Medium-Dependent Variation in Bactericidal Activity of Antibiotics Against Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus

Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus resistant to bactericidal activity of antibiotics caused sepsis in three patients. Bacteriological and clinical responses were not achieved until serum and tissue fluid levels of administered antibiotics exceeded the minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) of the infecting organism. Fifteen clinical isolates of S. aureus were tested in brain heart infusion broth and Mueller-Hinton broth for the MBC of gentamicin, vancomycin, clindamycin, oxacillin, cefazolin, and cephalothin. Results showed significant eightfold or greater broth-dependent differences in the MBC of at least one antibiotic against 87% (13/15) of strains tested. The MBC was unpredictable and varied with the strain, antibiotic, and medium used. No controlled studies are available to indicate the clinical significance of the MBC demonstrated in different media. The necessity for treating serious infection with bactericidal drugs has not yet been established; however, in septicemia such as that caused by bacterial endocarditis, bacteriostatic antibiotics have generally failed to eradicate the infection, whereas bactericidal agents have often been curative. Therefore, in patients unresponsive to usual antistaphylococcal therapy, we suggest that MBC testing be performed in at least two media and that treatment be instituted with antibiotics demonstrating the lowest MBC in all media used.