Affiliation:
1. Service des Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales, Microbiologie Médicale et Moléculaire (EA562), Hôpital du Bocage,1 and
2. Service d’Anatomie Pathologique, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Dijon,2 Dijon Cedex, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The increase of penicillin-resistant
Streptococcus pneumoniae
(PRSP) pneumonia results in a greater risk of antibiotic treatment failure. In vitro data are not sufficient predictors of clinical efficacy, and animal models may be insufficiently contributive, since they often use immunocompromised animals and do not always respect the human pharmacokinetics of antibiotics. We developed an experimental PRSP pneumonia model in immunocompetent rabbits, by using intrabronchial instillation of PRSP (MIC = 4 mg/liter), without any adjuvant. This reproducible model was used to assess amoxicillin efficacy by reproducing human serum pharmacokinetics following 1-g oral or intravenous administrations of amoxicillin every 8 h. Evaluation was performed by using clinical, CT scan, macroscopic, histopathologic, and microbiological criteria. Experimental pneumonia in untreated rabbits was similar to untreated severe human bacteremic untreated pneumonia; in both rabbits and humans, (i) cumulative survival was close to 50%, (ii) red or gray lung congestion and pleuritis were observed, and (iii) lung and spleen concentrations reached 5 and 4 log
10
CFU/g. A 48-h treatment resulted in a significant bacterial clearance in the lungs (1.53 versus 5.07 log
10
CFU/ml,
P
< 0.001) and spleen (1.00 versus 4.40 log
10
CFU/ml,
P
< 10
−6
) and a significant decrease in mortality (0% versus 50%,
P
= 0.02) in treated versus untreated rabbits. No difference was observed on macroscopic and histopathologic lesions between treated and untreated rabbits (
P
= 0.36 and 0.78, respectively). Similar results were obtained by using a fully penicillin-susceptible
S. pneumoniae
strain (MIC = 0.01 mg/liter). Our findings suggest that (i) this new model can be contributive in the evaluation of antibacterial agents and (ii) 1 g of amoxicillin three times a day may be sufficient to treat PRSP pneumonia in immunocompetent humans.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
49 articles.
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