Immunobiology Section, Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Center for Discovery and Innovation, Hackensack Meridian Health, Nutley, New Jersey, USA.
mBio. 2023 Apr 25;14(2):e0035323. doi: 10.1128/mbio.00353-23. Epub 2023 Mar 6.
Antituberculosis therapy (ATT) causes a rapid and distinct alteration in the composition of the intestinal microbiota that is long lasting in both mice and humans. This observation raised the question of whether such antibiotic-induced changes in the microbiome might affect the absorption or gut metabolism of the tuberculosis (TB) drugs themselves. To address this issue, we utilized a murine model of antibiotic-induced dysbiosis to assay the bioavailability of rifampicin, moxifloxacin, pyrazinamide, and isoniazid in mouse plasma over a period of 12 h following individual oral administration. We found that 4-week pretreatment with a regimen of isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide (HRZ), a drug combination used clinically for ATT, failed to reduce the exposure of any of the four antibiotics assayed. Nevertheless, mice that received a pretreatment cocktail of the broad-spectrum antibiotics vancomycin, ampicllin, neomycin, and metronidazole (VANM), which are known to deplete the intestinal microbiota, displayed a significant decrease in the plasma concentration of rifampicin and moxifloxacin during the assay period, an observation that was validated in germfree animals. In contrast, no major effects were observed when similarly pretreated mice were exposed to pyrazinamide or isoniazid. Thus, the data from this animal model study indicate that the dysbiosis induced by HRZ does not reduce the bioavailability of the drugs themselves. Nevertheless, our observations suggest that more extreme alterations of the microbiota, such as those occurring in patients on broad-spectrum antibiotics, could directly or indirectly affect the exposure of important TB drugs and thereby potentially influencing treatment outcome. Previous studies have shown that treatment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection with first-line antibiotics results in a long-lasting disruption of the host microbiota. Since the microbiome has been shown to influence the host availability of other drugs, we employed a mouse model to ask whether the dysbiosis resulting from either tuberculosis (TB) chemotherapy or a more aggressive course of broad-spectrum antibiotics might influence the pharmacokinetics of the TB antibiotics themselves. While drug exposure was not reduced in animals previously described as exhibiting the dysbiosis triggered by conventional TB chemotherapy, we found that mice with other alterations in the microbiome, such as those triggered by more intensive antibiotic treatment, displayed decreased availability of rifampicin and moxifloxacin, which in turn could impact their efficacy. The above findings are relevant not only to TB but also to other bacterial infections treated with these two broader spectrum antibiotics.
抗结核治疗(ATT)会导致肠道微生物组迅速而明显的改变,这种改变在小鼠和人类中都是持久的。这一观察结果引发了一个问题,即这种抗生素引起的微生物组变化是否会影响结核(TB)药物本身的吸收或肠道代谢。为了解决这个问题,我们利用一种抗生素诱导的肠道微生物失调的小鼠模型,在单独口服给药后 12 小时内检测利福平、莫西沙星、吡嗪酰胺和异烟肼在小鼠血浆中的生物利用度。我们发现,用异烟肼、利福平和吡嗪酰胺(HRZ)进行 4 周预处理,这是一种用于 ATT 的临床药物组合,并没有降低所检测的四种抗生素中的任何一种的暴露量。然而,接受广谱抗生素万古霉素、氨苄西林、新霉素和甲硝唑(VANM)预处理鸡尾酒的小鼠在检测期间显示利福平和莫西沙星的血浆浓度显著降低,这一观察结果在无菌动物中得到了验证。相比之下,当同样预处理的小鼠暴露于吡嗪酰胺或异烟肼时,没有观察到主要影响。因此,这项动物模型研究的数据表明,HRZ 诱导的肠道微生物失调不会降低药物本身的生物利用度。然而,我们的观察结果表明,更极端的微生物群改变,如广谱抗生素治疗患者中发生的改变,可能会直接或间接地影响重要的 TB 药物的暴露,从而可能影响治疗结果。以前的研究表明,用一线抗生素治疗结核分枝杆菌感染会导致宿主微生物组的长期破坏。由于微生物组已被证明会影响其他药物在宿主中的可用性,我们利用小鼠模型来询问结核(TB)化疗或更激进的广谱抗生素治疗引起的肠道微生物失调是否会影响 TB 抗生素本身的药代动力学。虽然在以前描述的表现出由常规 TB 化疗引发的肠道微生物失调的动物中,药物暴露没有减少,但我们发现,微生物组发生其他改变的小鼠,如更密集的抗生素治疗引起的改变,显示出利福平和莫西沙星的可用性降低,这反过来又会影响它们的疗效。这些发现不仅与结核病有关,也与其他用这两种更广泛谱抗生素治疗的细菌感染有关。