Delivering antibacterials to the lungs: considerations for optimizing outcomes.

Mario Cazzola, Francesco Blasi, Claudio Terzano, Maria G Matera, Serafino A Marsico
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引用次数: 23

Abstract

An important determinant of clinical outcome of a lower respiratory tract infection may be sterilization of the infected lung, which is also dependent on sustained antibacterial concentrations achieved in the lung. For this reason, recently there has been increased interest in measuring the concentration of antimicrobial agents at different potential sites of infection in the lung. Levels of antibacterials are now measured in bronchial mucosa, epithelial lining fluid (ELF) and alveolar macrophages, as well as in sputum. Penicillins and cephalosporins reach only marginal concentrations in bronchial secretions, whereas fluoroquinolones and macrolides have been shown to achieve high concentrations. The extent of penetration of different antibacterials into the bronchial mucosa is relatively high. This is also true for beta-lactams, although their tissue concentrations never reach blood concentrations. Antibacterials penetrate less into the ELF than into the bronchial mucosa, but fluoroquinolones appear to concentrate more into alveolar lavage than into bronchial mucosa. Pulmonary pharmacokinetics is a very useful tool for describing how drugs behave in the human lung, but it does not promote an understanding of the pharmacological effects of a drug. More important, instead, is the correlation between pulmonary disposition of the drug and its minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values for the infectious agent. The addition of bacteriological characteristics to in vivo pharmacokinetic studies has triggered a 'pharmacodynamic approach'. Pharmacodynamic parameters integrate the microbiological activity and pharmacokinetics of an anti-infective drug by focusing on its biological effects, particularly growth inhibition and killing of pathogens. Drugs that penetrate well and remain for long periods at the pulmonary site of infection often induce therapeutic responses greater than expected on the basis of in vitro data. However, although the determination of antibacterial concentrations at the site of infection in the lung has been suggested to be important in predicting the therapeutic efficacy of antimicrobial treatment during bacterial infections of the lower respiratory tract, some studies have demonstrated that pulmonary bacterial clearance is correlated more closely to concentrations in the serum than to those in the lung homogenates, probably because they better reflect antibacterial concentration in the interstitial fluid.

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向肺部输送抗菌药物:优化结果的考虑因素。
下呼吸道感染临床结果的一个重要决定因素可能是受感染肺部的消毒,这也依赖于肺部持续的抗菌浓度。由于这个原因,最近人们对测量肺部不同潜在感染部位的抗菌药物浓度越来越感兴趣。现在在支气管黏膜、上皮内层液(ELF)和肺泡巨噬细胞以及痰中测量抗菌药物的水平。青霉素类和头孢菌素类在支气管分泌物中仅达到边缘浓度,而氟喹诺酮类和大环内酯类已被证明达到高浓度。不同抗菌药物对支气管黏膜的渗透程度较高。β -内酰胺也是如此,尽管它们的组织浓度永远达不到血液浓度。抗菌药物对肺泡灌洗液的渗透少于对支气管粘膜的渗透,但氟喹诺酮类药物似乎更多地集中在肺泡灌洗液而不是支气管粘膜。肺药代动力学是描述药物在人体肺中的行为的一个非常有用的工具,但它并不能促进对药物药理作用的理解。相反,更重要的是药物在肺部的分布与其对感染因子的最小抑制浓度(MIC)值之间的相关性。在体内药代动力学研究中加入细菌学特征引发了“药效学方法”。药效学参数通过关注其生物效应,特别是生长抑制和杀死病原体,将抗感染药物的微生物活性和药代动力学整合在一起。穿透良好并在肺部感染部位停留较长时间的药物通常会诱导比体外实验数据所预测的更大的治疗反应。然而,尽管肺部感染部位抗菌药物浓度的测定被认为是预测下呼吸道细菌感染期间抗菌药物治疗效果的重要指标,但一些研究表明,肺部细菌清除率与血清浓度的关系比与肺匀浆浓度的关系更密切。可能是因为它们更能反映间质液中的抗菌浓度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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