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Aminoglycosides
development, mechanism of action, pharmacokinetics, spectrum of activity, etc.
99
Pharmacology
Professional
10/30/2011

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Term
What are aminoglycosides derived from?
Definition
Micromonospora and Streptomyces
Term
How are aminoglycosides named in relation to their derivative?
Definition
Micromonospora--micin, ex. gentamicin
Streptomyces--mycin, ex. tobramycin
Term
What are the semisynthetic derivatives?
Definition
amikacin (semisynthetic) from kanamycin (natural)
Term
What "problem organisms" are aminoglycosides effective against?
Definition
pseudomonas and acinetobacter
Term
What are aminoglycosides synergistic with?
Definition
beta-lactams and glycopeptides
Term
Which two aminoglycosides get the most use in the USA for systemic infections?
Definition
gentamicin and tobramycin
Term
What is amikacin reserved for?
Definition
when there are strains of bacteria resistant against gentamicin and tobramycin
Term
What was amikacin specifically designed for?
Definition
to be "immune" to bacterial resistance mechanisms
Term
When is streptomycin used?
Definition
when there is a specific need for the drug (like a resistant strain of TB)
Term
What organisms does streptomycin treat?
Definition
enterococcus, mycobacterium (TB), plague
Term
What does spectinomycin treat?
Definition
gonorrhea
Term
What is spectinomycin considered?
Definition
a niche drug
Term
When is spectinomycin used in treatment?
Definition
When a patient has an allergy to penicillins and has gonorrhea
Term
How is neomycin used (in what forms)?
Definition
topical agent in ointments, ophthalmologic products when combined with other antibiotics and steroids
Term
Why is neomycin used only topically?
Definition
it is very toxic, do not want it absorbed systemically
Term
Besides use as a topical agent, how else is neomycin sometimes used?
Definition
tablets used for GI cleansing before surgery (like colorectal surgery)
still not used much
Term
Describe the chemical structure of aminoglycosides
Definition
two or more aminosugars bound by glycosidic linkages to a central hexose nucleus
Term
Describe the chemistry of the aminoglycoside molecule
Definition
highly polar
polycationic
Term
How is the aminoglycoside absorption?
Definition
poor oral absorption
Term
What is the aminoglycoside distribution in the body?
Definition
low penetration into CSF and bronchial secretions
do not cross biologic membranes
Term
Are aminoglycosides good for meningitis?
Definition
no, not good penetration into CSF
Term
How are aminoglycosides used for respiratory infections?
Definition
always used in combination for respiratory infections. aminoglycosides broaden coverage but they don't have great penetration/concentration in bronchial secretions
Term
How is the pharmacokinetics similar between aminoglycosides?
Definition
blood curves very similar/almost identical so dosing would be the same
Term
How is the absorption of aminoglycosides through the gastrointestinal tract?
Definition
only about 1% absorption, very poor, won't get to infection effectively
Term
If a patient has a systemic infection and needs an aminoglycoside, how do they have to take it?
Definition
parenterally (IV)
Term
When are adequate serum concentrations acheived with aminoglycosides?
Definition
parenteral administration
Term
Do aminoglycosides get bound by proteins?
Definition
no, all the drug that you put in is "free" drug
Term
What were the goals when developing aminoglycosides?
Definition
wanted more pseudomonal activity
didn't want resistance with enterobacteriaceae
wanted less toxicity
Term
Which aminoglycoside is the most toxic?
Definition
neomycin
Term
Which aminoglycosides show the least amount of toxicity?
Definition
streptomycin
spectinomycin
Term
Which aminoglycosides don't show rapid resistance enterobacteriaceae?
Definition
neomycin
kanamycin
gentamicin
tobramycin
amikacin
netilmicin
Term
Which aminoglycosides show antipseudomonal activity?
Definition
gentamicin
tobramycin
amikacin
netilmicin
Term
Where are therapeutic concentrations acheiveable?
Definition
bile, bone, synovial spaces
Term
What is the metabolism of the aminoglycosides?
Definition
no metabolites
aminoglycosides not changed by liver
Term
How are aminoglycosides eliminated?
Definition
kidneys via glomerular filtration
Term
Do you have to care about a patient's kidney function with aminoglycosides?
Definition
Yes, must monitor blood levels, may have to adjust dosing
Term
For a patient with normal kidney function what is the aminoglycoside half-life?
Definition
2-2.5 hours
Term
How are the aminoglycoside's concentrations in the urine?
Definition
very good for UTIs
may reach up to 100x serum levels
Term
Where do aminoglycosides accumulate in the body and what does this account for?
Definition
accumulate in renal cortical tissue
accounts for nephrotoxicity
Term
What is inherent in the aminoglycosides?
Definition
nephrotoxicity
Term
What are all aminoglycosides removed by?
Definition
hemodialysis (33-50%) and to a lesser degree by peritoneal dialysis
Term
Why do serum levels need to be monitored and doses adjusted?
Definition
assure effective concentrations
minimize toxicity
aminoglycosides have a narrow therapeutic window
Term
Describe nephrotoxicity
Definition
acute tubular necrosis
damage to kidney tubules, can regenerate
damage is reversible as long as it's not too bad
Term
ototoxicity
Definition
hearing loss (high pitch first)
hair cells damaged
vestibular damage (ataxia)
cochlea damaged
tinnitis
Term
Is the aminoglycoside ototoxicity reversible?
Definition
No, generally irreversible
Term
Are aminoglycosides bactericidal or bacteriostatic?
Definition
rapidly bactericidal
Term
Is the killing effect of aminoglycosides time dependent or concentration dependent?
Definition
concentration dependent
Term
What are the three steps to aminoglycoside transport?
Definition
1. AG's diffuse through the aqueous porin channels of the outer membrane of gram - bacteria
2. AG's actively transported across the cytoplasmic membrane
3. AG's bind to ribosomes and inhibit protein synthesis
Term
What is the rate-limiting step to aminoglycoside transport?
Definition
step 2. AG's actively transported across the cytoplasmic membrane
Term
What inhibits the process of AG's being actively transported across the cytoplasmic membrane?
Definition
divalent cations, hyperosmolarity, pH reduction, anaerobiasis
Term
What organisms are aminoglysocides completely ineffective against and why?
Definition
anaerobes--because they lack the active transport mechanisms to bring AGs across the cytoplasmic membrane
Term
Is the aminoglycoside binding to ribosomes reversible?
Definition
binding is very tight, perhaps irreversible
Term
Where is antimicrobial inhibition most pronounced?
Definition
30S subunit of the ribosome
Term
Once an AG is bound to the ribosome what changes have been observed?
Definition
cell wall permeability and transport changes
inhibition of protein synthesis
misreading of the genetic code
Term
What are the three bacterial mechanisms of resistance?
Definition
altered target site of action
resistance due to decreased drug uptake
plasmid-mediated production of inactivating enzymes
Term
Which organism more commonly uses an altered target site of action for resistance?
Definition
Mycobacteria species
Term
What organism has shown resistance due to decreased drug uptake?
Definition
P. aeruginosa
Term
What are the inactivating enzymes?
Definition
acetylases, phosphorylases, adenyl transferases
Term
What do the inactivating enzymes do?
Definition
add chemical moities that prevent the proper working of the drug
Term
What is the most common form of resistance against AGs?
Definition
plasmid-mediated production of inactivating enzymes
Term
What accounts for the unpredictability of susceptibility testing of aminoglycosides?
Definition
plasmid-mediated production of inactivating enzymes
Term
Which aminoglycoside is designed to have the fewest vulnerable points of interaction?
Definition
amikacin
Term
What organisms do aminoglycosides have moderate activity against in combination with a beta-lactam or a glycopeptide?
Definition
gram + aerobes
Staph (including MRSA), Strep viridans, Enterococci
Term
What organisms do aminoglycosides have good activity against?
Definition
gram - aerobes
E. coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, most others
Term
What is the strength of aminoglycosides?
Definition
gram - aerobes
(ex. PESKY-MESS, SPACE bugs, etc.)
Term
What are aminoglycosides poor against?
Definition
anaerobes, atypicals
Term
What is traditional dosing?
Definition
peaks and troughs
wanted to keep concentration above MIC longer
Term
What occurred after the 3rd dose in traditional dosing?
Definition
steady-state of drug
Term
What is a loading dose?
Definition
try to get to steady-state right away
Term
What does extended interval (once daily) dosing take advantage of?
Definition
concentration dependent killing
Term
What is the post-antibiotic effect?
Definition
bacteria are "stunned" by large dose and it takes them a while to recover
Term
How does the effectiveness vary among the aminoglycosides?
Definition
against susceptible pathogens all aminoglycosides are equally effective
Term
How do toxicities vary among the aminoglycosides?
Definition
toxicities are approximately the same
Term
What are aminoglycosides especially active against?
Definition
all aminoglycosides are especially active against enterobacteriaceae
Term
Which AG is most active against P. aeruginosa?
Definition
tobramycin is 2-4x more active against P. aeruginosa than gentamicin
Term
Which AG is most active against enterobacteriaceae?
Definition
gentamicin is more active than tobramycin against enterobacteriaceae
Term
What is the most active AG against gentamicin-resistant strains?
Definition
amikacin
Term
What is sometimes used against S. aureus?
Definition
antistaphlococcal penicillin's and gentamicin are synergistic against it
Term
What is used against enterococci?
Definition
gentamicin + ampicillin are synergistic if the enterococci does not exhibit high levels of resistance to the aminoglycoside
Term
What agent is used against M. tuberculosis?
Definition
streptomycin
Term
What agent is used against M. avium-intracellulare?
Definition
amikacin
Term
What agent is used against nocardia?
Definition
amikacin
Term
Aminoglycosides vs other classes of antibiotics
Definition
beta lactams and flouroquinolones are safer and preferred if susceptibilities allow them to be used
Term
Where are aminoglycosides still important?
Definition
still important in combination therapy in serious infections caused by serious Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterococcal infections
Term
What is less of a problem with aminoglycosides compared to other classes of antibiotics?
Definition
resistance
Term
What is more of a problem with aminoglycosides compared to other classes of antibiotics?
Definition
toxicity
Term
What percentage of patients will develop some toxicity?
Definition
5-10% of patients
Term
What is important to remember about AG toxicity?
Definition
it is cumulative
Term
Under what conditions are AGs less active?
Definition
acidic pH's
Term
What inhibits AGs?
Definition
divalent cations
Term
Where do aminoglycosides have a more prominent role?
Definition
nosocomial infections, especially P. aeruginosa
Term
Why is aminoglycoside use limited in the community?
Definition
bacteria are likely to be susceptible to other antibiotics
Term
When are AGs used to modify the initial therapy?
Definition
used in life-threatening community acquired infections of unknown etiology
Term
Which AGs have similar toxicity profiles?
Definition
gentamicin, tobramycin, and amikacin
Term
What are the adverse effects from AGs?
Definition
neuromuscular paralysis
ototoxicity
nephrotoxicity
Term
What are some alterable risk factors that predispose a patient to AG toxicity?
Definition
diuretics
radiographic contrast dyes
effective circulating volume depletion
ACE inhibitors
NSAIDs
concomitant use of amphotericin B
cisplatinum
Term
What are some unalterable risk factors that predispose a patient to AG toxicity?
Definition
age
pre-existing renal disease
Term
How are aminoglycosides always used?
Definition
in combination
Term
Indications of use for aminoglycosides
Definition
initial therapy of seriously ill patients, particularly febrile patients with neutropenia
treatment of multi-drug resistant gram - bacilli
polymicrobial infections
synergism may occur when treating P. aeruginosa, S. aureus endocarditis or bacteremia, enterococcal endocarditis
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