학술논문

Are moxifloxacin and levofloxacin equally effective to treat XDR tuberculosis?
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (JAC). Aug2017, Vol. 72 Issue 8, p2326-2333. 8p.
Subject
*MOXIFLOXACIN
*QUINOLONE antibacterial agents
*MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis
*DISEASE susceptibility
*GENETIC mutation
*ANIMAL experimentation
*ANTIBIOTICS
*BIOLOGICAL models
*MICE
*MICROBIAL sensitivity tests
*TREATMENT effectiveness
Language
ISSN
0305-7453
Abstract
Background: Moxifloxacin retains partial activity against some fluoroquinolone-resistant mutants of Mycobacterium tuberculosis . Levofloxacin is presumed to be as active as moxifloxacin against drug-susceptible tuberculosis and to have a better safety profile.Objectives: To compare the in vivo activity of levofloxacin and moxifloxacin against M. tuberculosis strains with various levels of fluoroquinolone resistance.Methods: BALB/c mice were intravenously infected with 10 6 M. tuberculosis H37Rv and three isogenic mutants: GyrA A90V, GyrB E540A and GyrB A543V. Treatment with 50 or 100 mg/kg levofloxacin and 60 or 66 mg/kg moxifloxacin was given orally every 6 h, for 4 weeks.Results: Levofloxacin 50 and 100 mg/kg q6h and moxifloxacin 60 and 66 mg/kg q6h generated AUCs in mice equivalent to those of levofloxacin 750 and 1000 mg/day and moxifloxacin 400 and 800 mg/day, respectively, in humans. Moxifloxacin 60 and 66 mg/kg q6h had bactericidal activity against strain H37Rv (MIC ≤ 0.25 mg/L) and mutants GyrB E540A and GyrB A543V (MIC = 0.5 mg/L). Against mutant GyrA A90V (MIC = 2 mg/L), moxifloxacin 60 mg/kg q6h did not prevent bacillary growth, whereas 66 mg/kg q6h had bacteriostatic activity. Levofloxacin 50 mg/kg q6h had bactericidal activity against H37Rv (MIC ≤ 0.25 mg/L) but not against the mutant strains. Levofloxacin 100 mg/kg q6h had bactericidal activity against H37Rv and mutants GyrB E540A (MIC = 0.5 mg/L) and GyrB A543V (MIC= 1 mg/L) but not against mutant GyrA A90V (MIC = 4 mg/L).Conclusions: All mutations reduced fluoroquinolone activity, even those classified as susceptible according to phenotypic tests. High-dose levofloxacin is less effective than high-dose moxifloxacin against both fluoroquinolone-resistant and -susceptible M. tuberculosis strains in mice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]