Nonclinical and pharmacokinetic assessments to evaluate the potential of tedizolid and linezolid to affect mitochondrial function

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Nonclinical and pharmacokinetic assessments to evaluate the potential of tedizolid and linezolid to affect mitochondrial function
المؤلفون: Paul M. Tulkens, Ann Radovsky, Philippe Prokocimer, Jill Fiedler-Kelly, Edward E. McKee, Hiromi Hosako, Julie A. Passarell, Debaditya Das, Shawn Flanagan
المساهمون: UCL - SSS/LDRI - Louvain Drug Research Institute
المصدر: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, Vol. 59, no.1, p. 178-185 (2015)
سنة النشر: 2014
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, Population, Drug Evaluation, Preclinical, Tetrazoles, Pharmacology, In Vitro Techniques, Placebo, Mitochondrial Proteins, chemistry.chemical_compound, Mice, Therapeutic index, Pharmacokinetics, Medicine, Animals, Humans, Pharmacology (medical), education, Toxicity Tests, Chronic, IC50, Mechanisms of Action: Physiological Effects, Oxazolidinones, Rats, Inbred LEC, education.field_of_study, business.industry, Linezolid, medicine.disease, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Mitochondria, Infectious Diseases, chemistry, Lactic acidosis, Tedizolid, Female, Neurotoxicity Syndromes, business, Monte Carlo Method
الوصف: Prolonged treatment with the oxazolidinone linezolid is associated with myelosuppression, lactic acidosis, and neuropathies, toxicities likely caused by impairment of mitochondrial protein synthesis (MPS). To evaluate the potential of the novel oxazolidinone tedizolid to cause similar side effects, nonclinical and pharmacokinetic assessments were conducted. In isolated rat heart mitochondria, tedizolid inhibited MPS more potently than did linezolid (average [± standard error of the mean] 50% inhibitory concentration [IC 50 ] for MPS of 0.31 ± 0.02 μM versus 6.4 ± 1.2 μM). However, a rigorous 9-month rat study comparing placebo and high-dose tedizolid (resulting in steady-state area under the plasma concentration-time curve values about 8-fold greater than those with the standard therapeutic dose in humans) showed no evidence of neuropathy. Additional studies explored why prolonged, high-dose tedizolid did not cause these mitochondriopathic side effects despite potent MPS inhibition by tedizolid. Murine macrophage (J774) cell fractionation studies found no evidence of a stable association of tedizolid with eukaryotic mitochondria. Monte Carlo simulations based on population pharmacokinetic models showed that over the course of a dosing interval using standard therapeutic doses, free plasma concentrations fell below the respective MPS IC 50 in 84% of tedizolid-treated patients (for a median duration of 7.94 h) and 38% of linezolid-treated patients (for a median duration of 0 h). Therapeutic doses of tedizolid, but not linezolid, may therefore allow for mitochondrial recovery during antibacterial therapy. The overall results suggest that tedizolid has less potential to cause myelosuppression and neuropathy than that of linezolid during prolonged treatment courses. This, however, remains a hypothesis that must be confirmed in clinical studies.
تدمد: 1098-6596
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::0e32d5cb7fe77afaba2affd13b628077
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25331703
Rights: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....0e32d5cb7fe77afaba2affd13b628077
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE