Affiliation:
1. Department of Animal Biology Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Tabriz Tabriz Iran
Abstract
AbstractBackground and AimsThe prevalence of carbapenemase‐producing Enterobacterales (CPE) continues to increase worldwide. Combination of β‐lactam and novel β‐lactamase inhibitors introduce a revolutionary treatment option for CPE. Ceftazidime/avibactam (CAZ/AVB) has been recently developed for treatment of severe infections caused by multidrug‐resistant bacteria. We aimed to evaluate in vitro activity of CAZ/AVB on a collection of 85 ESBL‐producing‐carbapenemase negative and CPE from Iran.MethodsESBL and carbapenemase production was phenotypically confirmed by combined disk test and modified carbapenem inactivation method respectively. The presence of clinically important carbapenemase encoding genes was examined using PCR. Susceptibility of all isolates to CAZ/AVB was determined using discs containing 30 μg ceftazidime +20 μg avibactam (AVB). Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of CAZ/AVB in 28 CPE (4 Escherichia coli and 24 Klebsiella pneumoniae) was determined by gradient diffusion method using MIC test strips (0.016−256 mg/L ceftazidime +4 mg/L AVB).ResultsAll phenotypically identified ESBL positive‐carbapenemase negative isolates were found to be susceptible to CAZ/AVB. Among the carbapenem resistant isolates, CAZ/AVB showed potent inhibitory activity against all OXA‐48‐like (MIC ranges 0.125/4−0.75/4 mg/L) and KPC positive isolates (MIC ranges <0.016/4−0.19/4 mg/L). However, AVB could not restore the activity of ceftazdime against isolates producing metallo‐β‐lactamases (MLBs) including VIM, NDM (MIC > 256/4 mg/L) and IMP (MIC > 8/4 mg/L).ConclusionOur data highlighted the excellent in vitro performance of CAZ/AVB against ESBL‐producing and CPE suggesting that this combination can efficiently be used as therapeutic option for management of CPE infections particularly in regions with high prevalence of KPC and/or OXA‐48‐like positive but MBL‐negative Enterobacterales.