Login / Signup

Extension of Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Time-Kill Studies To Include Lipopolysaccharide/Endotoxin Release from Escherichia coli Exposed to Cefuroxime.

Anders ThorstedEva TanoKia KaivonenJan SjölinLena E FribergElisabet I Nielsen
Published in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2020)
The release of inflammatory bacterial products, such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS)/endotoxin, may be increased upon the administration of antibiotics. An improved quantitative understanding of endotoxin release and its relation to antibiotic exposure and bacterial growth/killing may be gained by an integrated analysis of these processes. The aim of this work was to establish a mathematical model that relates Escherichia coli growth/killing dynamics at various cefuroxime concentrations to endotoxin release in vitro Fifty-two time-kill experiments informed bacterial and endotoxin time courses and included both static (0×, 0.5×, 1×, 2×, 10×, and 50× MIC) and dynamic (0×, 15×, and 30× MIC) cefuroxime concentrations. A model for the antibiotic-bacterium interaction was established, and antibiotic-induced bacterial killing followed a sigmoidal Emax relation to the cefuroxime concentration (MIC-specific 50% effective concentration [EC50], maximum antibiotic-induced killing rate [E max] = 3.26 h-1 and γ = 3.37). Endotoxin release was assessed in relation to the bacterial processes of growth, antibiotic-induced bacterial killing, and natural bacterial death and found to be quantitatively related to bacterial growth (0.000292 endotoxin units [EU]/CFU) and antibiotic-induced bacterial killing (0.00636 EU/CFU). Increased release following the administration of a second cefuroxime dose was described by the formation and subsequent antibiotic-induced killing of filaments (0.295 EU/CFU). Release due to growth was instantaneous, while release due to antibiotic-induced killing was delayed (mean transit time of 7.63 h). To conclude, the in vitro release of endotoxin is related to bacterial growth and antibiotic-induced killing, with higher rates of release upon the killing of formed filaments. Endotoxin release over 24 h is lowest when antibiotic exposure rapidly eradicates bacteria, while increased release is predicted to occur when growth and antibiotic-induced killing occur simultaneously.
Keyphrases
  • high glucose
  • escherichia coli
  • diabetic rats
  • drug induced
  • inflammatory response
  • immune response
  • cystic fibrosis
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • anti inflammatory
  • biofilm formation