Penicillin
[PHW2
All drugs in this class have a fused beta-lactam/thiazolidine ring
Classes
- Narrow spectrum
* e.g. benzylpenicillin
- Narrow spectrum penicillin resistant to staphylococcal beta-lactamase
* e.g. flucloxacillin
- Moderate spectrum penicillin
* e.g. amoxycillin, ampicillin
- Broad spectrum penicillin
* e.g. amoxycillin with clavulanic acid
- Broad spectrum with anti-pseudomonal activities
* e.g. piperacillin
Pharmacodynamics
Actions
- Bactericidal action by inhibition of bacterial cell wall synthesis
Mechanism of action
- Intact beta-lactam ring binds to various proteins including
* Transpeptidase and carboxypeptidase
- Binding prevents cross-linkage of peptidoglycan, and weakens the cell walls
- Effects of this weakening varies according to the species
Effects on Gram-positive cocci
- Possesses a thick peptidoglycan cell wall
- When exposed to beta-lactam
--> Growth continues normally but reduced peptidoglycan cross-linkage
--> Cell wall weakened
--> Eventually lysis
NB:
- However, extinction is not achieved even when the bacteria are sensitive, because some cells remain dormant (the persistors) until the antibiotics is removed
- Synergy is achieved with certain antibiotics (e.g. gentamicin) and extinction becomes possible
Effects on Gram-negative bacilli
- Possesses thinner peptidoglycan wall which is surrounded by lipopolysaccharide-lipoprotein envelope
- Exposure to beta-lactam causes weakening of cell wall
--> bacteria becomes spherical due to osmosis
--> When placed in hypo-osmolar environment, lysis occurs
- However, bacilli like Haemophilus Influenzae have low intracellular osmolality
--> Rarely becomes osmotically challenged enough for lysis to occur
Resistance
- Penicillin can be rendered ineffective by beta-lactamase, which hydrolyses the beta-lactam ring
- Several varieties exist
- Gram-positive type and Gram-negative type are fundamentally different
- Gram-negative beta-lactamase is encoded on bacterial chromosomes and plasmids, which may be disseminated
* i.e. basis of acquired resistance
Side-effects
- Hypersensitivity
- Diarrhoea
Hypersensitivity
- Allergy to penicillin occurs in up to 10% of population
- Anaphylaxis occurs in 0.01%
- Cross-reactivity between penicillin, cephalosporins, and carbapenem occurs in 5 to 10%
- Reactions include urticaria, anaphylaxis, and interstitial nephritis
Diarrhoea
- Common during oral therapy
- Ampicillin is associated with a low risk of pseudomembranous colitus (0.3 - 0.7%)
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption
- Intestinal absorption is variable
- Some are available only in parenteral preparations
Distribution
Protein-binding = Variable
* Ampicillin = 20%
* Flucloxacillin = 93%
Metabolism
Up to 20% metabolised
Elimination
- Half-life = short
* Benzylpencillin = 30 min
* Ampicillin = 2 hours
- 60% - 90% excreted unchanged in urine
* Mainly by renal tubular secretion
- 10% excreted in bile
Specific examples
Benzylpenicillin (Penicillin G)
- Inactivated by gastric acid
- Must be given parenterally
- Active against a wide-range of Gram-positive pathogens, Gram-negative cocci and occasional Gram-negative bacilli
- Streptococci and Neisseria are extremely sensitivity
- H. influenzae, staphylococci, and pseudomonas are resistant
Flucloxacillin
- Semi-synthetic
- Well absorbed from gut, but should be given IV for serious infection
- Less active against Gram-positive cocci than benzylpencillin, but is effective against beta-lactamase positive staphylococci
- May cause cholestatic jaundice several weeks after the end of a treatment course
Ampicillin
- Effective against the same range of organisms as benzylpenicillin (but slightly less active)
- Also has some activity against H. influenzae, Salmonella, Escherichia Coli, and E. faecalis
- Ampicillin produces a maculopapular rash in
* 10% of all patients
* 95% of patients with infectious mononucleosis
Amoxycillin
- Amoxycillin has same spectrum as ampicillin
- Better bioavailability and bactericidal to susceptible Gram-negative organism at lower concentration
Clavulanic acid
- Clavulanic acid irreversibly inhibits a large range of beta-lactamases
- Combination of amoxycillin reduces the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) against H. influenzae, E coli, Klebsiella, and Staphylococcus aureus 8 - 64 fold
Ticarcillin
- Broad spectrum (lower activity than benzylpencillin)
- Particularly indicated for use against pseudomonas
- Often combined with clavulanic acid
- Synergistic action against pseudomonas when combined with aminoglycosides
- Causes platelet dysfunction at high doses
Clinical
Special considerations
Haemodialysis
- Pencillin dose adjustment is unnecessary except for benzylpenicillin (the dose of which should be reduced by 30%)