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Antibacterial resistance worldwide
   Optimism of the early period of antimicrobial discovery

Tempered by the emergence of bacterial strains with resistance to
  therapeutics

We enter an era where bacterial infections (bloodstream infections
 and ventilator-associated pneumonia) → no longer be successfully
 treated with Antibiotics.
  We now face a dramatic challenge resulting from two combined
 problems:
 First, microorganisms are becoming extremely resistant to
 existing antibiotics, in particular Gram-negative rods (e.g.,
 Escherichia coli, Salmonella spp, Klebsiella spp, Pseudomonas
 aeruginosa, Acinetobacter spp), which are resistant to almost all
 currently available antibiotics in some settings.
 Second, the antibiotic pipeline has become extremely dry
1. Increased Resistance &
  Prevalence Worldwide
Emergence and dissemination of new
  mechanisms of resistance, e.g., novel
  extended-spectrum beta-lactamases
  (ESBL) and carbapenemases . The
  spread of the new resistance gene, the New
  Delhi metallo-betalactamase (NDM-1), or
  other carbapenemases in
  Enterobacteriacae is alarming because
  these “superbugs” are resistant to most
  available antibiotics and can disseminate
  worldwide very rapidly, in particular as a
  consequence of medical tourism
Ref: Ready for a world without antibiotics? The Pensières
  Antibiotic Resistance Call to Action by Jean Carlet in
  Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control 2012
  http://www.aricjournal.com/content/1/1/11
Epidemiology: Global
Europe
 In Europe, the European Centre for Disease
 Prevention and Control (ECDC) reported that
 25,000 people die each year from antibiotic-
 resistant bacteria.
 Multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) result in
 massive extra healthcare costs and productivity
 losses of at least 1.5 billion euros each year in
 Europe (Ref: Combating Antimicrobial Resistance: 2011 is the year of
                                    “No action today, No cureTomorrow”
                                   by Daxesh M.P, in Indian Journal of
                                   Pharmacy Practice )
USA
In the USA, the annual cost of AMR in hospitals is
estimated at more than US$ 20 billion.
In the US, two thirds of deaths due to bacterial
infections are caused by Gram-negative bacteria
The Canadian Committee on Antibiotic Resistance
developed a model that suggested resistant infections
add $14 to $26 million in direct hospitalization costs
to health care cost in Canada
Massive emergence of ESBLs in Ghana
with low socioeconomic income
Antibiotic susceptibility proportions for NDM-1-positive
Enterobacteriaceae isolated in the UK and India (Kumarasamyet al.
Lancet Infect Dis 2010)
  Antibiotics         UK (n=37)     Chennai (n=44)   Haryana(n=26)

  Imipenem
                      0%            0%               0%
  Meropenem           3%            3%               3%
  Piperacillin-Tazo   0%            0%               0%
  Cefotaxime          0%            0%               0%
  Ceftazidime         0%            0%               0%
  Cefpirome           0%            0%               0%
  Aztreonam           11%           0%               8%
  Ciprofloxacin       8%            8%               8%
  Gentamicin          3%            3%               3%
  Tobramycin          0%            0%               0%
  Amikacin            0%            0%               0%
  Minocycline         0%            0%               0%
  Tigecycline         64%           56%              67%
  Colistin            89%           94%              100%
ASIA
        ESBL-producing bacteria are frequently causing
        infections in newborns. In an Indian hospital,
        Klebsiella and E.coli were the most common Gram-
        negative bacteria among infants with BSIs. About
        33% of ESBL-infections were deadly in spite of
        available newer antibiotics and other supportive care.

        In a study from Pakistan, 37 of 78 newborns (less
        than 6 days old) with infections due to Acinetobacter
        died within a short time frame. 71% of the bacteria
        were resistant to all antibiotics except polymyxin.


Ref: A fact sheet from ReAct - Action on Antibiotic Resistance,www.reactgroup.org, May 2012
Initiatives Worldwide
AMR became an important issue in the 1960s when resistance
 plasmid and transmissibility were detected.
 WHO recognized global AMR threat in 1998
 WHO developed the Global Strategy for the containment of
 Antimicrobial Resistance in 2001
 WHO and member states observed 2011 as the year of
 Antimicrobial resistance to building momentum for
 rational use of antibiotics: No action today, No cure
 tomorrow
 The World Health Organization (WHO estimates that up to
 40% of health care costs are related to procurement of
 medicines.
Increased Resistance
 Prevalence in India
INDIA
ESBL & MBL Prevalence in India:
   In 2008-2010, P aeruginosa more resistant against
  ceftazidime [53.17%]
  Increased resistance to cephotaxime- 50.79%, netilmicin
  45.23%, gentamicin - 38.09%, amikacin -36.50%,
  ciprofloxacin- 46.82% and piperacillin- 41.26 %.
   Among 126 Pseudomonas aeruginosa , 22.22% were ESBL
  producers. 69 % strains were resistant to carbapenem.
   MBLs in the imipenem resistant isolates was 62.5%.
The study suggested that the carbapenem resistance in P.
  aeruginosa was mediated predominantly via MBL
  production.
(Source: and MBL Mediated Resistance in Aeruginosa, by Durwas Peshattiwar et al,of
   Clinical and Diagnostic Research. 2011)
As per a latest report, ESBL production rate was
 70% in E. coli and 60% in Klebsiella spp. in
 India respectively for the year 2010. (Source: Detection of
  TEM and SHV genes in coli pneumoniae in a tertiary care hospital from India, by
  Sharma, J et al, J Med )



Very recently in 2011, TEM and CTX-M were
 predominantly found in E. coli (39.2%) and
 among the Klebsiella spp., TEM, SHV and CTX-
 M occurred together in 42.6% of the isolates.
  (Source: Correlation of TEM, SHV and CTX-M extended-spectrum beta
  lactamases among Enterobacteriaceae with their vitro susceptibility, Manoharan,
  A et al, Journal of Medical Microbiology 2011)
2. Declining Antibiotics
        Pipeline
Dwindling Trend of Antibiotics




Ref: Policy Responces to the growing threat of Antibiotic Resistance in extending the cure.org
The FDA approved new antibiotics in the past years (those
with novel mechanisms of action are shaded) (Ref: Policy Responces to
the growing threat of Antibiotic Resistance in extendingthecure.org)
Reasons of Dwindling Trend
The antibiotic pipeline is drying up for foll. reasons:
   It is intrinsically difficult to find new antibiotics with
  novel mechanisms of action.
   A high cost/benefit and risk/benefit ratio (length of
  development, low selling prices, and short treatments)
  discourage pharmaceutical companies from investment.
   There is strong competition with other drugs already
  on the market. While resistance is an emerging problem,
  low-priced generic antibiotics on the market are still
  effective in treating most infections and are used as first-
  line therapy.
Regardless of the reasons → companies have to
deal with the reality → there are less new
products being approved → therefore they are
failing to achieve their potential to provide
treatment for patients and commercial benefits to
their companies.
Treatment of ESBL‐producing organisms has become
limited by increasing resistance. However, over 95% of
ESBL‐ producing Enterobacteriaceae are still
susceptible to certain antibiotics → carbepenems,
amikacin, tigecycline and β‐lactam/β‐lactamase inhibitor
combinations.
In some clinical studies, fosfomycin and nitrofurantoin
prove to be good alternatives for urinary tract infections
Recent Novel Approaches
Novel approaches to developing new
antibiotics for bacterial infections
  After more than 50 years of success, the pharmaceutical
 industry is now producing too few antibiotics, particularly
 against Gram-negative organisms, to replace antibiotics that
 are no longer effective for many types of infection.
  Genomics, non-culturable bacteria, bacteriophages and
 non-multiplying bacteria may also be a source of novel
 compounds.
Current methods of antibiotic development:
   Natural compounds: non-culturable bacteria as target:
Bacteria produce antibiotics that kill or inhibit the replication of competitors. To
  date, marketed antibiotics such as streptomycin have been derived from bacteria
  that grow on artificial solid or liquid media. Marketed antibiotics have not been
  isolated from non-culturable bacteria, since growth on solid media has been an
  essential step to the development antibiotics. Now, it is possible to clone large
  fragments of non-culturable bacterial genomes and to express them using
  recombinant DNA technology


   The genomics revolution:
Genomics is used to select potential antibacterial targets and can also be used to
  provide insights into, for example, pathogenesis and antibiotic resistance.
  GlaxoSmithKline used a genomics-derived, targetbased approach to
  antibiotic discovery for 7 years, in which they examined more than 300 genes
  and employed 70 highthroughput screening campaigns, but did not develop an
  antibiotic into the market (Payne et al., 2007).
Bacteriophages
Bacteriophages and their fragments kill bacteria. It is estimated that every 2
  days, half of the world’s bacterial population is destroyed by bacteriophages
Bacteriophages have been used as antibacterials in humans in some countries
  of the world. Indeed, in the last century, just before the introduction of
  penicillin and sulpha drugs, phage preparations were sold in the United
  States of America. Even as far as in 2001, bacteriophages were used in
  the former Soviet Union to treat patients with infectious diseases.
The development of phage gene products is another potential route for new
  antibacterials. Phage lysins, have potential uses as antibacterials for human
  use. A particularly interesting finding is that lysins may be active against
  non-multiplying bacteria and biofilms. This could help in the treatment
  of, for example, catheter-associated infections.
Currently, there is a lack of good human clinical trial results, although
  animal studies suggest that in certain circumstances, bacteriophage therapy
  may be useful.
Non-multiplying bacteria as targets:
Bacteria exist in two different states in a clinical infection, such as
  tuberculosis, bacterial endocarditis, biofilms and streptococcal sore throat.
  The states are described as multiplying (logarithmic phase) and non-
  multiplying (sometimes called stationary phase, dormant or latent).
Currently marketed antibiotics are bacteriostatic for non-multiplying bacteria,
  although some of them, such as the penicillins, are highly bactericidal for
  multiplying organisms.
The advantage of an antibiotic that is bactericidal for nonmultiplying
  bacteria is that the duration of therapy may be shortened. This
  presumes that all the multiplying and nonmultiplying target bacteria are
  quickly killed by an antibiotic or by a combination of compounds.



(Ref: Novel approaches to developing new antibiotics for bacterial infections
  by ARM Coates and Y Hu in British Journal of Pharmacology (2007)
Need for Antibiotics
 Adjuvant Entities
The need for new generations of anti-infective
agents, and in particular new antibacterial agents,
is constant, as the emergence of resistance is largely a
question of when and not if ?
 Current antibiotics include the fourth generation of
beta lactams and the third generation of macrolides.
 However, significantly new approaches and
strategies for breakthrough molecules have not
been forthcoming.
There are examples of recent strategies for
development of adjunctive antibiotic therapies that
overcome microbial resistance and thus rejuvenate the
existing arsenal of drugs.
 Recent studies → demonstrated potential of compounds
that inhibit the action of the repressor protein implicated
in ethionamide resistance → stimulating activation of the
drug and thereby restoring the activity of the antibiotic
for treatment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
 Such specific interference with regulators or signal
transduction mechanisms involved in antibiotic resistance
or virulence → new toolbox for novel combinations of
antimicrobial drugs with adjuvant molecules lacking
intrinsic antibiotic activity.
Adjuvant strategies for potentiation of
antibiotics to overcome antimicrobial resistance
(Michel Pieren and Marcel Tigges, Current Opinion in Pharmacology 2012,
www.sciencedirect.com)

 The most important defence mechanisms utilized by
   bacteria to neutralize antibiotic drug action comprise
    Upregulation of active efflux and downregulation of
   outer membrane permeability thus inhibiting intracellular
   accumulation of the drug,
    Antibiotic target mutation,
    Enzymatic detoxification of the drug, and
    Compensatory pathways that bypass the drug target.
Combination therapy regularly used by clinicians
→ suffers from side effects, difficult dosing and the
potential selection of multidrug resistant
phenotypes.
 Therefore, combination of an antibiotic with a
non-toxic adjuvant compound → preferable.
 Potential points of intervention for such an
adjuvant compound could be → (i) signal
integration and processing, (ii) regulation of
virulence and resistance gene expression, (iii)
activity of effector molecules
Prospective Study for Antimicrobial Susceptibility of
Escherichia coli Isolated from Various Clinical Specimens in
India (Manu Chaudhary and Anurag Payasi in J Microb Biochem Technol 4: 157-
160. doi:10.4172/1948-5948.1000088)
     Microbial efficacy of a new Antibiotic Adjuvant Entity (AAE),
    which is a combination of a non-antibiotic adjuvant Ethylenediamine
    Tetraacetic Acid disodium (EDTA) along with β-lactam and β-
    lactamase inhibitor, altogether termed as ceftriaxone plus EDTA
    plus sulbactam (CSE1034) was studied and compared.
     Results obtained in the current research clearly demonstrate the
    good in-vitro activity of ceftriaxone plus EDTA plus sulbactam
    (CSE1034) against ESBLs, as well as MβLs producing E. coli.
    However, penems exhibited in-vitro activity against only ESBLs
    producing E. coli.
     Hence, in case of infection with MβLs producing E. coli,
    ceftriaxone plus EDTA plus sulbactam (CSE1034) can be of drug
    of choice for the treatment.
Anti Microbial Resistance (AMR)

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Anti Microbial Resistance (AMR)

  • 1.
  • 2. Antibacterial resistance worldwide Optimism of the early period of antimicrobial discovery Tempered by the emergence of bacterial strains with resistance to therapeutics We enter an era where bacterial infections (bloodstream infections and ventilator-associated pneumonia) → no longer be successfully treated with Antibiotics. We now face a dramatic challenge resulting from two combined problems: First, microorganisms are becoming extremely resistant to existing antibiotics, in particular Gram-negative rods (e.g., Escherichia coli, Salmonella spp, Klebsiella spp, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Acinetobacter spp), which are resistant to almost all currently available antibiotics in some settings. Second, the antibiotic pipeline has become extremely dry
  • 3. 1. Increased Resistance & Prevalence Worldwide
  • 4. Emergence and dissemination of new mechanisms of resistance, e.g., novel extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBL) and carbapenemases . The spread of the new resistance gene, the New Delhi metallo-betalactamase (NDM-1), or other carbapenemases in Enterobacteriacae is alarming because these “superbugs” are resistant to most available antibiotics and can disseminate worldwide very rapidly, in particular as a consequence of medical tourism Ref: Ready for a world without antibiotics? The Pensières Antibiotic Resistance Call to Action by Jean Carlet in Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control 2012 http://www.aricjournal.com/content/1/1/11
  • 6. Europe In Europe, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) reported that 25,000 people die each year from antibiotic- resistant bacteria. Multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) result in massive extra healthcare costs and productivity losses of at least 1.5 billion euros each year in Europe (Ref: Combating Antimicrobial Resistance: 2011 is the year of “No action today, No cureTomorrow” by Daxesh M.P, in Indian Journal of Pharmacy Practice )
  • 7. USA In the USA, the annual cost of AMR in hospitals is estimated at more than US$ 20 billion. In the US, two thirds of deaths due to bacterial infections are caused by Gram-negative bacteria The Canadian Committee on Antibiotic Resistance developed a model that suggested resistant infections add $14 to $26 million in direct hospitalization costs to health care cost in Canada
  • 8. Massive emergence of ESBLs in Ghana with low socioeconomic income
  • 9. Antibiotic susceptibility proportions for NDM-1-positive Enterobacteriaceae isolated in the UK and India (Kumarasamyet al. Lancet Infect Dis 2010) Antibiotics UK (n=37) Chennai (n=44) Haryana(n=26) Imipenem 0% 0% 0% Meropenem 3% 3% 3% Piperacillin-Tazo 0% 0% 0% Cefotaxime 0% 0% 0% Ceftazidime 0% 0% 0% Cefpirome 0% 0% 0% Aztreonam 11% 0% 8% Ciprofloxacin 8% 8% 8% Gentamicin 3% 3% 3% Tobramycin 0% 0% 0% Amikacin 0% 0% 0% Minocycline 0% 0% 0% Tigecycline 64% 56% 67% Colistin 89% 94% 100%
  • 10. ASIA ESBL-producing bacteria are frequently causing infections in newborns. In an Indian hospital, Klebsiella and E.coli were the most common Gram- negative bacteria among infants with BSIs. About 33% of ESBL-infections were deadly in spite of available newer antibiotics and other supportive care. In a study from Pakistan, 37 of 78 newborns (less than 6 days old) with infections due to Acinetobacter died within a short time frame. 71% of the bacteria were resistant to all antibiotics except polymyxin. Ref: A fact sheet from ReAct - Action on Antibiotic Resistance,www.reactgroup.org, May 2012
  • 11. Initiatives Worldwide AMR became an important issue in the 1960s when resistance plasmid and transmissibility were detected. WHO recognized global AMR threat in 1998 WHO developed the Global Strategy for the containment of Antimicrobial Resistance in 2001 WHO and member states observed 2011 as the year of Antimicrobial resistance to building momentum for rational use of antibiotics: No action today, No cure tomorrow The World Health Organization (WHO estimates that up to 40% of health care costs are related to procurement of medicines.
  • 13. INDIA ESBL & MBL Prevalence in India: In 2008-2010, P aeruginosa more resistant against ceftazidime [53.17%] Increased resistance to cephotaxime- 50.79%, netilmicin 45.23%, gentamicin - 38.09%, amikacin -36.50%, ciprofloxacin- 46.82% and piperacillin- 41.26 %. Among 126 Pseudomonas aeruginosa , 22.22% were ESBL producers. 69 % strains were resistant to carbapenem. MBLs in the imipenem resistant isolates was 62.5%. The study suggested that the carbapenem resistance in P. aeruginosa was mediated predominantly via MBL production. (Source: and MBL Mediated Resistance in Aeruginosa, by Durwas Peshattiwar et al,of Clinical and Diagnostic Research. 2011)
  • 14. As per a latest report, ESBL production rate was 70% in E. coli and 60% in Klebsiella spp. in India respectively for the year 2010. (Source: Detection of TEM and SHV genes in coli pneumoniae in a tertiary care hospital from India, by Sharma, J et al, J Med ) Very recently in 2011, TEM and CTX-M were predominantly found in E. coli (39.2%) and among the Klebsiella spp., TEM, SHV and CTX- M occurred together in 42.6% of the isolates. (Source: Correlation of TEM, SHV and CTX-M extended-spectrum beta lactamases among Enterobacteriaceae with their vitro susceptibility, Manoharan, A et al, Journal of Medical Microbiology 2011)
  • 16. Dwindling Trend of Antibiotics Ref: Policy Responces to the growing threat of Antibiotic Resistance in extending the cure.org
  • 17. The FDA approved new antibiotics in the past years (those with novel mechanisms of action are shaded) (Ref: Policy Responces to the growing threat of Antibiotic Resistance in extendingthecure.org)
  • 18. Reasons of Dwindling Trend The antibiotic pipeline is drying up for foll. reasons: It is intrinsically difficult to find new antibiotics with novel mechanisms of action. A high cost/benefit and risk/benefit ratio (length of development, low selling prices, and short treatments) discourage pharmaceutical companies from investment. There is strong competition with other drugs already on the market. While resistance is an emerging problem, low-priced generic antibiotics on the market are still effective in treating most infections and are used as first- line therapy.
  • 19. Regardless of the reasons → companies have to deal with the reality → there are less new products being approved → therefore they are failing to achieve their potential to provide treatment for patients and commercial benefits to their companies.
  • 20. Treatment of ESBL‐producing organisms has become limited by increasing resistance. However, over 95% of ESBL‐ producing Enterobacteriaceae are still susceptible to certain antibiotics → carbepenems, amikacin, tigecycline and β‐lactam/β‐lactamase inhibitor combinations. In some clinical studies, fosfomycin and nitrofurantoin prove to be good alternatives for urinary tract infections
  • 22. Novel approaches to developing new antibiotics for bacterial infections After more than 50 years of success, the pharmaceutical industry is now producing too few antibiotics, particularly against Gram-negative organisms, to replace antibiotics that are no longer effective for many types of infection. Genomics, non-culturable bacteria, bacteriophages and non-multiplying bacteria may also be a source of novel compounds.
  • 23. Current methods of antibiotic development: Natural compounds: non-culturable bacteria as target: Bacteria produce antibiotics that kill or inhibit the replication of competitors. To date, marketed antibiotics such as streptomycin have been derived from bacteria that grow on artificial solid or liquid media. Marketed antibiotics have not been isolated from non-culturable bacteria, since growth on solid media has been an essential step to the development antibiotics. Now, it is possible to clone large fragments of non-culturable bacterial genomes and to express them using recombinant DNA technology The genomics revolution: Genomics is used to select potential antibacterial targets and can also be used to provide insights into, for example, pathogenesis and antibiotic resistance. GlaxoSmithKline used a genomics-derived, targetbased approach to antibiotic discovery for 7 years, in which they examined more than 300 genes and employed 70 highthroughput screening campaigns, but did not develop an antibiotic into the market (Payne et al., 2007).
  • 24. Bacteriophages Bacteriophages and their fragments kill bacteria. It is estimated that every 2 days, half of the world’s bacterial population is destroyed by bacteriophages Bacteriophages have been used as antibacterials in humans in some countries of the world. Indeed, in the last century, just before the introduction of penicillin and sulpha drugs, phage preparations were sold in the United States of America. Even as far as in 2001, bacteriophages were used in the former Soviet Union to treat patients with infectious diseases. The development of phage gene products is another potential route for new antibacterials. Phage lysins, have potential uses as antibacterials for human use. A particularly interesting finding is that lysins may be active against non-multiplying bacteria and biofilms. This could help in the treatment of, for example, catheter-associated infections. Currently, there is a lack of good human clinical trial results, although animal studies suggest that in certain circumstances, bacteriophage therapy may be useful.
  • 25. Non-multiplying bacteria as targets: Bacteria exist in two different states in a clinical infection, such as tuberculosis, bacterial endocarditis, biofilms and streptococcal sore throat. The states are described as multiplying (logarithmic phase) and non- multiplying (sometimes called stationary phase, dormant or latent). Currently marketed antibiotics are bacteriostatic for non-multiplying bacteria, although some of them, such as the penicillins, are highly bactericidal for multiplying organisms. The advantage of an antibiotic that is bactericidal for nonmultiplying bacteria is that the duration of therapy may be shortened. This presumes that all the multiplying and nonmultiplying target bacteria are quickly killed by an antibiotic or by a combination of compounds. (Ref: Novel approaches to developing new antibiotics for bacterial infections by ARM Coates and Y Hu in British Journal of Pharmacology (2007)
  • 26. Need for Antibiotics Adjuvant Entities
  • 27. The need for new generations of anti-infective agents, and in particular new antibacterial agents, is constant, as the emergence of resistance is largely a question of when and not if ? Current antibiotics include the fourth generation of beta lactams and the third generation of macrolides. However, significantly new approaches and strategies for breakthrough molecules have not been forthcoming.
  • 28. There are examples of recent strategies for development of adjunctive antibiotic therapies that overcome microbial resistance and thus rejuvenate the existing arsenal of drugs. Recent studies → demonstrated potential of compounds that inhibit the action of the repressor protein implicated in ethionamide resistance → stimulating activation of the drug and thereby restoring the activity of the antibiotic for treatment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Such specific interference with regulators or signal transduction mechanisms involved in antibiotic resistance or virulence → new toolbox for novel combinations of antimicrobial drugs with adjuvant molecules lacking intrinsic antibiotic activity.
  • 29. Adjuvant strategies for potentiation of antibiotics to overcome antimicrobial resistance (Michel Pieren and Marcel Tigges, Current Opinion in Pharmacology 2012, www.sciencedirect.com) The most important defence mechanisms utilized by bacteria to neutralize antibiotic drug action comprise Upregulation of active efflux and downregulation of outer membrane permeability thus inhibiting intracellular accumulation of the drug, Antibiotic target mutation, Enzymatic detoxification of the drug, and Compensatory pathways that bypass the drug target.
  • 30. Combination therapy regularly used by clinicians → suffers from side effects, difficult dosing and the potential selection of multidrug resistant phenotypes. Therefore, combination of an antibiotic with a non-toxic adjuvant compound → preferable. Potential points of intervention for such an adjuvant compound could be → (i) signal integration and processing, (ii) regulation of virulence and resistance gene expression, (iii) activity of effector molecules
  • 31. Prospective Study for Antimicrobial Susceptibility of Escherichia coli Isolated from Various Clinical Specimens in India (Manu Chaudhary and Anurag Payasi in J Microb Biochem Technol 4: 157- 160. doi:10.4172/1948-5948.1000088) Microbial efficacy of a new Antibiotic Adjuvant Entity (AAE), which is a combination of a non-antibiotic adjuvant Ethylenediamine Tetraacetic Acid disodium (EDTA) along with β-lactam and β- lactamase inhibitor, altogether termed as ceftriaxone plus EDTA plus sulbactam (CSE1034) was studied and compared. Results obtained in the current research clearly demonstrate the good in-vitro activity of ceftriaxone plus EDTA plus sulbactam (CSE1034) against ESBLs, as well as MβLs producing E. coli. However, penems exhibited in-vitro activity against only ESBLs producing E. coli. Hence, in case of infection with MβLs producing E. coli, ceftriaxone plus EDTA plus sulbactam (CSE1034) can be of drug of choice for the treatment.