| Literature DB >> 29211877 |
T M Rawson1, D O'Hare2, P Herrero3, S Sharma4, L S P Moore1,5, E de Barra5, J A Roberts6,7, A C Gordon8, W Hope9, P Georgiou3, A E G Cass10, A H Holmes1,5.
Abstract
Sub-optimal exposure to antimicrobial therapy is associated with poor patient outcomes and the development of antimicrobial resistance. Mechanisms for optimizing the concentration of a drug within the individual patient are under development. However, several barriers remain in realizing true individualization of therapy. These include problems with plasma drug sampling, availability of appropriate assays, and current mechanisms for dose adjustment. Biosensor technology offers a means of providing real-time monitoring of antimicrobials in a minimally invasive fashion. We report the potential for using microneedle biosensor technology as part of closed-loop control systems for the optimization of antimicrobial therapy in individual patients.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29211877 PMCID: PMC5890674 DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkx458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Antimicrob Chemother ISSN: 0305-7453 Impact factor: 5.790
Figure 1.Schematic for closed-loop control of antimicrobial delivery.
Current antimicrobial sensor classes reported in the literature
| Sensor | Setting demonstrated | Ranges of detection in study | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Macrolides | Spiked human urine Water samples Optimal analytical conditions | 0–2 μM (azithromycin) | |
| Quinolones | Spiked human plasma Spiked human urine Milk Optimal analytical conditions | In spiked human plasma: 0.05–100 μM (CIP) 0.1–100 μM (OFX) 0.1–40 μM (NOR) 0.06–100 μM (GAT) | |
| Chloramphenicol | Milk Spiked human urine Food samples Optimal analytical conditions | In food samples: 0.08–1392 μM LLD 0.015 μM | |
| Metronidazole | Spiked human urine Optimal analytical conditions | Calibration in lab: Linear range 0.8 pM–720 nM | |
| Tetracyclines | Meat/feedstuff samples Spiked honey Optimal analytical conditions | In feedstuff Linear range 0.3–52.0 μM (tetra) LLD 0.10 μM (tetra) | |
| Rifampicin | Optimal analytical conditions | Linear detection ranges: 0.006–10.0 mmol/L with an LLD of 4.16 nmol/L and 0.04–10 mmol/L with an LLD of 2.34 nmol/L | |
| Penicillins | Optimal analytical conditions Food/milk samples | In spiked milk samples: linear range 3–283 μM and LLD 0.3 μM (Pen-G) Recovery from spiked samples was 102±6% In optimal conditions: Km value 67±13 μM reported using Michaelis Menten kinetics equation (Pen-G) | |
| Aminoglycosides | Optimal analytical conditions Ambulatory animals bloodstream Spiked human serum | In spiked human serum: Accurate within therapeutic range of 2–6 μM | |
| Lincomycin | Optimal analytical conditions Foodstuff Spiked human urine | In optimal conditions: Linear detection range up to 1 mM and LLD of 0.08 μM In spiked human urine: Recovery in samples was 96.44% to 103.26% | |
| Sulphonamides | Optimal analytical conditions Milk Spiked human urine | In optimal conditions: Range of 0.1–10.0 mmol/L with LLD of 60 nmol/L (TMP) AND 1.0–10.0 mmol/L with LLD of 38 nmol/L (SMX) In spiked urine: Recovery 91.3%-101% |
CIP, ciprofloxacin; OFX, ofloxacin; GAT, gatifloxacin; NOR, norfloxacin; TMP, trimethoprim; SMX, sulfamethoxazole; Pen-G, penicillin G; LLD, lower limit of detection.