EVALUATING THE EFFICACY OF AMIKACIN IN LOW-CLEARANCE UNILAMELLAR LIPOSOMES IN A S. AUREUS LOCAL INFECTION MODEL

Traditional therapies for Staphylococcal infections such as osteomyelitis or localized abscesses have a difficult time penetrating into tissue sites. To effectively ameliorate these infections, prolonged therapy and or high doses of antibiotics are frequently required. Aminoglycosides, such as amika...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of liposome research 2001-01, Vol.11 (2-3), p.243-254
Hauptverfasser: Garrison, Augusta E., Bendele, Ray, Knauer, Susan, Wolf, Julie, Moon-McDermott, Lotus, Gill, Stan, Colagiovanni, Dorothy B.
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container_end_page 254
container_issue 2-3
container_start_page 243
container_title Journal of liposome research
container_volume 11
creator Garrison, Augusta E.
Bendele, Ray
Knauer, Susan
Wolf, Julie
Moon-McDermott, Lotus
Gill, Stan
Colagiovanni, Dorothy B.
description Traditional therapies for Staphylococcal infections such as osteomyelitis or localized abscesses have a difficult time penetrating into tissue sites. To effectively ameliorate these infections, prolonged therapy and or high doses of antibiotics are frequently required. Aminoglycosides, such as amikacin, are not routinely utilized for treating local infections due to poor efficacy associated with ineffective tissue penetration, toxicity, and poor penetration in an acid millieu. We postulated that a formulation of amikacin in small unilamellar liposomes might readily be engulfed by inflammatory macrophages facilitating drug delivery to the site of infection. This increased drug load to the site of bacterial infection may result in enhanced bactericidal action compared to conventional aminoglycosides. Tissue drug concentrations were determined for liposomal amikacin (L-AN) and conventional amikacin (AN). Plasma amikacin levels were determined for L-AN. The L-AN was very effective at concentrating at the site of infection compared to AN. Following confirmation of adequate tissue drug levels, a rodent subcutaneous abscess infection using S. aureus as the bacterial challenge agent was evaluated. Sprague-Dawley rats were intravenously administered L-AN every other day due to its prolonged half-life, while the comparator agent, AN, was administered daily. Abscess size, weights, severity, histology, and tissue colony counts were examined. In efficacy studies, L-AN was superior to AN in reducing colony counts.
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We postulated that a formulation of amikacin in small unilamellar liposomes might readily be engulfed by inflammatory macrophages facilitating drug delivery to the site of infection. This increased drug load to the site of bacterial infection may result in enhanced bactericidal action compared to conventional aminoglycosides. Tissue drug concentrations were determined for liposomal amikacin (L-AN) and conventional amikacin (AN). Plasma amikacin levels were determined for L-AN. The L-AN was very effective at concentrating at the site of infection compared to AN. Following confirmation of adequate tissue drug levels, a rodent subcutaneous abscess infection using S. aureus as the bacterial challenge agent was evaluated. Sprague-Dawley rats were intravenously administered L-AN every other day due to its prolonged half-life, while the comparator agent, AN, was administered daily. Abscess size, weights, severity, histology, and tissue colony counts were examined. 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source Taylor & Francis Medical Library - CRKN; Taylor & Francis Journals Complete
subjects Bacterial infection
Efficacy
Liposomal antibiotic
Staphylococcus aureus
title EVALUATING THE EFFICACY OF AMIKACIN IN LOW-CLEARANCE UNILAMELLAR LIPOSOMES IN A S. AUREUS LOCAL INFECTION MODEL
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