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IgM-enriched immunoglobulin improves colistin efficacy in a pneumonia model by Pseudomonas aeruginosa .

Tania Cebrero-CangueiroGema Labrador-HerreraMarta Carretero-LedesmaSoraya Herrera-EspejoRocío Álvarez-MarínJerónimo PachónJosé Miguel CisnerosMaría Eugenia Pachón-Ibáñez
Published in: Life science alliance (2022)
We evaluated the efficacy of ceftazidime or colistin in combination with polyclonal IgM-enriched immunoglobulin (IgM-IG), in an experimental pneumonia model (C57BL/6J male mice) using two multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains, both ceftazidime-susceptible and one colistin-resistant. Pharmacodynamically optimised antimicrobials were administered for 72 h, and intravenous IgM-IG was given as a single dose. Bacterial tissues count and the mortality were analysed. Ceftazidime was more effective than colistin for both strains. In mice infected with the colistin-susceptible strain, ceftazidime reduced the bacterial concentration in the lungs and blood (-2.42 and -3.87 log 10 CFU/ml) compared with colistin (-0.55 and -1.23 log 10 CFU/ml, respectively) and with the controls. Colistin plus IgM-IG reduced the bacterial lung concentrations of both colistin-susceptible and resistant strains (-2.91 and -1.73 log 10 CFU/g, respectively) and the bacteraemia rate of the colistin-resistant strain (-44%). These results suggest that IgM-IG might be useful as an adjuvant to colistin in the treatment of pneumonia caused by multidrug-resistant P. aeruginosa .
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