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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2008, p. 351-352, Vol. 52, No. 1
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00766-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Colistin Heteroresistance in Acinetobacter and Its Association with Previous Colistin Therapy
Joshua S. Hawley,1
Clinton K. Murray,1* and
James H. Jorgensen2
Department of Medicine, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas,1
Department of Pathology, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas2
Received 14 June 2007/
Returned for modification 22 August 2007/
Accepted 8 October 2007

ABSTRACT
Colistin heteroresistance has been reported among
Acinetobacter isolates; however, its association with prior colistin therapy
has not been not described. A population analysis profile identified
resistant
Acinetobacter subpopulations from colistin-susceptible
clinical isolates. The proportion of cells exhibiting heteroresistance
was significantly higher among isolates recovered from patients
treated with colistin.

TEXT
Therapeutic options for serious infections caused by
Acinetobacter baumannii-calcoaceticus complex (ABC) are limited by intrinsic
and acquired resistance. In a population of casualties returning
from Iraq and Afghanistan, the most effective agents were colistin
and minocycline (
6). In the United States, minocycline is not
available in an intravenous formulation, leaving colistin as
the only agent available for some seriously ill patients. A
recent report of heteroresistance to colistin among ABC isolates
from Australia is of concern due to the potential implications
for therapeutic failures (
7). Whether previous colistin exposure
contributed to the development of ABC heteroresistance was not
addressed in that report. In the present study, we assessed
multidrug-resistant (MDR) ABC isolates for heteroresistance
to colistin from patients with or without prior colistin exposure.
We selected a convenience sample of 19 different patient's MDR ABC isolates with previously determined susceptibility to colistin (MIC of
1 µg/ml) from among ABC isolates retained by our clinical microbiology laboratory from October 2003 to November 2005. MDR was defined as susceptibility to two or fewer antimicrobial agent classes. Seven of the isolates (study isolates) were from patients who had previously been treated with colistin (colistimethate sodium) for their ABC infection. Twelve control isolates were selected from patients without any prior colistin exposure. Isolates were identified as ABC using the Vitek system (bioMerieux, Inc., Durham, NC). Broth microdilution MIC testing using in-lab prepared frozen panels was performed according to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute reference susceptibility method with cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton broth, a standard inoculum density of 5 x 105 CFU/ml, and incubation at 35°C for 20 to 24 h (3). Panels contained colistin sulfate, polymyxin B, tigecycline, minocycline, doxycycline, ceftazidime, ticarcillin-clavulanate, ampicillin-sulbactam, sulbactam, imipenem, gentamicin, and amikacin. The quality control organisms Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853 were tested simultaneously with patient isolates and always provided MICs within acceptable limits (4).
Colistin sulfate (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was added to molten Mueller-Hinton agar (Difco/BD, Sparks, MD) to produce plates with colistin concentrations of 1, 2, and 8 µg/ml. Frozen ABC isolates were subcultured twice on sheep blood agar prior to preparation of a suspension in 0.9% saline equivalent to approximately a no. 5 McFarland standard. An aliquot of 100 µl of the adjusted inoculum suspension of each isolate was used to inoculate each of two 1-, 2-, and 8-µg/ml colistin plates. To determine the actual inoculum delivered to each plate, 100 µl of a 1:106 dilution of the inoculum suspension was spread onto duplicate sheep blood agar plates to determine colony counts. To exclude bias due to high inoculum, 2-, 4-, and 8-µg/ml colistin plates were subsequently inoculated using 1:10 and 1:100 dilutions of the initial inoculum, and colony counts were compared to the undiluted inoculum. Plates were incubated at 35°C for 20 to 24 h prior to counting colonies. Colonies recovered from the 8-µg/ml colistin plates were subcultured onto sheep blood agar plates and passaged twice prior to again determining the colistin MIC. Heteroresistance was defined by growth of ABC colonies on plates containing 8 µg of colistin/ml, with confirmation of an MIC of >8 µg/ml by subsequent broth microdilution (BMD) testing. Statistical analysis was performed by using mean colony count values from the duplicate plates for each isolate. The colistin-exposed and nonexposed groups were compared with the Mann-Whitney U test using SPSS 11.5.1 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL).
Total colistin exposure varied among study isolates, with total cumulative patients' doses ranging from 325 to 900 mg (Table 1). The number of days from the last dose until recovery of the study isolates ranged from 0 to 18 days. Colistin heteroresistance was demonstrated in all study and control ABC isolates. However, the mean numbers of colonies that grew on plates with colistin at 8 µg/ml were 307 for colistin-exposed isolates (n = 7) and 97 for nonexposed isolates (n = 12), values equivalent to 2.11 CFU (range, 0.72 to 2.88 [standard deviation = 0.76]) per million CFU of ABC plated (0.000211%) and 0.53 CFU (range, 0.07 to 0.96 [standard deviation = 0.34]) per million CFU of ABC plated (0.000053%), respectively (P < 0.001). The numbers of colonies growing on plates containing 2 and 4 µg of colistin/ml were too numerous to count for all isolates. There was no significant difference between the proportion of heteroresistant colonies recovered using undiluted inoculum versus 1:10 and 1:100 dilutions of the inoculum suspension (data not shown), excluding inoculum effect as the cause of our findings. When colonies recovered on plates with colistin at 8 µg/ml were passaged twice on sheep blood plates and then tested for antimicrobial susceptibilities, all isolates from both control and study groups demonstrated colistin MICs of >16 µg/ml. There was no significant difference between the two isolate groups with regard to the mean MICs of the other tested antibiotics, except for sulbactam (P = 0.002) and gentamicin (P = 0.001), which demonstrated greater susceptibility in the colistin-exposed group. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis typing after digestion with ApaI revealed seven different clones within the 19 isolates when the banding patterns were analyzed using BioNumerics software (Applied Maths). Within some of the seven unique clones, there were isolates from both patients who were and patients who were not previously exposed to colistin.
Due to the frequent finding of multidrug resistance,
Acinetobacter is considered a pathogen of particular concern by the Infectious
Diseases Society of America (
10). Although the impact of ABC
infection upon mortality is controversial, it remains an important
cause of morbidity among seriously ill patients (
1,
5). Colistin
is one agent reliably active against many isolates (
6). Heteroresistance
to colistin among
Acinetobacter isolates has been previously
described in one report (
7), and preliminary in vitro data indicate
that the emergence of heteroresistant populations may be amplified
by colistin exposure (
11). The relationship of such heteroresistance
to prior colistin exposure in patients has not yet been described.
We have extended those initial observations by testing isolates
from patients treated with colistin and a control group of patients
without colistin exposure. We have demonstrated by using pulsed-field
gel electrophoresis that these isolates were from multiple lineages
and not a single clone. We found a statistically significantly
higher degree of heteroresistance among isolates from patients
with previous colistin treatment. The proportion of resistant
subpopulations in this study (0.000211% for study isolates and
0.000053% for control isolates) was slightly higher than that
reported in the previous study of heteroresistance (0.00001
to 0.000001%) (
7). Due to the small number of isolates available
from colistin-treated patients, we did not attempt to correlate
the dose, duration, or timing of colistin exposure with the
degree of heteroresistance.
It is a matter of conern that the resistant subpopulations isolated during the population analysis profile demonstrated stable colistin MICs exceeding 16 µg/ml, which is above the peak serum levels achievable at standard doses (8) and well above the current definition of colistin resistance in Acinetobacter (4). It is possible that the heteroresistant proportion of the bacterial population might be selected and become predominant during colistin therapy, leading to treatment failure. However, the clinical relevance of colistin heteroresistance is unproven at this time. These findings suggest that careful monitoring for emerging resistance during prolonged colistin therapy is warranted.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank M. Leticia McElmeel and Letitia C. Fulcher for excellent
technical assistance.
The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of the Army, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious Disease Service (MCHE-MDI-7E), Brooke Army Medical Center, 3851 Roger Brooke Drive, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234. Phone: (210) 916-4355. Fax: (210) 916-0388. E-mail:
Clinton.Murray{at}amedd.army.mil 
Published ahead of print on 22 October 2007. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, January 2008, p. 351-352, Vol. 52, No. 1
0066-4804/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00766-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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