| Literature DB >> 31788739 |
Alina Karoline Nussbaumer-Pröll1, Sabine Eberl1, Birgit Reiter2, Thomas Stimpfl2, Walter Jäger3, Stefan Poschner3, Markus Zeitlinger4.
Abstract
In vitro pharmacodynamic models are used to optimize in vivo dosing regimens in antimicrobial drug development. One limiting factor of such models is the lack of host factors such as corpuscular blood components as erythrocytes which have already been shown to impact activity of antibiotics and/or growth of the pathogen. However, the impact of thrombocytes has not previously been investigated. We set out to investigate if the addition of thrombocytes (set to physiological concentrations in blood of healthy human, i.e., 5 × 105 thrombocytes/μL standard growth media Mueller Hinton Broth, MHB) has an influence on bacterial growth and on the efficacy of antibiotics against Gram+ and Gram- bacteria. Growth assays and time-killing-curves (TKC) were performed with ATCC-strains of Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa in triplicate over 24 h. The same approach was followed for 5 clinical isolates of Escherichia coli. Meropenem, ciprofloxacin, and tigecycline were tested as representatives of broad-spectrum antibiotics, and concentrations several-fold above and below the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) were simulated. No significant impact of thrombocytes was found on bacterial growth or antimicrobial stability for the investigated agents. Bacteria reduced thrombocyte content to different degree, indicating direct interaction of pathogens and thrombocytes. Impact on bacterial killing was observed but was not fully reproducible when thrombocytes from different donors where used. While interaction of bacteria and thrombocytes was evident in the present study, interaction between antibiotic activity and thrombocytes seems unlikely. Whether variability was caused by different thrombocyte concentrates needs further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: MHB; MIC; TKC; Thrombocytes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31788739 PMCID: PMC7039845 DOI: 10.1007/s10096-019-03762-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0934-9723 Impact factor: 3.267
Fig. 1a The bacterial growth is represented in CFU per milliliter with MHBThrom (open symbols) and MHBRef (black symbols) for E. coli, S. aureus, and P. aeruginosa over 24 h. b Concentration-time profiles of meropenem (black symbols), ciprofloxacin (white symbols), and tigecycline (crossed symbols) are shown in MHBThrom (squares) and MHBRef (circles)
Fig. 2a The mean data with standard deviation of the TKCs of E. coli tested for ciprofloxacin are shown. b Variability of impact of thrombocytes on killing by ciprofloxacin presented as ratios of bacterial killing after 24 h between MHBRef and MHBThrom. Ratios above 1 indicate a decrease in antibiotic activity by addition of thrombocytes while values below 1 show increased antibiotic activity
Average values of platelet counts over time with standard deviation from 0 to 24 h for MHBThrom and for MHBThrom adapted with E. coli, S. aureus, and P. aeruginosa
| Average values of platelet count in THR per microliter | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time point | MHBThrom | MHBThrom
| MHBThrom
| MHBThrom
|
| 0 h | 3.49E+05 (± 2.23 × 104) | 3.05E+05 (± 2.65 × 103) | 2.99E+05 (± 2.65 × 103) | 3.17E+05 (± 2.27 × 104) |
| 3 h | 3.26E+05 (± 1.33 × 104) | 8.00E+03 (± 2.52 × 103) | 1.83E+05 (± 3.06 × 103) | 1.91E+05 (± 2.65 × 103) |
| 7 h | 3.01E+05 (± 2.65 × 103) | 8.00E+03 (± 2.08 × 103) | 1.01E+05 (± 3.61 × 103) | 1.82E+05 (± 1.53 × 103) |
| 24 h | 2.73E+05 (± 8.02 × 103) | 8.00E+03 (± 2.00 × 103) | 9.70E+04 (± 5.69 × 103) | 1.63E+05 (± 3.61 × 103) |