Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts 022151;
2. Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 021152; and
3. Rhône-Poulenc Rorer Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Collegeville, Pennsylvania 194263
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the course of clinical studies with the investigational streptogramin antimicrobial dalfopristin-quinupristin, isolates of vancomycin-resistant
Enterococcus faecium
were referred to our laboratory from across the United States. Seventy-two percent of the strains were of the VanA type, phenotypically and genotypically, while 28% were of the VanB type. High-level resistance to streptomycin or gentamicin was observed in 86 and 81%, respectively, of the VanA strains but in only 69 and 66%, respectively, of the VanB strains. These enterococci were resistant to ampicillin (MIC for 50% of the isolates tested [MIC
50
] and MIC
90
, 128 and 256 μg/ml, respectively) and to the other approved agents tested, with the exception of chloramphenicol (MIC
90
, 8 μg/ml) and novobiocin (MIC
90
, 1 μg/ml). Considering all of the isolates submitted, dalfopristin-quinupristin inhibited 86.4% of them at concentrations of ≤1 μg/ml and 95.1% of them at ≤2 μg/ml. However, for the data set comprised of only the first isolate submitted for each patient, 94.3% of the strains were inhibited at concentrations of ≤1 μg/ml and 98.9% were inhibited at concentrations of ≤2 μg/ml. Multiple drug resistance was very common among these isolates of vancomycin-resistant
E. faecium
, while dalfopristin-quinupristin inhibited the majority at concentrations that are likely to be clinically relevant.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
63 articles.
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