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A macrophage-targeted platform for extending drug dosing with polymer prodrugs for pulmonary infection prophylaxis

Authors :
Brian Lee
Thomas E.J. Chavas
Guilhem F. Rerolle
Fang-Yi Su
Debashish Roy
Elaine Limqueco
Selvi Srinivasan
T. Eoin West
Lara Lovelace-Macon
Patrick S. Stayton
Shawn J. Skerrett
Daniel M. Ratner
Source :
J Control Release
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Pulmonary melioidosis is a bacterial disease with high morbidity and a mortality rate that can be as high as 40% in resource-poor regions of South Asia. This disease burden is linked to the pathogen's intrinsic antibiotic-resistance and protected intracellular localization in alveolar macrophages. Current treatment regimens require several antibiotics with multi-month oral and intravenous administrations that are difficult to implement in the developing world. Herein, we report that a macrophage-targeted polyciprofloxacin prodrug acts as a surprisingly effective pre-exposure prophylactic in highly lethal murine models of aerosolized human pulmonary melioidosis. A single dose of the polymeric prodrug maintained high lung drug levels and targeted an intracellular depot of ciprofloxacin to the alveolar macrophage compartment that was sustained over a period of 7 days above minimal inhibitory concentrations. This intracellular pharmacokinetic profile provided complete pre-exposure protection in a BSL-3 model with a drug-resistant, aerosolized clinical isolate of Burkholderia pseudomallei from Thailand. This total protection was achieved despite the bacteria's intrinsic resistance to ciprofloxacin and where an equivalent dose of pulmonary-administered ciprofloxacin was ineffective. For the first time, we demonstrate that targeting the intracellular macrophage compartment with extended antibiotic dosing can achieve pre-exposure prophylaxis in a model of pulmonary melioidosis. This fully synthetic and modular therapeutic platform could be an important therapeutic approach with new or re-purposed antibiotics for melioidosis prevention and treatment, especially as portable inhalation devices in high-risk, resource-poor settings.

Details

ISSN :
18734995
Volume :
330
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9ee847b7e3198ca8e0422d52e40fbe20