RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: Antibiotic combinations are often used for carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) but more data are needed on the optimal selection of drugs. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of a novel automated method based on time-lapse microscopy (the oCelloScope, Philips BioCell A/S, Allerød, Denmark) to determine in vitro combination effects against CPE and to discuss advantages and limitations of the oCelloScope in relation to standard methods. METHODS: Four Klebsiella pneumoniae and two Escherichia coli were exposed to colistin, meropenem, rifampin and tigecycline, alone and in combination. In the oCelloScope experiments, a background corrected absorption (BCA) value of ≤8 at 24 h was used as a primary cut-off indicating inhibition of bacterial growth. A new approach was used to determine synergy, indifference and antagonism based on the number of objects (bacteria) in the images. Static time-kill experiments were performed for comparison. RESULTS: The time-kill experiments showed synergy with 12 of 36 regimens, most frequently with colistin plus rifampin. BCA values ≤8 consistently correlated with 24-h bacterial concentrations ≤6 log10 CFU/mL. The classification of combination effects agreed with the time-kill results for 33 of 36 regimens. In three cases, the interactions could not be classified with the microscopy method because of low object counts. CONCLUSIONS: Automated time-lapse microscopy can accurately determine the effects of antibiotic combinations. The novel method is highly efficient compared with time-kill experiments, more informative than checkerboards and can be useful to accelerate the screening for combinations active against multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria.