Polymer (PEG-PE)-coated liposomes exhibit prolonged circulation time in blood and substantial localization in Klebsiella pneumoniae-infected lung tissue in rats. Therefore, to determine the therapeutic effect, gentamicin and ceftazidime were entrapped in these liposomes and administered to rats experimentally infected with pneumonia: Relatively high and sustained concentrations of liposome-associated antibiotic in blood were observed. Compared with antibiotics alone, one dose of liposome-entrapped gentamicin or ceftazidime increased the therapeutic effect of the drugs, survival of rats, and bacterial killing in lungs. One dose of liposome-entrapped ceftazidime was as effective as a continuous 2-day infusion of nonentrapped ceftazidime. Since antibiotic-containing liposomes are stable during circulation and liposome-entrapped ceftazidime and gentamicin have low bactericidal activity in vitro, the superior therapeutic effect of the liposome-encapsulated antibiotics results from localization and subsequent degradation of liposomes and the resulting release of entrapped antibiotic at the infection site.
The therapeutic efficacy of long-circulating polyethylene glycol-coated liposomal amphotericin B (AMB) (PEG-AMB-LIP) was compared with that of AMB desoxycholate (Fungizone) in a model of severe invasive pulmonary aspergillosis in persistently leukopenic rats as well as in temporarily leukopenic rats. PEG-AMB-LIP treatment (intravenous administration) consisted of a single, or double (every 72 h), or triple (every 72 h) dose of 10 mg of AMB/kg of body weight, a double dose (every 72 h) of 14 mg of AMB/kg, or a 5-day treatment (every 24 h) with 6 mg/kg/dose. AMB desoxycholate was administered for 10 consecutive days at 1 mg of AMB/kg/dose. Treatment was started 30 h after fungal inoculation, at which time mycelial growth was firmly established. Both persistently and temporarily leukopenic rats died between 4 and 9 days after Aspergillus fumigatus inoculation when they were left untreated or after treatment with a placebo. In persistently leukopenic rats, a single dose of PEG-AMB-LIP (10 mg/kg) was as effective as the 10-day treatment with AMB desoxycholate (at 1 mg/kg/dose) in significantly prolonging the survival of rats infected with A. fumigatus and in reducing the dissemination of A. fumigatus to the liver. Prolongation of PEG-AMB-LIP treatment (double or triple dose or 5-day treatment) did not further improve efficacy. For temporarily leukopenic rats no major advances in efficacy were achieved compared to those for persistently leukopenic rats, probably because the leukocyte numbers in blood were restored too late in the course of infection.
Antimicrobial agents may interact synergistically when both drugs are present at the infected site for an adequate period of time at sufficient concentrations. Generally speaking, the agents in the combination show different tissue distributions and pharmacokinetics. By co-encapsulation of the drugs in a drug carrier, like liposomes, parallel tissue distributions of both drugs may be ensured and drug concentrations at the site of infection may be increased. In this presentation therapeutic efficacy of liposome-co-encapsulated gentamicin (GN) and ceftazidime (CZ) will be shown in a GN-CZ-susceptible and GN-CZ-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae-pneumonia in rats.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.