Lew M A, Beckett K M, Levin M J
J Infect Dis. 1977 Aug;136(2):263-70. doi: 10.1093/infdis/136.2.263.
The antifungal activities of four tetracycline analogues in combination with amphotericin B (AmB) were determined against 20 strains of Candida albicans. When a microtiter checkerboard technique was used, minocycline (less than or equal to 10 microgram/ml) acted synergistically with AmB against all strains, whereas doxycycline had a reduced effect, and demeclocycline and tetracycline had no potentiating effect at this concentration. Killing-curve experiments with two strains of C. albicans demonstrated that the combination of minocycline and AmB produced a decrease in number of colony-forming units (cfu) of greater than 2 logs in 4 hr and a 4-log decrease in cfu in 24 hr at concentrations (minocycline, 0.64 microgram/ml; AmB, 0.1 microgram/ml) that were subinhibitory when each agent was used alone and that are readily achieved in human serum and body fluids with conventional doses. The killing-curve technique indicated that doxycycline had an intermediate degree of synergistic activity, whereas tetracycline had no synergistic activity at clinically relevant concentrations.