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Clinical Trial
. 2000 Mar;181(3):1180-4.
doi: 10.1086/315312.

Aminoglycoside-resistance mechanisms for cystic fibrosis Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates are unchanged by long-term, intermittent, inhaled tobramycin treatment

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Clinical Trial

Aminoglycoside-resistance mechanisms for cystic fibrosis Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates are unchanged by long-term, intermittent, inhaled tobramycin treatment

D L MacLeod et al. J Infect Dis. 2000 Mar.

Abstract

Aminoglycoside-resistance mechanisms were characterized in Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates from cystic fibrosis (CF) patients during a recent clinical trial of inhaled tobramycin. Impermeability, in which bacteria have reduced susceptibility to all aminoglycosides, was the predominant mode of resistance in isolates obtained both before and after 6 months of cyclic treatment with tobramycin or placebo administered by aerosol. Enzymatic resistance mechanisms were found in fewer than 10% of resistant isolates. P. aeruginosa from individual patients could be grouped on the basis of genetic relatedness. When enzymatic resistance was involved, all isolates in a group had elevated tobramycin MICs. When impermeability occurred, MICs of a genotypic group varied from susceptible to resistant. These findings suggest that impermeability resistance occurs in only a fraction of the P. aeruginosa population in lungs of persons with CF and that this form of resistance arises by a process involving multiple small changes in MIC.

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