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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, March 2000, p. 654-657, Vol. 44, No. 3
Section of Pediatric Infectious Diseases,
Maxwell Finland Laboratory for Infectious Diseases Boston Medical
Center/Boston University School of Medicine, Boston,
Massachusetts,1 and Clinical
Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacia & Upjohn, Kalamazoo,
Michigan2
Received 28 January 1999/Returned for modification 23 July
1999/Accepted 28 October 1999
Therapy for otitis media (OM) due to resistant Streptococcus
pneumoniae (MIC of penicillin,
0066-4804/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Efficacy of Linezolid in Experimental Otitis
Media
2.0 µg/ml) is challenging.
Linezolid, an oxazolidinone, represent a new class of antimicrobial
agents with excellent in vitro activity against penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae; however, in vitro activity against
nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI) is limited. We
evaluated its efficacy against experimental acute OM due to a
multidrug-resistant S. pneumoniae isolate and two isolates
of NTHI. The chinchilla model was utilized to evaluate the
efficacy of linezolid against experimental infection due to
S. pneumoniae or NTHI. Serum and middle ear antibiotic concentrations were determined, and sterilization of experimental OM was evaluated. Chinchillas were inoculated directly with S. pneumoniae into the superior bulla. Twenty-four hours after
inoculation, all animals had positive middle ear and nasopharyngeal
cultures. Animals were given linezolid at 25 mg/kg/dose twice a day
(b.i.d.) by orogastric feeding tube or amoxicillin at 40 mg/kg/dose
b.i.d. intramuscularly for 5 days. By day 5, all animals in the
linezolid group had sterile middle ear cultures and eradication of
S. pneumoniae from the nasopharynx. In the amoxicillin
group, all nine animals remained middle ear and nasopharynx positive
(P < 0.01). In animals inoculated with NTHI, 25 and
37.5 mg/kg b.i.d. failed to sterilize middle ear infection or eradicate
colonization. Mean levels in middle ear fluid measured during
experimental infection were 12.8 µg/ml at 2 to 6 h and 4.1 µg/ml at 16 to 17 h after orogastric dosing at 25 mg/kg.
Linezolid achieved a high concentration in the middle ear during
experimental OM. Linezolid eradicated multidrug-resistant S. pneumoniae from the middle ear and nasopharynx. Experimental infection and nasopharyngeal colonization due to NTHI persisted despite
achievement of concentrations in the middle ear that were above the MIC
(for NTHI).
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Maxwell Finland
Laboratory for Infectious Diseases, Boston Medical Center, 774 Albany St., Boston, MA 02118. Phone: (617) 414-7407. Fax: (617) 414-5806. E-mail: spelton{at}bu.edu.
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