Dynamic PET Reveals Compartmentalized Brain and Lung Tissue Antibiotic Exposures.
Sanjay K JainXueyi ChenBhavatharini ArunOscar Nino MezaMona SarhanMedha SinghByeonghoon JeonKishor ManeMaunank ShahElizabeth TuckerLaurence CarrollJoel S FreundlichCharles PeloquinVijay IvaturiPublished in: Research square (2024)
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a leading cause of death, but antibiotic treatments for tuberculous meningitis, the deadliest form of TB, are based on those developed for pulmonary TB and not optimized for brain penetration. Here, we performed first-in-human dynamic 18 F-pretomanid positron emission tomography (PET) studies in eight human subjects for three-dimensional, multi-compartmental in situ visualization of antibiotic concentration-time exposures (area under the curve - AUC), demonstrating preferential brain (AUC tissue/plasma 2.25) versus lung (AUC tissue/plasma 0.97) tissue partitioning. Preferential, antibiotic-specific partitioning into brain or lung tissues of antibiotics active against MDR strains were confirmed in experimentally-infected mice and rabbits, using dynamic PET with chemically identical antibiotic radioanalogs, and postmortem mass spectrometry measurements. PET-facilitated pharmacokinetic modeling predicted human dosing necessary to attain therapeutic brain exposures in human subjects. These data were used to design optimized, pretomanid-based regimens which were evaluated at human equipotent dosing in a mouse model of TB meningitis, demonstrating excellent bactericidal activity without an increase in intracerebral inflammation or brain injury. Importantly, several antibiotic regimens demonstrated discordant activities in brain and lung tissues in the same animal, correlating with the compartmentalized tissue exposures of the component antibiotics. These data provide a mechanistic basis for the compartmentalized activities of antibiotic regimens, with important implications for the development of antimicrobial regimens for meningitis and other infections in compartments with unique antibiotic penetration.
Keyphrases
- positron emission tomography
- endothelial cells
- computed tomography
- brain injury
- white matter
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- resting state
- pet ct
- cerebral ischemia
- air pollution
- pluripotent stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- multiple sclerosis
- pet imaging
- emergency department
- gene expression
- cerebrospinal fluid
- electronic health record
- multidrug resistant
- machine learning
- ms ms
- type diabetes
- big data
- capillary electrophoresis
- blood brain barrier
- electron microscopy