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Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (1990) 25, 221-236
© 1990 The British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy


research-article

The in-vitro activity of ceftibuten against 475 clinical isolates of Gram-negative bacilli, compared with cefuroxime and cefadroxil

S. G. L. Bragman and M. W. Casewell

Department of Medical Microbiology, King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry Denmark Hill, London SE5 8RX, UK

Received 2 June 1989; accepted 5 October 1989


The in-vitro activity of ceftibuten was compared with cefuroxime and cefadroxil against 475 clinically-significant, epidemiologically-distinct isolates of Gram-negative bacilli: 170 from blood, 212 from urine and 93 from a supplementary collection of multiply-resistant strains known to have resistance plasmids, to have caused sporadic or epidemic nosocomial infection, or both. Ceftibuten MICs ranged from 0·003 to >32mg/l, with a modal MIC of 0·01 mg/l: 95% of all isolates had ceftibuten MIC values of ≤8 mg/l, the sensitivity breakpoint suggested by the manufacturer. Ninety per cent of isolates had MICs of ≤ 1 mg/l and 49% had MICs of ≤ 0·03 mg/l. All isolates of Klesiella, Serratia, Proteus and Providencia spp., and Morganella morganii had MIC values of 8 mg/l or less. Only two of 124 isolates of Escherichia coli tested, and only one of 23 Citrobacter spp., had MICs of > 8 mg/l (16, 16 and > 32 mg/l respectively). Resistance (MIC > 16 mg/l) was more frequent among /l and Acinetobacter spp. Thirteen of 52 Enterobacter spp., and seven of 18 Acinetobacter calcoaceticus had MICs of at least 32 mg/l. MIC ranges, modal MICs and MIC90s indicated that ceftibuten was, with the exception of only two strains, consistently more active in-vitro than cefuroxime, which was in turn more active than cefadroxil.


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