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Oral Fosfomycin Activity Against Klebsiella Pneumoniae in a Dynamic Bladder Infection in Vitro Model

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Date 2022 Feb 25
PMID 35211736
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Abstract

Introduction: The use of oral fosfomycin for urinary tract infections (UTIs) caused by non-Escherichia coli uropathogens is uncertain, including Klebsiella pneumoniae, the second most common uropathogen.

Methods: A multicompartment bladder infection in vitro model was used with standard media and synthetic human urine (SHU) to simulate urinary fosfomycin exposure after a single 3 g oral dose (fAUC0-72 16884 mg·h/L, t½ 5.5 h) against 15 K. pneumoniae isolates including ATCC 13883 (MIC 2 to >1024 mg/L) with a constant media inflow (20 mL/h) and 4-hourly voiding of each bladder. The impact of the media (CAMHB + G6P versus SHU) on fosfomycin MIC measurements, drug-free growth kinetics and regrowth after fosfomycin administration was assessed. A low and high starting inoculum (5.5 versus 7.5 log10 cfu/mL) was assessed in the bladder infection model.

Results: Compared with CAMHB, isolates in SHU had a slower growth rate doubling time (37.7 versus 24.1 min) and reduced growth capacity (9.0 ± 0.3 versus 9.4 ± 0.3 log10 cfu/mL), which was further restricted with increased inflow rate (40 mL/h) and more frequent voids (2-hourly). Regrowth was commonly observed in both media with emergence of fosfomycin resistance promoted by a high starting inoculum in CAMHB (MIC rise to ≥1024 mg/L in 13/14 isolates). Resistance was rarely detected in SHU, even with a high starting inoculum (MIC rise to ≥1024 mg/L in 2/14 isolates).

Conclusions: Simulated in an in vitro UTI model, the regrowth of K. pneumoniae urinary isolates was inadequately suppressed following oral fosfomycin therapy. Efficacy was further reduced by a high starting inoculum.

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