MIC-Based Interspecies Prediction of the Antimicrobial Effects of Ciprofloxacin on Bacteria of Different Susceptibilities in an In Vitro Dynamic Model
Author(s) -
Alexander A. Firsov,
Sergey N. Vostrov,
Alexander Alekseevich Shevchenko,
Stephen H. Zinner,
Giuseppe Cornaglia,
Yury A. Portnoy
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.42.11.2848
Subject(s) - ciprofloxacin , pseudomonas aeruginosa , antimicrobial , microbiology and biotechnology , area under the curve , minimum inhibitory concentration , staphylococcus aureus , escherichia coli , antibacterial agent , biology , bacteria , antibiotics , pharmacology , biochemistry , genetics , gene
Multiple predictors of fluoroquinolone antimicrobial effects (AMEs) are not usually examined simultaneously in most studies. To compare the predictive potentials of the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC)-to-MIC ratio (AUC/MIC), the AUC above MIC (AUCeff ), and the time above MIC (T eff ), the kinetics of killing and regrowth of four bacterial strains exposed to monoexponentially decreasing concentrations of ciprofloxacin were studied in an in vitro dynamic model. The MICs of ciprofloxacin for clinical isolates ofStaphylococcus aureus ,Escherichia coli 11775 (I) and 204 (II), andPseudomonas aeruginosa were 0.6, 0.013, 0.08, and 0.15 μg/ml, respectively. The simulated values of AUC were designed to provide similar 1,000-fold (S. aureus ,E. coli I, andP. aeruginosa ) or 2,000-fold (E. coli II) ranges of the AUC/MIC. In each case except for the highest AUC/MIC ratio, the observation periods included complete regrowth in the time-kill curve studies. The AME was expressed by its intensity,I E (the area between the control growth and time-kill and regrowth curves up to the point where the viable counts of regrowing bacteria are close to the maximum values observed without drug). For most AUC ranges theI E -AUC curves were fitted by anE max (maximal effect) model, whereas the effects observed at very high AUCs were greater than those predicted by the model. The AUCs that produced 50% of maximal AME were proportional to the MICs for the strains studied, but maximal AMEs (I E max ) and the extent of sigmoidicity (s ) were not related to the MIC. BothT eff and log AUC/MIC correlated well withI E (r 2 = 0.98 in both cases) in a species-independent fashion. UnlikeT eff or log AUC/MIC, a specific relationship betweenI E and log AUCeff was inherent in each strain. Although eachI E and log AUCeff plot was fitted by linear regression (r 2 = 0.97 to 0.99), these plots were not superimposed and therefore are bacterial species dependent. Thus, AUC/MIC andT eff were better predictors of ciprofloxacin’s AME than AUCeff . This study suggests that optimal predictors of the AME produced by a given quinolone (intraquinolone predictors) may be established by examining its AMEs against bacteria of different susceptibilities.T eff was shown previously also to be the best interquinolone predictor, but unlike AUC/MIC, it cannot be used to compare different quinolones. AUC/MIC might be the best predictor of the AME in comparisons of different quinolones.
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