Literature DB >> 21517740

The broad-spectrum antimycobacterial activities of phenothiazines, InVitro: somewhere in all of this there may be patentable potentials.

Jakko van Ingen1.   

Abstract

The phenothiazines are neuroleptic drugs that have long been known to have antimycobacterial activity, in vitro. Of the various commercially available phenothiazines, thioridazine, chlorpromazine and trifluoperazine are most active against mycobacteria, in vitro. Their MICs for Mycobacterium tuberculosis are in the 8-16 µg/ml range and MICs for Mycobacterium avium in the 10-32 µg/ml range, depending on methods and media. These concentrations cannot be safely attained in humans, where maximum serum concentrations are 0.5 µg/ml (thioridazine) to 1 µg/ml (chlorpromazine) or 4 µg/ml (trifluoperazine). Phenothiazines still have potential as antimycobacterial drugs because they accumulate in macrophages; concentrations inside macrophages are at least 10 fold higher than in serum. When applied to mycobacteria inside macrophages, concentrations as low as 0.1 µg/ml (thioridazine) or 0.1-3.6 µg/ml (chlorpromazine) kill phagocytized M. tuberculosis and M. avium in 3-7 days. Owing to their multiple and novel drug targets, phenothiazine resistance has not been observed. The drug targets and less toxic phenothiazine derivatives (patents include WO2005105145A and WO2010122012A) provide excellent patentable potentials. Thioridazine itself may be patented as "new use". New drugs for treatment of mycobacterial disease, most notable multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, are urgently needed; phenothiazines and their targets should be exploited for this use.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21517740     DOI: 10.2174/157489111796064623

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Recent Pat Antiinfect Drug Discov        ISSN: 1574-891X


  2 in total

Review 1.  Thioridazine: A Non-Antibiotic Drug Highly Effective, in Combination with First Line Anti-Tuberculosis Drugs, against Any Form of Antibiotic Resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Due to Its Multi-Mechanisms of Action.

Authors:  Leonard Amaral; Miguel Viveiros
Journal:  Antibiotics (Basel)       Date:  2017-01-14

2.  Thioridazine as Chemotherapy for Mycobacterium avium Complex Diseases.

Authors:  Devyani Deshpande; Shashikant Srivastava; Sandirai Musuka; Tawanda Gumbo
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2016-07-22       Impact factor: 5.191

  2 in total

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