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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2009, p. 3118-3121, Vol. 53, No. 7
0066-4804/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00183-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Resistance Selection Studies Comparing the Activity of Razupenem (PTZ601) to Vancomycin and Linezolid against Eight Methicillin-Resistant and Two Methicillin-Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus Strains
Catherine Clark,
Klaudia Kosowska-Shick,
Pamela McGhee,
Bonifacio Dewasse,
Linda Beachel, and
Peter C. Appelbaum*
Department of Pathology, Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033
Received 10 February 2009/
Returned for modification 5 April 2009/
Accepted 5 May 2009

ABSTRACT
Multistep and single-step resistance selection studies were
performed with razupenem, linezolid, and vancomycin against
10 methicillin (meticillin)-resistant and -susceptible
Staphylococcus aureus strains. After 20 daily subcultures, razupenem yielded
only clones with MICs of >4 µg/ml in one strain (8
µg/ml) whose parent's MIC was already 4 µg/ml. After
18 to 49 passages in 6/10 strains, razupenem MICs rose from
0.016 to 2 µg/ml (parents) to 0.125 to 8 µg/ml (with
clones stable after 10 drug-free subcultures). Single-step mutant
selection frequencies were similarly low for razupenem and comparators.

INTRODUCTION
Staphylococcus aureus is becoming increasingly resistant to
antibiotics. Additionally, the majority of methicillin (meticillin)-resistant
S. aureus (MRSA) (and also some methicillin-susceptible [MSSA])
strains are resistant to all currently available quinolones
(
1). Heterogeneous vancomycin-intermediate
S.
aureus (hVISA)
and vancomycin-intermediate
S.
aureus (VISA) strains (
1,
5,
7,
8,
11,
12) are increasingly reported, and recently, nine
vancomycin-resistant
S. aureus (VRSA) strains have been described
(
1; M. Rybak, personal communication). Two recent papers emphasize
the recent spread of VISA strains in Turkey (
12) and France
(
7). Recently, Rybak et al. (
11) have indicated, with macro
Etest and population analysis testing, that the incidence of
hVISA strains has increased over the past 22 years for an overall
incidence of 2.2%. Yusof et al. (
17) have recently described
a double-sided vancomycin/teicoplanin macro Etest strip which
accurately differentiates between hVISA and VISA strains. Utilization
of this method will increase reports of the incidence of hVISA
and VISA strains. As of this time, the pathogenicity of VRSA
strains awaits confirmation.
The situation has become further complicated by the appearance and rapid spread, especially in the United States, of community-acquired MRSA strains, which are especially virulent possibly by virtue of the production of Panton-Valentine leukocidin (1). Although these strains are currently more drug susceptible than are hospital-acquired strains, this situation will not remain the same, and increased resistance will develop. Additionally, treatment of the community-acquired MRSA strains with glycopeptides will increase the selective pressure leading to nonsusceptibility to vancomycin and teicoplanin. There is therefore an urgent need for nonglycopeptide drugs with which to treat MRSA strains. Recently, we and others have also documented clinical development of daptomycin resistance after daptomycin therapy (8).
Razupenem (also formerly known as SM-216601, SMP-601, PZ-601, and PTZ601) (Fig. 1) is a new experimental broad-spectrum 2-(4-arylthiazol-2-ylthio)-1β-methylcarbapenem derivative with enhanced activity against gram-positive organisms, including staphylococci, enterococci, and MRSA (9, 10, 14, 15). This study examines the antistaphylococcal activity of razupenem compared to the activities of vancomycin and linezolid, by single- and multistep mutant selection analysis.
Ten isolates were tested by multistep and single-step resistance
selection analysis. These included eight MRSA strains, comprising
two each of MSSA, MRSA, hVISA, VISA, and VRSA isolates. All
organisms except VRSA 509 (Michigan) were recent isolates from
patients at Hershey Medical Center. Razupenem powder was obtained
from Protez Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Malvern, PA.
The CLSI standard macrodilution method was used for initial MICs (6). Serial passages were performed daily in Mueller-Hinton broth for each strain in subinhibitory concentrations of all antimicrobials. For each subsequent daily passage, an inoculum was taken from the tube 1 to 2 dilutions below the MIC that matched the turbidity of a growth control tube. This inoculum was used to determine the next MIC. Daily passages (minimum of 14) were performed until a significant increase in MIC (>4-fold) was obtained. Stability of the acquired resistance was determined by MIC determinations after 10 daily passages of the variant on blood agar without antibiotics (3, 4). A stable clone is defined as having an MIC after the drug-free passages within ±1 of the MIC before the drug-free passages. Only for razupenem clones were passages continued for the maximum of 50 days, regardless of MIC, as seen in Table 1. For multistep testing, confirmation of parent and resistant clones was done by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (3, 4).
For single-step studies, very high inocula (1
x 10
10 to 1
x 10
11 CFU/ml) of the 10 isolates on cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton
plates were exposed to each drug at 2
x, 4
x, and 8
x MIC. Each
plate contained 20 ml medium and was inoculated with 50-µl
aliquots of the above-mentioned high inocula. To ensure that
colonies could be quantitated (0 to 300 colonies/plate), dilutions
of the inoculum were also made, resulting in a minimum of three
plates per drug concentration. The frequency of spontaneous
mutations was calculated at each MIC multiple for each strain
after incubation of plates for 48 h (
4).
Results of the multistep resistance selection studies are presented in Table 1. As can be seen, parental MICs (µg/ml) were as follows: razupenem, 0.016 to 4; vancomycin, 2 to >64; linezolid, 2 to 4. Razupenem yielded no resistant clones (>4-fold increase) after 15 days (Table 1). After 20 daily subcultures, razupenem yielded only clones with MICs of >4 µg/ml (preliminary susceptibility breakpoint of
4 µg/ml obtained by population pharmacokinetics and Monte Carlo simulation [2]) in one strain (SA618; 8 µg/ml) (Table 1) whose parent's MIC was 4 µg/ml. This MIC remained stable throughout an additional 30 days (the maximum number of passages). After 18 to 49 days, in 6 of 10 strains, razupenem MICs rose from 0.016 to 2 µg/ml (parents) to 0.125 to 8 µg/ml (stable clones after 10 drug-free subcultures) (Table 1). Of these six resistant clones, two yielded razupenem MICs of >4 µg/ml. Linezolid yielded resistant clones after 15 to 48 days in 4 of 10 strains with MICs rising from 2 to 4 µg/ml (parents) to 16 to 32 µg/ml (stable clones) (Table 1). Vancomycin selected no resistant clones (>4-fold increase) in all eight strains tested (MICs of
64 µg/ml were not tested). MICs of vancomycin against the tested strains rose from 2 to 8 µg/ml (parents) to 4 to 8 µg/ml after 50 days (Table 1). No cross-resistance was found with any clone/antimicrobial combination (Table 1).
Results of the single-step resistance selection studies are presented in Table 2. Mutant selection frequencies for razupenem ranged from <4.0 x 10–11 to 6.0 x 10–6 at 2x MIC to <3.3 x 10–11 to 6.7 x 10–9 at 8x MIC. These frequencies were equivalent to those for the existing carbapenems (imipenem, meropenem) against Pseudomonas aeruginosa (13, 16). Comparator values were similar: vancomycin, <3.3 x 10–11 to >1.0 x 10–8 at 2x MIC to <3.3 x 10–11 to <5.0 x 10–10 at 8x MIC; and linezolid, <3.7 x 10–11 to <3.3 x 10–10 at 2x MIC to < 3.7 x 10–11 to <3.3 x 10–10 at 8x MIC.
Previous reports of razupenem (also known previously as SM-216601,
SMP-601, PZ-601, and PTZ601) have reported improved activity
against staphylococci and
Enterococcus faecium, with MICs against
MRSA ranging from 0.06 to 2 µg/ml (MIC
90, 2 µg/ml).
The compound is also potent against streptococci,
Haemophilus influenzae,
Moraxella catarrhalis, and
Enterobacteriaceae such
as
Escherichia coli,
Klebsiella pneumoniae, and
Proteus mirabilis (
9,
14,
15). Razupenem is not compromised (like other β-lactams)
by low temperature or high salt concentrations (
10). Additionally,
razupenem shows better pharmacokinetics in animals, suggesting
a favorable pharmacokinetic profile in humans, with a longer
half-life, than do available carbapenems (
15). In a murine model
of hematogenous bronchopneumonia caused by MRSA and VISA, treatment
with razupenem (MICs of 2 µg/ml for test strains) resulted
in a significant decrease in the number of viable bacteria,
a higher survival rate, and less marked inflammatory changes
in the group treated with razupenem than in the group treated
with vancomycin (
9).
The current study shows MICs against MRSA similar to those reported previously (9, 14, 15), and especially to those reported by Livermore and Warner (10) who obtained, irrespective of temperature and NaCl, razupenem MICs of 4 µg/ml in some strains. Our studies also indicate that razupenem has confirmed activity versus MRSA at a preliminary breakpoint of
4 µg/ml (2) and low rates of spontaneous mutations on single-step selection. Although razupenem had a low propensity to select for mutations after 20 daily subcultures, 6 of the 10 strains tested yielded clones with increased MICs, two with MICs above the preliminary susceptibility breakpoint of
4 µg/ml, at between 20 and 50 daily subcultures. The significance of these findings remains to be determined in the clinical setting.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was supported by a grant from Protez Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., Malvern, PA.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Hershey Medical Center, P.O. Box 850, Hershey, PA 17033. Phone: (717) 531-5113. Fax: (717) 531-7953. E-mail:
pappelbaum{at}psu.edu 
Published ahead of print on 11 May 2009. 

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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2009, p. 3118-3121, Vol. 53, No. 7
0066-4804/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00183-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.