Evaluation of ceftriaxone and other antibiotics against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Streptococcus pneumoniae under in vitro conditions simulating those of serious infections.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

In pursuit of an in vitro system capable of reliably predicting the activities of antibiotics in serious infections and in infections occurring in immunocompromised hosts, we evaluated the abilities of four drugs to achieve virtually complete killing of bacterial cells growing in human body fluids in amounts which are very high and close to those likely to be present in serious infections; drug concentrations varied with time as they vary in human bronchial secretions or blood or urine (dynamic concentrations). The rationale for such a test was (i) to set up in vitro conditions as close as possible to those the antibiotics encounter in serious infections and (ii) to hold the drugs capable of almost completely killing the bacteria used in the assay to be highly active in vitro and likely to be the most efficacious in the treatment of serious infections. Among the antibiotics used, ceftriaxone proved to be highly active under conditions simulating pulmonary infections and septicemias caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae (bacteria grown in bronchoalveolar fluid or blood; antibiotic concentrations varying with time as in human bronchial secretions or blood) and under conditions simulating blood and urinary infections caused by Escherichia coli (bacteria grown in human blood or urine; antibiotic concentrations varying as in the various fluids). Gentamicin (not tested against pneumococci) appeared to be highly active only under conditions simulating urinary infections caused by E. coli; aztreonam (not tested against pneumococci) and ampicillin (tested only against pneumococci) did not appear to be highly active under any of the test conditions. Only the combination of gentamicin plus either ceftriaxone or aztreonam appeared to be highly active under conditions simulating serious septicemias and urinary infections caused by Psudomonas aeruginosa.

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