55 d baby with bronchopneumonia, culture: enterobacter MDR, and resistant to colistin, what are other options can be used?
Hossam Elgnainy Selected answer as best
1. Verify susceptibility testing
- Enterobacter spp. often carry AmpC β-lactamase → resistant to many β-lactams.
- Colistin resistance limits polymyxin use.
- You need to carefully check if the lab reported susceptibility to:
- Carbapenems (meropenem, imipenem, ertapenem)
- Ceftazidime–avibactam (CAZ-AVI)
- Tigecycline
2. Potential therapeutic options
- Carbapenems (if susceptible)
- Meropenem is standard in neonates and infants.
- However, many MDR Enterobacter are carbapenem-resistant.
- Ceftazidime–avibactam
- Active against many KPC and OXA-48 producers.
- Tigecycline
- Broad activity against MDR Enterobacteriaceae.
- Concerns in neonates/infants: risk of teeth/bone effects and limited PK data. Used as salvage therapy.
3. Combination therapy
- In such resistant cases, monotherapy is risky.
- Options include:
- Meropenem (if MIC borderline) + aminoglycoside (amikacin/gentamicin, if susceptible).
- Ceftazidime–avibactam + aztreonam (especially if MBL [metallo-β-lactamase] suspected).
Hossam Elgnainy Selected answer as best
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