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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2003, p. 1187-1192, Vol. 47, No. 4
0066-4804/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.47.4.1187-1192.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
University of Wisconsin,1 William S. Middleton VA Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin,2 Aventis Pharmaceuticals, Romainville, France3
Received 7 January 2002/ Returned for modification 12 October 2002/ Accepted 30 December 2002
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The study of antimicrobial pharmacodynamics provides insight into the link between drug exposures, in vitro susceptibility, and treatment efficacy (7, 10). It has become common for these studies with antibacterial drugs to impact dosing regimen design for clinical trials and to impact the development of susceptibility breakpoints (5, 9, 13, 26). Similar pharmacodynamic characterizations have been undertaken with several antifungal compounds (2, 3, 4). The correlation between this information in experimental models and available clinical trial analysis suggests these pharmacodynamic predictions could play a similar role in the development of new antifungal drugs (2, 22, 30; C. J. Clancy, C. A. Kauffman, A. Morris, M. L. Nguyen, D. C. Tanner, D. R. Snydman, V. L. Yu, and M. H. Nguyen, Prog. Abstr. 36th Annu. Meet. Infect. Dis. Soc. Am., abstr. 98, p. 93, 1998). The present studies have been designed to characterize these in vivo pharmacodynamic relationships for a new glucan synthase inhibitor, HMR 3270. We are hopeful this information can be utilized for future clinical development of this and other antifungal compounds.
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Antifungal agent. HMR 3270 was obtained as a powder from Aventis Pharmaceuticals (Romainville, France). The powder was stored desiccated at -4°C. Drug solutions were prepared on the day of study by dissolving the powder in 0.85% sterile physiologic NaCl (vol/vol). Subsequent drug dilutions were performed with 0.85% NaCl (vol/vol).
In vitro susceptibility testing. MICs were determined using a broth microdilution modification of the NCCLS M27-A method (25). The MIC was defined as the lowest concentration that produced an optically clear well. Determinations were performed in duplicate on at least two separate occasions.
Animals. Six-week-old ICR/Swiss specific-pathogen-free female mice weighing 23 to 27 g were used for all studies (Harlan Sprague-Dawley, Madison, Wis.). Animals were maintained in accordance with the American Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care criteria (27). All animal studies were approved by the Animal Research Committee of the William S. Middleton Memorial VA Hospital.
Infection model. Mice were rendered neutropenic (polymorphonuclear leukocytes < 100/mm3) by injecting cyclophosphamide (Mead Johnson Pharmaceuticals, Evansville, Ind.) intraperitoneally 4 days (150 mg/kg of body weight) before infection, 1 day (100 mg/kg) before infection, and 2 days (100 mg/kg) after infection. Absolute white blood cell and neutrophil counts were monitored every 48 h throughout the period of study with a Coulter counter and peripheral blood smears. Neutrophil counts remained at or below 100/mm3 throughout the entire study.
Organisms were subcultured on SDA 24 h prior to infection. Inoculum was prepared by placing three to five colonies into 5 ml of sterile pyrogen-free 0.9% saline warmed to 35°C. The final inoculum was adjusted to 0.6 transmittance at 530 nm. Fungal counts of the inoculum determined by viable counts on SDA were 106 CFU/ml.
Disseminated infection with the Candida organisms was achieved by injection of 0.1 ml of inoculum via the lateral tail vein 2 h prior to start of drug therapy. At the end of the study period animals were sacrificed by CO2 asphyxiation. After sacrifice the kidneys of each mouse were immediately removed and placed in sterile 0.9% saline at 4°C. Homogenate was then serially diluted 1:10, and aliquots were plated on SDA for viable fungal colony counts after incubation for 24 h at 35°C. The lower limit of detection is 100 CFU/ml. Results were expressed as the mean number of CFU/kidneys for two mice (four kidneys).
Pharmacokinetics. Single-dose pharmacokinetics of HMR 3270 were determined in individual neutropenic infected ICR/Swiss mice following intraperitoneal doses of 4 and 16 mg/kg administered in 0.2-ml volumes. At each dose examined, groups of four mice were sampled by intracardiac puncture, and serum was pooled at each time point. Mice were anesthetized with halothane prior to sampling and euthanized with CO2 immediately afterwards. Drug levels were determined at seven time points over 84 h. The first samples were collected 1 h after drug administration. Subsequent samples were collected at 4- to 24-h intervals. The pooled blood was placed in 1.5-ml tubes (Fisher Scientific) and immediately centrifuged (model MB centrifuge; International Equipment Co.) at 10,000 x g for 5 min. The serum was subsequently removed and stored at -80°C. Serum drug levels were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography assay at Aventis Pharmaceuticals. The interday precision of the assay was between -13 and -1.4%, with a coefficient of variation of 6.4%. The lower level of detection for this assay was 0.04 mg/liter. Pharmacokinetic constants including elimination half-life and C0 were calculated via nonlinear least-squares techniques (MINSQ; Micromath Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah). The area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) was calculated by the trapezoidal rule. For doses for which no kinetics were determined, pharmacokinetic parameters were extrapolated from the values obtained in the actual studies.
In vivo time kill and postantifungal effect. Infection in neutropenic mice was produced as described above. Two hours after infection with C. albicans K-1, mice were treated with single intraperitoneal doses of HMR 3270 (0.25, 0.5, 1.0, and 4.0 mg/kg). Groups of two treated and control mice were sacrificed at each sampling time, with intervals ranging from 1 to 2 h for the first 6 h for the time kill study and every 6 to 24 h thereafter for remainder of the study period to determine the postantifungal effect (PAFE). Growth with the two lower doses was monitored for 72 and 120 h. The two highest doses were monitored for 144 h to determine if the organisms would recover from the effect of drug treatment. Control growth was determined over 24 h at five sampling times. Kidneys were removed at each time point and processed immediately for CFU determination. The time that serum levels of HMR 3270 remained above the MIC for the organism following the four doses was calculated from the pharmacokinetic data. The postantibiotic effect (PAE) was calculated by determining the time it took for controls to increase 1 log10 CFU/kidneys (C) and subtracting this from the amount of time it took organisms from the treated animals to grow 1 log10 CFU/kidney (T) after drug levels in serum fell below the MIC for the organism: PAE = T - C (8, 31).
Pharmacodynamic parameter determination. Neutropenic mice were infected with C. albicans K-1 2 h prior to start of therapy. Twenty-four dosing regimens were chosen to minimize the interdependence among the three pharmacodynamic parameters studied and also to observe the complete dose response relationship. Groups of two mice were treated for 144 h with dosing regimens of HMR 3270 using fourfold-increasing total doses administered at dosing intervals of every 36 h (q36h), q48h, q72h, and q144h. Total doses ranged from 0.125 to 4.00 mg/kg/144 h. Drug was administered in 0.2-ml volumes. Mice were sacrificed after 144 h of therapy, and kidneys were removed for CFU determination as described above. Untreated control mice were sacrificed just before treatment and at the end of the experiment. Efficacy was defined as the change in log10 CFU/kidneys over the 144-h treatment period and was calculated by subtracting the mean log10 CFU/kidneys in untreated control mice after 144 h from the mean number of CFU from kidneys of two mice at the end of therapy.
Pharmacodynamic parameter magnitude determination. Studies similar to those described above were performed with five addition strains of C. albicans (98-17, 98-234, 2438, 580, and 2183). Attempts were made to choose organisms with various susceptibilities to HMR 3270. However, we were unable to identify organisms for which there were various MICs in our stock of organisms. The group of organisms utilized included both fluconazole-susceptible, fluconazole-susceptible dose-dependent, and fluconazole-resistant strains. Dosing studies were designed to vary the magnitude of the pharmacodynamic parameters. The total dose varied from 0.08 to 5.30 mg/kg. Doses were fractionated into three doses (q48h) for the 6-day study period. Groups of two mice were again used for each dosing regimen. At the end of the study, mice were euthanized and kidneys were immediately processed for CFU determination.
Data analysis. A sigmoid dose-effect model was used to measure the in vivo potency of HMR 3270. The model is derived from the Hill equation: E = (Emax x DN)/(ED50N + DN), where E is the observed effect (change in log10 CFU/kidneys compared with untreated controls at 144 h), D is the cumulative 144-h dose, Emax is the maximum effect, ED50 is the dose required to achieve 50% of Emax, and N is the slope of the dose-effect relationship. The correlation between efficacy and each of the three parameters studied was determined by nonlinear least-squares multivariate regression analysis (Sigma Stat; Jandel Scientific Software, San Rafael, Calif.). The coefficient of determination (R2) was used to estimate the percent of variance in the change of log10 CFU/kidneys over the treatment period for the different dosing regimens that could be attributed to each of the pharmacodynamic parameters.
To allow a more meaningful comparison of potency among the dosing regimens studied we calculated the dose required to produce a fungistatic dose or no net growth over 144 h compared to numbers at the start of therapy. If the doses needed to achieve these benchmarks increased significantly as the dosing interval was lengthened from q36h through q144h regimens, the duration of the time that drug levels in serum remained above the MIC was the parameter predictive of efficacy. On the other hand, if the doses necessary to reach these outcomes decreased with dosing interval lengthening, then the parameter associated with these outcomes would be the peak serum level. If the doses remained similar independent of changes in the dosing interval, then the AUC would be predictive of efficacy.
The static dose was determined for the q48h dosing regimen for each of the six strains. The magnitude of the pharmacodynamic parameter predictive of the efficacy of HMR 3270 was then calculated for each of the six organisms studied to determine if a similar parameter magnitude was associated with efficacy as determined by these indices. The significance of differences among these values was determined by analysis of variance (Sigma Stat; Jandel Scientific Software). A two-tailed P of <0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
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Pharmacokinetics. The serum time course of HMR 3270 in infected neutropenic mice following intraperitoneal doses of 4 and 16 mg/kg are shown in Fig. 1. Peak levels in serum and the AUC increased in a linear fashion with dose escalation. Peak levels were achieved within 2 h for each of the doses and ranged from 8.6 ± 0.30 to 35.4 ±2.0 mg/liter (means ± standard deviations). The elimination half-life did not change significantly with the doses studied, ranging from 22.1 to 23.2 h. The AUC, as determined by the trapezoidal rule, ranged from 286 to 970 mg · h/liter with the lowest and highest doses, respectively.
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FIG. 1. Serum HMR 3270 concentrations after administration of intraperitoneal doses of 4 and 16 mg/kg in neutropenic infected mice. Each symbol represents the geometric mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of the levels in the sera of four mice.
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FIG. 2. (Left panel) In vivo PAE following HMR 3270 doses of 0.25, 0.5, 1, and 4 mg/kg against C. albicans K-1 in neutropenic infected mice. Each symbol represents the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) for two mice. The widths of the horizontal bars represent the time that serum levels exceeded the MIC. (Right panel) In vivo time kill following HMR 3270 doses of 0.25, 0.5, 1, and 4 mg/kg against C. albicans K-1 in neutropenic infected mice. Each symbol represents the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) for two mice.
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FIG. 3. Relationship between the total dose and the change in log10 CFU per kidney over the 6-day treatment period for HMR 3270 administered at different dosing intervals in a neutropenic murine model of disseminated candidiasis. Each total dose level was fractionated for each of the dosing intervals. Each symbol represents data for two mice. The dashed horizontal line represents the number of CFU at the start of therapy. SD, the static dose; 95% confidence intervals are given in parentheses.
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FIG. 4. Relationship between the time above the MIC, the AUC/MIC ratio, the peak/MIC ratio, and the change in log10 CFU per kidney after 6 days of treatment. Each symbol represents data for two mice. The dashed horizontal line represents the number of CFU at the start of therapy.
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FIG. 5. Relationship between the peak/MIC ratio and the change in log10 CFU per kidney after 6 days of treatment for HMR 3270 against six C. albicans organisms. Each symbol represents data for two mice. The dashed horizontal line represents the number of CFU at the start of therapy.
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TABLE 1. HMR 3270 peak/MIC ratios against six Candida strains in a neutropenic disseminated candidiasis model
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The in vivo time course of antifungal activity of the new cyclic lipopeptide antifungal compounds has not described the time course adequately. These drugs inhibit the synthesis of 1,3-ß-glucan of the fungal cell wall (12, 20). This class of compounds exhibits a broad antifungal spectrum with particular potency against Candida species (1, 12, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 24, 28, 29). For Candida species this activity results in rapid cell lysis and death. Several investigations have characterized in vitro the time course activity of this new antifungal drug class (15, 16, 17). These studies have demonstrated that the antifungal activity of these compounds is enhanced with increasing drug concentrations. Furthermore, these investigations have demonstrated prolonged suppression of organism growth following brief drug exposures (PAEs). An in vitro pattern of activity characterized by concentration-dependent killing and prolonged PAFE would suggest that large infrequent drug dosing may be most efficacious.
Thus far, in vivo studies with several of glucan synthase inhibitors have demonstrated that efficacy against a variety fungal pathogens is enhanced with escalating drug doses (1, 18, 19, 24). However, these in vivo investigations have not characterized the time course activity of these compounds. The experiments presented here have examined these pharmacodynamic relationships in an in vivo model.
Our in vivo time kill results observed significant organism burden reductions when drug doses produced drug levels in serum more than four times the MIC. The magnitude of this drug concentration/MIC ratio resulted in similar killing in in vitro investigations (15, 16, 17). The degree of in vivo killing in our observations was enhanced with higher drug doses. The highest serum concentration in relation to organism MIC achieved in our single dose time kill studies was 16. In postantifungal observations, the duration of regrowth suppression was also concentration dependent. PAFEs ranged from only 8 h to more than 80 h. These time course characteristics would also suggest one of the concentration-dependent PK/PD parameters would best predict drug efficacy.
The multiple dosing regimen observations demonstrated that large infrequent drug administration was most effective. A fourfold-lower total drug dose was necessary to produce a net fungistatic effect with the once-every-6-day dosing compared to the q36h dosing regimen. As one would expect, when these dosing regimen data were regressed with each of the three PK/PD parameters, the strongest relationship was observed when the peak serum level/MIC ratio was utilized. This time course pattern of activity and PK/PD parameter relationship is similar to that we observed with amphotericin B in this model.
We also attempted to discern the magnitude of the peak/MIC ratio that would be necessary to achieve efficacy against organisms with various MICs. Unfortunately, we do not possess C. albicans strains for which HMR 3270 MICs vary. The in vitro susceptibility surveillance literature suggests that this is not unusual (28, 29). In addition, the resistant C. albicans isolates that have been isolated have varied significantly in virulence in animal models which would further complicate treatment comparisons (21). However, among the six isolates with identical MICs studied, outcomes were similar. A net fungistatic effect was observed with peak/MIC ratios near 3 and maximal efficacy was seen when this ratio approached ten. These peak/MIC ratios (3 and 10) should be compared to HMR 3270 population pharmacokinetics to help define an appropriate dosing regimen for early clinical studies in treatment of C. albicans infection. In general free-drug levels should be utilized for PK/PD parameter magnitude comparisons. However, in this case we utilized total drug levels because of the similarity of protein binding determinations across species with the various echinocandins (J. Lowthers, personal communication). For HMR 3270, the degree of protein binding has been >99% for both mice and in humans.
The echinocandin activity against filamentous pathogens such as Aspergillus species is clearly different from that observed with Candida species. For these pathogens, glucan synthase inhibition does slow organism growth by altering hyphal tip structures, but does not result in organism killing. One might thus expect a different in vivo antifungal time course against filamentous species. Certainly one would not see concentration dependent killing, however, one may still observe postantifungal or sub-MIC effects. The PK/PD parameter predictive of activity with these patterns of activity would be either percentage of time above the MIC or AUC/MIC ratio. Even if the PK/PD parameter predictive of treatment outcome for these species remains the peak/MIC ratio, one might anticipate that a different (likely higher) parameter magnitude would be required to produce similar treatment outcomes. These important questions should be the focus of future PK/PD investigations.
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