| Literature DB >> 21463524 |
Abstract
Chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients is caused by biofilm-growing mucoid strains. Biofilms can be prevented by early aggressive antibiotic prophylaxis or therapy, and they can be treated by chronic suppressive therapy. New results from one small trial suggest that addition of oral ciprofloxacin to inhaled tobramycin may reduce lung inflammation. Clinical trials with new formulations of old antibiotics for inhalation therapy (aztreonam lysine) against chronic P. aeruginosa infection improved patient-reported outcome, lung function, time to acute exacerbations and sputum density of P. aeruginosa. Other drugs such as quinolones are currently under investigation for inhalation therapy. A trial of the use of anti-Pseudomonas antibiotics for long-term prophylaxis showed no effect in patients who were not already infected. Use of azithromycin to treat CF patients without P. aeruginosa infection did not improve lung function. Here I review the recent advances in the treatment of P. aeruginosa lung infections with a focus on inhalation treatments targeted at prophylaxis and chronic suppressive therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21463524 PMCID: PMC3087692 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-9-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Important properties of mucoid and nonmucoid phenotypes of Pseudomonas aeruginos a in the respiratory tract of cystic fibrosis patientsa
| Property | Mucoid phenotype | Nonmucoid phenotype |
|---|---|---|
| Location in the lungs | Respiratory zone and conductive zone in sputum | Conductive zone in sputum |
| Biofilm formation | Yes | Yes |
| Biofilm formation | Yes | No |
| Multiply antibiotic resistance due to conventional mechanisms | Seldom | Frequent |
| Resistance (tolerance) due to biofilm properties | Yes | No |
| Responsible for lung tissue damage | Yes | No |
| Induces pronounced antibody response | Yes | No |
aTable 1 is based on data in references [9] and [10].
Figure 1The conductive and respiratory zones of the lungs [12]. Inhalation antibiotic therapy mainly targets the conductive zone where sputum is located, whereas systemic antibiotic therapy mainly targets the respiratory zones with no sputum [9,10].
Some recent publications on inhalation therapy in cystic fibrosisa
| Topic | Reference |
|---|---|
| General aspects of inhalation therapy | [ |
| Dry powder inhalers | |
| Tobramycin | [ |
| Colistin | [ |
| Aztreonam lysine for inhalation | |
| AIR-CF1 aztreonam three times daily versus placebo | [ |
| AIR-CF2 aztreonam twice daily versus three times daily versus placebo | [ |
| AIR-CF3 follow-up of AIR-CF1 and AIR-CF2 with repeated aztreonam courses | [ |
| Fosfomycin in combination with tobramycin | [ |