International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jan 2021)

Is the term “anti-anaerobic” still relevant?

  • Paul-Louis Woerther,
  • Camille d’Humières,
  • Xavier Lescure,
  • Luc Dubreuil,
  • Christophe Rodriguez,
  • François Barbier,
  • Vincent Fihman,
  • Etienne Ruppé

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102
pp. 178 – 180

Abstract

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For decades, the term “anti-anaerobic” has been commonly used to refer to antibiotics exhibiting activity against anaerobic bacteria, also designated as anaerobes. This term is used in various situations ranging from infections associated with well-identified pathogens like Clostridioides difficile, or Fusobacterium necrophorum in Lemierre’s syndrome, that require specific antibiotic treatments to polymicrobial infections generally resulting from the decreased permeability of anatomical barriers (e.g., intestinal translocation and stercoral peritonitis) or infectious secondary localizations (e.g., brain abscess and infectious pleurisy). In these cases, the causal bacteria generally remain unidentified and the antimicrobial treatment is empirical. However, major progress in the knowledge of human bacterial microbiotas in the last 10 years has shown how diverse are the species involved in these communities. Here, we sought to reappraise the concept of anti-anaerobic spectrum in the light of recent advances in the microbiota field. We first highlight that the term anaerobic itself does not represent the tremendous diversity of the bacteria it spans, and then we stress that the antibiotic susceptibility profiles for most anaerobic bacteria remain unaddressed. Furthermore, we provide examples challenging the relevance of the “anti-anaerobic” spectrum from a clinical and ecological perspective.

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