1. A pharmacometric approach to define target site-specific breakpoints for bacterial killing and resistance suppression integrating microdialysis, time–kill curves and heteroresistance data: a case study with moxifloxacin
- Author
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K. Iqbal, A. Broeker, Alina Nussbaumer-Pröll, Sebastian G. Wicha, Hartmuth Nowak, Markus Zeitlinger, Tim Rahmel, and Zoe Österreicher
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Microdialysis ,Moxifloxacin ,030106 microbiology ,Bacterial killing ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Pharmacology ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Models, Biological ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antibiotic therapy ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Bacteriological Techniques ,Resistance development ,Breakpoint ,General Medicine ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Target site ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objectives Pharmacokinetic–pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) considerations are at the heart of defining susceptibility breakpoints for antibiotic therapy. However, current approaches follow a fragmented workflow. The aim of this study was to develop an integrative pharmacometric approach to define MIC-based breakpoints for killing and suppression of resistance development for plasma and tissue sites, integrating clinical microdialysis data as well as in vitro time–kill curves and heteroresistance information, exemplified by moxifloxacin against Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli. Methods Plasma and target site samples were collected from ten patients receiving 400 mg moxifloxacin/day. In vitro time–kill studies with three S. aureus and two E. coli strains were performed and resistant subpopulations were quantified. Using these data, a hybrid physiologically based (PB) PK model and a PK-PD model were developed, and utilized to predict site-specific breakpoints. Results For both bacterial species, the predicted MIC breakpoint for stasis at 400 mg/day was 0.25 mg/L. Less reliable killing was predicted for E. coli in subcutaneous tissues where the breakpoint was 0.125 mg/L. The breakpoint for resistance suppression was 0.06 mg/L. Notably, amplification of resistant subpopulations was highest at the clinical breakpoint of 0.25 mg/L. High-dose moxifloxacin (800 mg/day) increased all breakpoints by one MIC tier. Conclusions An efficient pharmacometric approach to define susceptibility breakpoints was developed; this has the potential to streamline the process of breakpoint determination. Thereby, the approach provided additional insight into target site PK-PD and resistance development for moxifloxacin. Application of the approach to further drugs is warranted.
- Published
- 2020
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