An Investigation into the Re-Emergence of Disease Following Cessation of Antibiotic Treatment in Balb/c Mice Infected with Inhalational
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is the causative agent of melioidosis, a multifaceted disease. A proportion of the mortality and morbidity reported as a result of infection with this organism may be due to the premature cessation of antibiotic therapy typically lasting for several months. The progression of re-emergent disease was characterised in Balb/c mice following cessation of a 14 day treatment course of co-trimoxazole or finafloxacin, delivered at a human equivalent dose. Mice were culled weekly and the infection characterised in terms of bacterial load in tissues, weight loss, clinical signs of infection, cytokine levels and immunological cell counts. Following cessation of treatment, the infection re-established in some animals. Finafloxacin prevented the re-establishment of the infection for longer than co-trimoxazole, and it is apparent based on the protection offered, the development of clinical signs of disease, bodyweight loss and bacterial load, that finafloxacin was more effective at controlling infection when compared to co-trimoxazole.
Heine H, Purcell B, Duncan C, Miller L, Craig J, Chase A Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2024; 69(1):e0129524.
PMID: 39670750 PMC: 11784359. DOI: 10.1128/aac.01295-24.
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