Bacterial‐Population Responses to Drug‐Selective Pressure: Examination of Garenoxacin's Effect onPseudomonas aeruginosa
Open Access
- 1 August 2005
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 192 (3) , 420-428
- https://doi.org/10.1086/430611
Abstract
The emergence of resistance to antibiotics is a serious problem often related to suboptimal drug dosing; such suboptimal dosing results in the preferential killing of drug-susceptible microbial subpopulations, allowing amplification of drug-resistant microbial subpopulations. We determined the effect that fluctuating concentrations of quinolone drugs have on both the total population and the resistant subpopulation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa by employing, over a 48-h period, human pharmacokinetics and multiple regimens in an in vitro–infection model. All data were simultaneously modeled by use of 3 parallel inhomogeneous differential equations. Model parameters were used to derive the minimal, or breakpoint, drug exposure necessary to suppress amplification of the resistant subpopulation. In a prospective-validation study, we found that a drug exposure near to but below the calculated breakpoint amplified the resistant subpopulation, whereas a drug exposure at the breakpoint suppressed it. This approach allows delineation of target drug exposures (area under the concentration/time curve for 24 h:minimal inhibitory concentration [AUC24:MIC] = 190) that will suppress amplification of the antibiotic-resistant subpopulation, thereby preserving the susceptibility of target pathogensKeywords
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