AmpC β-lactamase
From IDWiki
Background
- Class C serine β-lactamase produced by many Enterobacterales and afermentative Gram-negative bacilli
- Production of the β-lactamase may be from:
- Inducible chromosomal resistance, often following a few doses of ceftriaxone or ceftazidime
- Stable chromosomal de-repression, often seen in Escherichia coli and Shigella
- Plasmid-mediated ampC genes, including blaCMY, blaFOX, blaDHA, blaACT, and blaMIR, and is seen in Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Salmonella
- Chromosomal de-repression and plasmid-mediated expression are both generally constitutively expressed, so treatment may be guided by initial susceptibility testing
Inducible AmpC
- Bacteria with moderate to high risk of clinically-significant AmpC production includes:
- The above three species have inducible AmpC in up to 40% of isolates
- Not necessarily all of the SPICE organisms have risk of inducible AmpC production, of which only about 5% of isolates will have an inducible AmpC
- Antibiotics that are the best inducers include aminopenicillins (amoxicillin and ampicillin), first-generation cephalosporins, and cephamycins
- Also imipenem, though it remains effective even after induction of AmpC overexpression
- Antibiotics that are weaker inducers include piperacillin, ceftriaxone, ceftazidime, cefepime, and aztreonam