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Inhibition of erythromycin‐resistant propionibacteria on the skin of acne patients by topical erythromycin with and without zinc
Author(s) -
BOJAR R.A.,
EADY B.A.,
JONES C.E.,
CUNIJFFH W.I.,
HOLLAND K.T.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
british journal of dermatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.304
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1365-2133
pISSN - 0007-0963
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2133.1994.tb02929.x
Subject(s) - erythromycin , acne , in vivo , microbiology and biotechnology , antibiotics , medicine , tetracycline , antibacterial agent , pharmacology , biology , dermatology
Summary Propionibacteria resistant to high concentrations of erythromycin [minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC)≥0·5 mg/ml) are now commonly isolated from the skin of antibiotic‐treated acne patients. This double‐blind study was carried out to assess the ability of 4% w·v erythromycin with and without 1–2% w/v nine acetate to reduce the numbers of erythromycin‐resistant propionibacteria in vivo, and also to monitor the acquisition of resistant strains de novo during therapy. Under laboratory conditions, erythromycin‐resistant propionibacteria were shown to be as sensitive to zinc acetate as fully sensitive strains. In vivo, the erythromycin/zinc complex and erythromycin alone produced highly significant reductions in total propionibacteria (P<0·01) and in the number of erythromycin‐resistant strains (P<0·01 at 8 weeks). After 12 weeks, resistant propionibacteria were re‐acquired, or acquired de novo. by three patients treated with erythromycin alone and four patients treated with the erythromycin/zinc complex. In contrast, changes in numbers of Micrococcaceae were slight and. after 12 weeks, erythromycin‐resistant strains were predominant in both treatment groups. In vitro MIC determinations suggested that this finding might be explained by the exceptionally high degree of erythromycin resistance displayed by some staphylococcal strains (MIC>4 mg/ml) and by the relative insensitivity of all staphylococcal strains to zinc acetate. Krythromycin with and without zinc was clinically effective, and both preparations produced significant reductions in acne grade, and inflamed and non‐inflamed lesion counts (F<0·001). In particular, 11 of 12 patients who harboured >10 3 c.f.u. erythromycin‐resistant propionibacteria/cm 2 skin pretreatment (seven on the erythromycin/zinc complex and five on erythromycin alone) showed clinical improvement, with a>50% reduction in acne grade and/or lesion count. These results show that topical 4% w/v erythromycin with and without zinc eradicates erythromycin‐resistant propionibac‐teria in vivo, and is thus therapeutlcally effective in patients who harbour such strains.