| Session: Inhibitors of Bacterial and Fungal Efflux Pumps Location:
 Exhibit Hall
 Session Date:
 Monday, 9/27/99
 Session Time:
 3:00 pm - 4:30 pm
 
 Efflux Pump Inhibitors (EPIs) Enhance the Activity of Antimicrobial Agents
 against a Broad Selection of Bacteria
 
 J. Blais, D. Cho, K. Tangen, C. Ford, A. Lee, O. Lomovskaya, S. Chamberland
 Microcide Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Mountain View, California
 
 The in vitro activity profile of a series of new agents that are devoid of intrinsic
 antimicrobial activity but enhance the activity of several classes of drugs against clinically
 relevant pathogens through the inhibition of active efflux is presented. EPIs were
 combined with a variety of antibiotics and tested against a wide selection of
 gram-negative isolates, including several Enterobacteriaceae and Pseudomonadaceae,
 and gram-positive isolates, including Staphylococci, Enterococci, and Streptococci.
 Specific pump deletion mutants and mutants overexpressing pumps were used to
 characterize the activity of these new agents in combination with several antibiotics
 against the Mex pumps in P. aeruginosa, the AcrAB pump system in E. coli and
 Salmonella, and Acr homologs in H. influenzae. Significant synergy was observed with
 combinations of fluoroquinolones or macrolides and EPIs in Enterobacteriaceae and
 Pseudomonadaceae. For example the MIC90 of levofloxacin for a population of 50
 clinical isolates of P. aeruginosa was 8-fold lower in the presence of these efflux pump
 inhibitors (EPIs), shifting from 8 to 1 µg/ml or from resistant to susceptible according to
 the NCCLS susceptibility breakpoints for levofloxacin. In time-kill studies, the
 combination of EPIs and levofloxacin was synergistically bactericidal against P.
 aeruginosa. EPIs also enhanced the activity of fluoroquinolones and macrolides in
 several gram-positive isolates. In summary, EPIs significantly enhance the activity of
 antimicrobial agents against several pathogenic bacteria and may be clinically useful
 agents.
 |