dc.description.abstract | Background: Cefiderocol is a novel siderophore β-lactam with improved hydrolytic stability toward β-lactamases, including carbapenemases, achieved by combining structural moieties of two clinically efficient cephalosporins, ceftazidime and cefepime. Consequently, cefiderocol represents a treatment alternative for infections
caused by MDR Gram-negatives.<p>
<p>Objectives: To study the role of cefiderocol on resistance development and on the evolution of β-lactamases
from all Ambler classes, including KPC-2, CTX-M-15, NDM-1, CMY-2 and OXA-48.
<p>Methods: Directed evolution, using error-prone PCR followed by selective plating, was utilized to investigate how
the production and the evolution of different β-lactamases cause changes in cefiderocol susceptibility determined using microbroth dilution assays (MIC and IC<sub>50</sub>).
<p>Results: We found that the expression of bla<sub>OXA-48</sub> did not affect cefiderocol susceptibility. On the contrary, the
expression of bla<sub>KPC-2</sub>, bla<sub>CMY-2</sub>, bla<sub>CTX-M-15</sub> and bla<sub>NDM-1</sub> substantially reduced cefiderocol susceptibility by 4-, 16-,
8- and 32-fold, respectively. Further, directed evolution on these enzymes showed that, with the acquisition of
only 1–2 non-synonymous mutations, all β-lactamases were evolvable to further cefiderocol resistance by 2-
(NDM-1, CTX-M-15), 4- (CMY-2), 8- (OXA-48) and 16-fold (KPC-2). Cefiderocol resistance development was often
associated with collateral susceptibility changes including increased resistance to ceftazidime and ceftazidime/
avibactam as well as functional trade-offs against different β-lactam drugs.
<p>Conclusions: The expression of contemporary β-lactamase genes can potentially contribute to cefiderocol resistance development and the acquisition of mutations in these genes results in enzymes adapting to increasing
cefiderocol concentrations. Resistance development caused clinically important cross-resistance, especially
against ceftazidime and ceftazidime/avibactam. | en_US |