Developing New Drugs for Mycobacterium tuberculosis Therapy: What Information Do We Get from Preclinical Animal Models?
George L. Drusano, Brandon Duncanson, Charles A. Scanga, Sarah Kim, Stephan Schmidt, Michael Neely, Walter M. Yamada, Michael Vicchiarelli, et al. (10 authors)
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy · 2020-09
Abstract
Preclinical animal models of infection are employed to develop new agents but also to screen among molecules to rank them. There are often major differences between human pharmacokinetic (PK) profiles and those developed by animal models of infection, and these may lead to substantial differences in efficacy relative to that seen in humans. Linezolid is a repurposed agent employed to great effect for therapy of Mycobacterium tuberculosis . In this study, we used the hollow-fiber infection model (HFIM) to evaluate the impact of different pharmacokinetic profiles of mice and nonhuman primates (NHP) versus humans on bacterial cell kill as well as resistance suppression.
MeSH terms
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Linezolid
- Pharmacokinetics
- Tuberculosis
- Animal model
- Medicine
- Animal studies
- Pharmacology
- Biology
- Immunology