Frimodt-Møller N
Department of Clinical Microbiology, Copenhagen County Hospitals, Lyngby.
Dan Med Bull. 1988 Oct;35(5):422-37.
The correlation between in vitro activity, pharmacokinetic properties and effect in vivo of antibiotics has so far received relatively little attention, and the optimal dosing strategy for most antibiotics is still a matter of dispute. A review on this subject is presented based on observations from an experimental pneumococcus infection model in mice. The pneumococcus is particularly suitable as pathogen in experimental infection models for antibiotic research, since it is clinically relevant, susceptible to a range of antibiotics, and naturally virulent to most laboratory animals without the need for potentiating factors. The course of pneumococcus infection in animals is discussed in detail, including the parameters for measuring antibiotic effect in vivo. In screening models the most simple and relevant parameter is survival/death of the animal, which is usually incorporated in the determination of a 50% endpoint, e.g. the ED50 (50% effective dose). Among the variety of factors of potential influence upon the ED50, the importance of the bacterial growth kinetics in vivo is emphasized. Considering the correlation of pharmacokinetic properties with effect in vivo three parameters are considered important: The peak antibiotic concentration, the area under the drug concentration curve (AUC), and the time the antibiotic concentration remains above the minimal inhibitory concentration (time greater than MIC). For the beta-lactam antibiotics evidence is accumulating that the time greater than MIC is the most important. Comparing 14 cephalosporins in the mouse-protection test with intraperitoneal inoculation of a pneumococcus type 3, the time greater than MIC calculated from the pharmacokinetic profiles of a 5 mg/mouse dose for all the 14 cephalosporins showed a high correlation with the ED50. When studying the serum antibiotic concentrations at doses similar to the ED50's for various cephalosporins and penicillins, the time greater than MIC was the parameter that varied the least. Neither the peak drug concentrations nor the AUC's showed any correlation with effect in vivo. The role of the time greater than MIC in context with other factors such as extravascular penetration of antibiotics, serum protein binding and the post-antibiotic effect is discussed. Most other experimental studies concerning dosing strategy for the beta-lactam antibiotics, including the few clinical studies available, confirm the importance of the time factor. The clinical implication for this group of antibiotics therefore is to strive for a constant, not necessarily high, concentration above the MIC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
抗生素的体外活性、药代动力学特性与体内效应之间的相关性迄今受到的关注相对较少,大多数抗生素的最佳给药策略仍存在争议。基于对小鼠实验性肺炎球菌感染模型的观察结果,本文对此主题进行了综述。肺炎球菌特别适合作为抗生素研究实验感染模型中的病原体,因为它与临床相关,对多种抗生素敏感,并且对大多数实验动物具有天然致病性,无需增强因子。详细讨论了动物体内肺炎球菌感染的过程,包括测量抗生素体内效应的参数。在筛选模型中,最简单且相关的参数是动物的存活/死亡情况,这通常用于确定50%终点,例如ED50(50%有效剂量)。在影响ED50的各种潜在因素中,强调了体内细菌生长动力学的重要性。考虑到药代动力学特性与体内效应的相关性,有三个参数被认为很重要:抗生素的峰值浓度、药物浓度曲线下面积(AUC)以及抗生素浓度保持高于最低抑菌浓度的时间(大于MIC的时间)。对于β-内酰胺类抗生素,越来越多的证据表明大于MIC的时间是最重要的。在对3型肺炎球菌进行腹腔接种的小鼠保护试验中比较14种头孢菌素时,根据5mg/小鼠剂量的药代动力学曲线计算出的所有14种头孢菌素大于MIC的时间与ED50显示出高度相关性。当研究各种头孢菌素和青霉素与ED50相似剂量下的血清抗生素浓度时,大于MIC的时间是变化最小的参数。大于MIC的时间与其他因素(如抗生素的血管外渗透、血清蛋白结合和抗生素后效应)的关系也进行了讨论。大多数其他关于β-内酰胺类抗生素给药策略的实验研究,包括现有的少数临床研究,都证实了时间因素的重要性。因此,这组抗生素的临床意义在于努力维持高于MIC的恒定浓度,不一定是高浓度。(摘要截取自400字)