trials shelved in 2002 • Future uncertain Edelman R, Am J Trop Med Hyg 2000;62(6):681-5

  27. Dengue Viruses • Flavivirus • Single stranded, nonsegmented RNA virus • 4 distinct serotypes • Each serotype provides lifelong immunity • Infection does not confer cross protection • All can cause severe manifestations • Can be infected up to 4 times • Subsequent infections may be severe • Main reservoir is humans • Non-human primates may be infected

  28. Dengue Disease Burden • Most common arboviral disease • Endemic in 100 countries • 2.5 billion persons at risk • 100 million cases yearly • 250,000 cases of Dengue hemorrhagic fever • 25,000 deaths yearly

  29. Aedes Mosquitoes • Highly susceptible to Dengue infection • Preferred nourishment is human blood • Thrives in urban environments • Bites during daytime • Bite is nearly imperceptible • May bite several people to obtain a blood meal

  30. Spread & Distribution of Dengue http://www.who.int/csr/disease/dengue/impact/en/

  31. Dengue in Puerto Rico 2009-11

  32. Dengue Clinical Syndromes • Undifferentiated fever • Classic dengue fever • Severe Dengue • Dengue hemorrhagic fever • Dengue shock syndrome

  33. Classic Dengue Fever • Sudden onset fever • Headache & retro-orbital pain • Severe myalgia & arthralgia • “Break-bone fever” • Skin rash • Appears around time of defervescence • Mild hemorrhagic manifestations • Tourniquet tests • Laboratories • Leukopenia, lymphopenia & thromobocytopenia • Transaminitis

  34. Tourniquet Test Wilder-Smith A and Schwartz E. N Engl J Med 2005;353:924-932

  35. Chikungunya vs. Dengue

  36. Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever: CDC Case Definition • 4 criteria—must meet all • Fever • Hemorrhagic manifestations • Platelet count <100,000/mm3 • “Leaky capillaries” • Hematocrit >20% above baseline) • Low albumin • Pleural or other effusions

  37. Dengue Shock Syndrome • 4 criteria for DHF plus • Circulatory failure: • Rapid and weak pulse • Pulse pressure < 20 mm Hg • SBP <90 mmHg • Duration of shock is short • 12-24 hours • Supportive care only intervention • Morality ranges from 0.2%-20% • 2 deaths in USA from 1993-2000

  38. DHF Mechanism • Antibody mediated enhancement • Cross reacting Abs bind virus • They do no neutralize bound virus • Complexes bind Fc receptors • Replicate in dendritic cells & macrophages • Viral load is increased • Killer cells & T-cell are activated • “Cytokine storm” ensues • Endothelial damage & capillary leakage

  39. Wilder-Smith A and Schwartz E. N Engl J Med 2005;353:924-932

  40. Dengue Prevention • Insect precautions are mainstay • Vaccines • 2 candidates in phase 2-3 trials • Both live attenuated viruses • Both tetravalent vaccines • Immunogenic, but not reactogenic • Field trials in planning stages • Vector control • Must be multi-modal

  41. Sehdev P Clin Inf Dis 2002;35(9):1071–1072

  42. Yellow Fever • 1st outbreak in New World 1648 • Yet, thought to originate from Africa • Global epidemics • 1793: Philadelphia 10% population died • 1878: Mississippi Valley 100,000 cases • Sanitary measures reduced burden • Serendipitous • Vector was not known at time • Virus isolated in 1927 • Vaccine developed in 1928

  43. Yellow Fever Map 2007 http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/yellowfever/YF_GlobalMap.html

  44. Estimated Disease Burden • 200,000 cases per year • 30,000 deaths • Epidemic attack rates • 30 cases per 1,000 persons • Case fatality rates • 20-50% in endemic areas • Imported cases rare, but deadly • 6 cases USA & Europe 1996-2004 http://wwwn.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/ch4/yellow-fever.aspx

  45. YF Transmission Cycle Monath TP, Lancet ID 2001;1:11-20

  46. Stages of Yellow Fever Monath TP, Lancet ID 2001;1:11-20

  47. Diagnosis & Treatment • Mainstay is serology • Single positive IgM • Fourfold rise in IgG titer • PCR positive early (days 1-6) • But, not readily available • Culture is gold standard • Therapy is supportive • Ribavirin has been tried, but doesn’t work • Immunoglobulin not useful

  48. Yellow Fever Vaccine • Live, attenuated virus (17D strain) • 95% effective, 10 year protection • HA, fever & myalgia • Immediate hypersensitivity (1/131,000) • Vaccine associated neurotrophic disease • 16/23 case age < 9 months • Vaccine associated viscerotropic disease • 10 cases since 1996 • Contraindications • Egg allergy & age < 9 months MMWR 2002;51:RR-17

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