BSAC wp DIN SRGA CA-SFM CRG NWGA NCCLS (USA) NCCLS (USA) Antimicrobial susceptibility testing in Antimicrobial susceptibility testing in Europe Europe - the role of national breakpoint committees and EUCAST - the role of national breakpoint committees and EUCAST Gunnar Kahlmeter, EUCAST [email protected]
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BSAC wp DIN SRGACA-SFM CRG NWGA
NCCLS (USA)NCCLS (USA)
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing in Europe Antimicrobial susceptibility testing in Europe
- the role of national breakpoint committees and EUCAST- the role of national breakpoint committees and EUCAST
E.coli vs. Cefotaxime in EARSS 2002Austria, Germany, Sweden
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Simulated local outbreak!
<<2.0 2.0
The breakpoint compromise!The breakpoint compromise!
Epidemiological aspectsEpidemiological aspects– breakpoints must allow (early) detection of acquired resistance mechanisms!
Clinical aspectsClinical aspects – breakpoints must have clinical value!
Methodological aspectsMethodological aspects – breakpoints must allow reproducible S-, I- and R-categorization in the lab!
EUCASTEUCASTEuropean Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing
formed in 1997 and restructured in 2002
convened byEuropean Society for Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
(ESCMID)National Breakpoint Committees in Europe
and financed byESCMID
National Breakpoint Committees in EuropeDG-SANCO of the European Union (3 year grant from May 2004)
EUCASTEUCAST• EUCAST General Committee:
- one representative, appointed by the appropriate medical associations, from each European country - one representative each from ISC and FESCI- Chairperson and Scientific secretary (appointed by ESCMID)- meets once a year at ECCMID - all Steering Committee proposals are referred to the General Committee for comments before decision
• EUCAST Steering Committee:- Chairperson and a Scientific Secretary (appointed by ESCMID)- one representative each from the European national breakpoint committees (presently 6)- two representatives from the EUCAST General Committee
- Czech Republic and Greece 2002-2004 - Russia and Spain 2004 -2006
• EUCAST industry network - The network consists of all interested manufacturers of pharmaceuticals and susceptibility testing devices. All are invited to take an active part in EUCAST activities - Steering Committee proposals are referred to the industry network for comments before decision- relevant industry members can apply for inclusion on the email list by contacting the EUCAST secretariat
EUCAST General Committee 2004EUCAST General Committee 2004Austria Prof Helmut Mittermayer Belgium Prof Jan Verhaegen Bosnia Dr Selma Uzunovic-Kamberovic Bulgaria Prof Krassimir Metodiev Croatia Dr Arjana Tambic-Andrasevic Czech Republic Dr Pavla Urbaskova Denmark Dr Niels Frimodt-Møller Estonia Dr Paul Naaber Finland Dr Antti Nissinen France Prof Claude-James Soussy Germany Prof Bernd Wiedemann Greece Prof Alkiviadis Vatopoulos Hungary Dr Éva Bán Iceland Dr Karl Gustaf KristinssonIreland Dr Martin Cormican Italy Prof Pietro Emanuele Varaldo Latvia Dr Arta Balode Lithuania Prof Arvydsa Ambrozaitis Netherlands Prof John Degener Norway Dr Martin Steinbakk Poland Prof Waleria Hryniewicz
Portugal Prof Jose Melo Cristino Romania no official representativeRussia Dr Olga Stetsiouk Serbia Dr Lazar Ranin Slovak Republic Prof. Milan Niks Slovenia Dr Jana Kolman Spain Dr Francisco Soriano Sweden Dr Barbro Olsson-Liljequist Switzerland Prof Jaques Bille Turkey Dr Deniz Gür UK Prof Alasdair MacGowan Yugoslavia no official representative
ISC – Prof Paul TulkensFESCI – Prof David Livermore
Email network of industry with interest in antimicrobials
Chairperson Gunnar Kahlmeter, SwedenScientific Secretary Derek Brown, UK
• Chairperson Gunnar Kahlmeter 2002 - 05• Scientific Secretary Derek Brown 2002 - 05
• BSAC (The UK) Alasdair MacGowan 2002 - 05• CA-SFM (France) Fred Goldstein 2002 - 05• CRG (The Netherlands) Johan W. Mouton 2002 - 05• DIN (Germany) Arne Rodloff 2002 - 05• NWGA (Norway) Martin Steinbakk 2002 - 05• SRGA (Sweden) Anders Österlund 2002 - 05
• General Committee rep Olga Stetsiouk (Russia) 2004 - 06• General Committee rep Francisco Soriano (Spain) 2004 - 06
EUCAST definitions of clinical breakpointsavailable at www.eucast.org
Clinically Susceptible (S)• a microorganism is defined as susceptible by a level of antimicrobial activity associated
with a high likelihood of therapeutic success• a microorganism is categorized as susceptible (S) by applying the appropriate
breakpoint in a defined phenotypic test system Clinically Intermediate (I)• a microorganism is defined as intermediate by a level of antimicrobial activity associated
with indeterminate therapeutic effect• a microorganism is categorized as intermediate (I) by applying the appropriate
breakpoints in a defined phenotypic test system Clinically Resistant (R) • a microorganism is defined as resistant by a level of antimicrobial activity associated
with a high likelihood of therapeutic failure.• a microorganism is categorized as resistant (R) by applying the appropriate breakpoint
in a defined phenotypic test system
Clinical breakpoints may be altered with legitimate changes in circumstances
Clinical breakpoints are presented as S<x mg/L; I>x, <y mg/L; R>y mg/L
EUCAST has re-defined susceptible, intermediate and resistant and defined the
terms wild type and non-wild type microorganism…..
and agreed…
EUCAST definitions of epidemiological cut off values
available at www.eucast.orgWild type (WT) • a microorganism is defined as wild type (WT) for a species by the absence of
acquired and mutational resistance mechanisms to the drug in question.• a microorganism is categorized as wild type (WT) for a species by applying the
appropriate cut-off value in a defined phenotypic test system.• wild type microorganisms may or may not respond clinically to antimicrobial
treatment. Microbiological resistance - non-wild type (NWT)• a microorganism is defined as non-wild type (NWT) for a species by the
presence of an acquired or mutational resistance mechanism to the drug in question.
• a microorganism is categorized as non-wild type (NWT) for a species by applying the appropriate cut-off value in a defined phenotypic test system.
• non-wild type microorganisms may or may not respond clinically to antimicrobial treatment.
Epidemiological cut-off values will not be altered by changing circumstances.
The wild type is presented as WT<z mg/L and non-wild type as NWT >z mg/L
EUCAST publicationsEUCAST publications1. European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing. (2000). Terminology relating to
methods for the determination of susceptibility of bacteria to antimicrobial agents. EUCAST Definitive Document E.Def 1.2. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 6, 503-8.
2. European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing. (2000). Determination of antimicrobial susceptibility test breakpoints. EUCAST Definitive Document E.Def 2.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 6, 570-2.
3. European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing. (2000). Determination of minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of antibacterial agents by agar dilution. EUCAST Definitive Document E.Def 3.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 6, 509-15.
4. European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing. (2001). Linezolid breakpoints. EUCAST Definitive Document E.Def 4.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 7, 283-4.
5. European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing. (2003). Determination of minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of antibacterial agents by broth microdilution. EUCAST Discussion Document E.Def 5.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 9 (issue 7 insert) 1-10.
6. Ridgway, G.L., Bébéar, C., Bébéar, C.M, et al. (2001). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of intracellular and cell-associated pathogens. EUCAST Discussion Document E.Dis 6.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 7 (issue 12 insert),1-10.
7. Rodriguez-Tudela, J.L., Barchiesi, F., Bille, J. et al. (2003). Determination of minimum inhibitory concentrations by broth microdilution of fermentative yeasts. EUCAST Discussion Document E.Dis 7.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 9 (issue 8 insert), 1-8.
8. Drobniewski, F. (2002). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. EUCAST Discussion Document E.Dis 8.1. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 8 (issue 10 insert),1-10.
9. Kahlmeter G, Brown DFJ, Goldstein FW et al. (2003) European harmonization of MIC breakpoints for antimicrobial susceptibility testing of bacteria. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 52, 145-148.
10. Kahlmeter G & Brown D. Harmonisation of European breakpoints – can it be achieved? Clinical Microbiology Newsletter, in press.
Published documents, discussion documents and tentative decisions are posted on the EUCAST website.
Tentative decisions and discussion documents - after a period of consultation they will be submitted for publication and/or be made available on the EUCAST website as final documents or decisions (www.eucast.org).
EUCAST Subcommittee on Antifungal EUCAST Subcommittee on Antifungal Susceptibility TestingSusceptibility Testing
(EUCAST AFST) (EUCAST AFST)
• develop reference methods for antifungal susceptibility testing• set breakpoints for antifungal drugs
Financed through EUCASTEUCAST processes for breakpoint setting, decisions and consultation
EUCAST collaborationsEUCAST collaborations• EMEA – SOP being developed which renders EUCAST the official
European breakpoint committee (EUCAST breakpoints in the SPCs).
• Expert groups and reference laboratories (Neisseria, Salmonella, European Veterinary working group, NEQAS)
• EARSS– EUCAST permanently on the EARSS advisory board
• NCCLS – NCCLS/EUCAST broth dilution method for the determination of MIC-values
harmonised through CEN and ISO; finished document end of 2004.– NCCLS/EUCAST common QC type strain MIC-target values and ranges– NCCLS/EUCAST harmonised FQ breakpoints for staphylococci.– Collaborative process for revision of cephalosporin and carbapenem MIC
breakpoints (first joint meeting in Tampa, January 2005).
• Pharmaceutical industry information and consultation network
Liaison with NCCLS
Breakpoints for new antimicrobials
• Daptomycin • Tigecycline
EUCAST procedure for setting EUCAST procedure for setting breakpointsbreakpoints
The next 9 slides describe the EUCAST procedure for harmonising European breakpoints.
1. Data on dosing, formulations, clinical indications and target organisms are reviewed and differences which might influence breakpoints are highlighted
Dosage BSACUK
CA-SFMFrance
CRGNetherlands
DINGermany
NWGANorway
SRGASweden
Most common dose 500 x 2 oral400 x 2 iv
500 x 2 oral200 x 2 iv
250 x 2 oral200 x iv
500 x 2 oral200 x 2 iv
200-400 x 2 oral
400 x 2 iv
500 x 2 oral400 x 2 iv
Maximum dose schedule 750 x 2 oral400 x 3 iv
750 x 2 oral400 x 3 iv
750 x 2 oral400 x 3 iv
750 x 2 oral400 x 2 iv data pending 750 x 2 oral
400 x 3 iv
Available formulations oral, iv oral, iv oral, iv oral, iv oral, iv oral, iv
Clinical data
There is clinical evidence for ciprofloxacin to indicate a poor response in systemic infections caused by Salmonellae with low-level fluoroquinolone resistance (MIC>0.064 mg/L) EUCAST has suggested that the epidemiological cut off value (S<0.064/R>0.064 mg/L) be used in Salmonellae systemic infections. These strains are best found using a nalidixic acid 30 µg screen disc in routine susceptibility testing.
There is agreement in EUCAST that ciprofloxacin activity against Enterococci and Streptococci, including S.pneumoniae, is insufficient to categorize wild type bacteria “susceptible”.
National breakpoint committees Example: ciprofloxacin
2. Multiple MIC-distributions are collected, the wild type MIC distribution is defined and tentative epidemiological cut-off values determined (WT < X mg/L)
4. Using available PK/PD data, Monte Carlo simulations are performed and a tentative breakpoint calculated
”Minimum requirement for S-category” is that the high MIC
value of the wild type MIC-distribution is consistent with
the MIC derived from the PK/PD index needed for
optimal efficacy based on free drug”.
5. Clinical data relating outcome to MIC-values and resistance mechanisms are assessed in relation to the tentative breakpoint
….and you´ve just heard Professor MacGowan adress
that issue
<<2 mg/L2 mg/L
Epidemiological cut off: WT<2.0
To permit reproduciblesusceptibility testing,splitting of the wild typemust be avoided: 0.5 and 1 mg/L were notacceptable….and 2 mg/Lwas considered too high…
…it was decided to set the break-point at S≤0.125 and R>2 mg/L, rendering wild type S.pneumoniae inter-mediately susceptible to ciprofloxacin.
6. Tentative breakpoints are checked against target species wild type MIC distributions to avoid splitting the wild type
8. Re-appraisal of tentative breakpoints following comments
7. Consultation process on tentative breakpoints
- national committees- EUCAST general committee- pharmaceutical industry, AST device manufacturers
- others via EUCAST website
9. Further consultation if required
EUCAST breakpoint tables are published at www.eucast.org
EUCAST has now finalised breakpoints for fluoroquinolones,
glycopeptides, aminoglycosides and linezolid and is nowworking on cephalosporins, carbapenems and aztreonam.
EUCAST websites are found at EUCAST websites are found at www.eucast.orgwww.eucast.org
The EUCAST website is a section of the official ESCMID website – it gives details of all EUCAST activities including- constitution and organisation- committee member lists - meetings - EUCAST documents- EUCAST power-point presentation - clinical MIC breakpoint tables- MIC distributions for wild type bacteria and fungi- epidemiological MIC cut-off values.
www.eucast.orgwww.eucast.org
This is the first screen of the EUCAST general website.
www.eucast.org
First screen of the EUCAST program for the display of wild type MIC distributions in microorganisms.
Choose to display in English, French or German
EUCAST aggregated wild type MIC EUCAST aggregated wild type MIC distributionsdistributions
- the fact that wild type microrganisms of the same species exhibit identical MIC (and inhibition zone) distributions irrespective of origin provides an opportunity to aggregate multiple distributions and define a reference.
• Data from scientific papers, breakpoint committees, reference laboratories, pharmaceutical industry, surveillance networks (EARSS, Sentry, Alexander Project, National surveillance networks)
• All submitted full-range MIC distributions accepted
This slide shows a portion of the data set for S.pneumoniae and ciprofloxacin.
Each MIC distribution is from a different investigator, surveillance program, breakpoint committee or pharmaceutical company.
The median of the uni- or of the first part of the bi- or multi-modal distribution has been marked in blue.
Aggregated S.pneumoniae ciprofloxacin MIC-data.
Values of >1% are shown in graph as bars.
www.eucast.org
Choose to display in English, French or German
Specify the drug or the bug (never both) - after a moment a table of MIC-distributions is shown. Click on any species in the left hand column to display the data as a bar chart, with
EUCAST epidemiological cut-off values and harmonised European clinical breakpoints.
(1) To define epidemiological cut-off values
(2) As a template for calibration of methodology (accuracy and imprecision).”We have defined the result of antimicrobial susceptibility testing!”
(3) Reference MIC database for breakpoint setting - to avoid clinical breakpoints that divide wild type bacteria
(4) As MIC reference database
EUCAST wild type MIC distributions – templates for calibration of MIC determinations
• The method used for MIC determination in the local set of data is not adequately standardised or calibrated,
• The species identification is incomplete
• There are too few determinations to allow identification of the part of the distribution that constitutes the wild type microorganisms (which usually corresponds to the four lowest dilution steps).
Laboratories which cannot fit their own MIC data to the the EUCAST reference distribution should look into the following possibilities:
1
Examples from the EUCAST wild type MIC distribution program.
The objectives of EUCAST are• to form in EUCAST, under the auspices of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and
Infectious Diseases", a professional network of - the national breakpoint committees and experts on antimicrobial susceptibility testing and - industry involved in the production and marketing of antimicrobial agents or of in-vitro diagnostic medical devices used in antimicrobial susceptibility testing;
• to set common European breakpoints for surveillance of antimicrobial resistance;
• to identify national differences in clinical breakpoints and to harmonise breakpoints for existing and new antimicrobial drugs;
• to produce, disseminate and update a series of documents on the technology of in-vitro antimicrobial susceptibility testing, promoting standardisation of methods used in different parts of Europe and comparability of results obtained by different technologies;
• to encourage internal and external national and international quality assessment schemes;
• to collaborate with European and international groups concerned with antimicrobial susceptibility testing and/or the epidemiology of antimicrobial resistance;
• to advise European Community Institutions on the technology and interpretation of antimicrobial susceptibility testing;
• to work with groups outside Europe (eg NCCLS) to achieve international consensus on susceptibility testing;
• to devise and participate in educational and training programmes for antimicrobial susceptibility testing (workshop with EARSS in 2005, two workshops for national breakpoint committees in 2005 & 2006).
The EndThe End
E.coli and ciprofloxacin in ECO•SENS
Spain
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Canada
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E.coli ATCC 25933 vs Ciprofloxacin 10 µg
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Wildtype distributions do not vary with geographical origin!Wildtype distributions do not vary with geographical origin!
G Kahlmeter, JAC, 2003.
Zone diameter (mm)
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Pondicherry, IndiaKronoberg county, Sweden
S.pneumoniae vs. oxacillin 1 µg
C.Larsson et al, Clin Microbiol Infect, 1999
Wildtype distributions do not vary with geographical origin!Wildtype distributions do not vary with geographical origin!
S.aureus vs. clindamycinVeterinary vs human isolates
Origin
Summary of EUCAST procedure for setting Summary of EUCAST procedure for setting clinical breakpointsclinical breakpoints
1. Data on dosing, formulations, clinical indications and target organisms are reviewed and differences which might influence breakpoints are highlighted.
2. Multiple MIC-distributions are collected, the wild type MIC distribution is defined and tentative epidemiological cut-off values determined (WT < X mg/L).
3. Existing national clinical breakpoints are compared.
4. Using available PK/PD data, Monte Carlo simulations are performed and a tentative breakpoint calculated. ”Minimum requirement for S-category” is that the high MIC value of the wild type MIC-distribution is consistent with the MIC derived from the PK/PD index needed for optimal efficacy based on free drug”.
5. Clinical data relating outcome to MIC-values and resistance mechanisms are assessed in relation to the tentative breakpoint.
6. Tentative breakpoints are checked against target species wild type MIC distributions to avoid splitting the wild type.
7. Consultation process (national committees, EUCAST general committee and pharmaceutical industry and AST device manufacturers).
8. EUCAST clinical breakpoint tables are published on the internet (www.eucast.org) with links to tables and graphs of wild type distributions of MIC values.
• The national breakpoint committees have committed themselves to implementing EUCAST breakpoints – which means that anyone using the national European systems will gradually adhere to the EUCAST breakpoint system
• Breakpoints as presented in EUCAST tables can be directly applied to MIC distributions (local and national surveillance, EARSS, etc)
• Systems for automated susceptibility testing can be set up with EUCAST MIC breakpoints.
EUCAST wild type MIC distributions and epidemiological cut-off values – the concept
JAC 2003; 52: 145-148
EUCAST developed the concept of antimicrobial wild type MIC distributions and epidemiological cut-off values (JAC 52:145-148, 2003).Software was created to receive and display large volumes of MIC data for bacteria and fungi over the Internet. It is freely available at http://www.eucast.org.
Distributions are displayed in an aggregated format. Tables and graphs show the part of the MIC distribution which, when EUCAST defines the ”epdemiological cut-off value”, is defined as the ”wild type distribution”. The epidemiological cut-off value separating microorganisms without (wild type) and with acquired or mutational resistance (non-wild type) and clinical breakpoints are, if defined, shown on the bottom line of the graph. The epidemiological cut-off value (left hand lower corner) is shown as WT≤ X mg/L.The clinical breakpoints (right hand lower corner) are shown as S≤ Y mg/L and R> Z mg/L.
EUCAST wild type MIC distributions and epidemiological cut-off values – methods and data
Origin of MIC dataEach distribution is comprised of aggregated MIC data including individual MIC distributions from - publications in international journals- breakpoint committees- antimicrobial surveillance systems such as EARSS, SENTRY, the Alexander Project- pharmaceutical companies and susceptibility testing device manufacturers.
Thus, unless otherwise specifically stated, distributions include results obtained with different methods. These methods do not give exactly the same results but the results rarely vary by more than one doubling dilution step. In this way the aggregated EUCAST MIC distributions contain the random variation between different investigators and the systematic variation seen between different methods.
Origin of the organisms included in the MIC distributions The data are from tests on bacteria and fungi collected from man and animals, of any geographic origin and over a wide timeframe.
MIC methods represented Species-specific distributions of MIC values collected from all over the world are included in the database. The distributions shown represent full range MIC values determined with methods described by EUCAST, BSAC (UK), CA-SFM (France), CRG (The Netherlands), DIN (Germany), NCCLS (USA), NWGA (Norway), and SRGA (Sweden) or methods calibrated to these methods (eg. commercial methods which give full range MIC values).
EUCAST wild type MIC distributions – templates for calibration of MIC determinations
Laboratories which cannot fit their own MIC data to the the EUCAST reference distribution should look into the following possibilities:
• The method used for MIC determination in the local set of data is not adequately calibrated,
• The species identification is incomplete,
• There are too few determinations to allow identification of the part of the distribution that constitutes the wild type microorganisms. This usually corresponds to the four lowest dilution steps.
Exclusion of dataAll submitted full-range MIC distributions have been accepted. There has been no systematic exclusion of data from one contributor or from one method. The contributions are screened by the EUCAST Steering Committee and less than 10% have been excluded from the aggregated distributions. However, all data are held in the database and are accessible to the Steering Committee. The most common reason for exclusion has been that the data were not full-range MICs so that a significant proportion of MICs were outside the tested range.
EUCAST wild type MIC distributions – why are only the MICs of wild type microorganisms displayed?
The distributions consist of MIC-values determined over 30 years or more. Resistance frequencies obtained through the aggregated MIC distributions would not be representative of current antimicrobial resistance frequencies and would be confusing and misleading.
When the epidemiological cut-off value has been determined by the EUCAST Steering Committee it blocks display of the non-wild type microorganisms (red bars, upper figure) and shows only the part representing the wild type (lower fig).
Everyone is invited to contribute dataAll who have full-range MIC data for bacteria or fungi are invited to contribute data as long as MICs are determined with an accepted standardised method, which should be named. Once entered on the database the data will not be identifiable as separate distributions but will help build the aggregate reference distributions. The biologically resistant (non-wild type) part of the distribution will be seen only by the EUCAST Steering Committee.
Submitting data to the EUCAST database does not interfere with publication of data.
Where can I get more information?Contact EUCAST – email addresses and information can be obtained through the EUCAST website at http://www.eucast.org
EUCAST wild type MIC distributions – how to contribute data