AUTHOR=Wang Rui-Ling , Liu Ping , Chen Xiao-Feng , Yao Xin , Liao Xiao-Ping , Liu Ya-Hong , Sun Jian , Zhou Yu-Feng
TITLE=Pharmacodynamic Target Assessment and PK/PD Cutoff Determination for Gamithromycin Against Streptococcus suis in Piglets
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Veterinary Science
VOLUME=9
YEAR=2022
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/veterinary-science/articles/10.3389/fvets.2022.945632
DOI=10.3389/fvets.2022.945632
ISSN=2297-1769
ABSTRACT=
Gamithromycin is a long-acting azalide antibiotic that has been developed recently for the treatment of swine respiratory diseases. In this study, the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) targets, PK/PD cutoff, and optimum dosing regimen of gamithromycin were evaluated in piglets against Streptococcus suis in China, including a subset with capsular serotype 2. Short post-antibiotic effects (PAEs) (0.5–2.6 h) and PA-SMEs (2.4–7.7 h) were observed for gamithromycin against S. suis. The serum matrix dramatically facilitated the intracellular uptake of gamithromycin by S. suis strains, thus contributing to the potentiation effect of serum on their susceptibilities, with a Mueller-Hinton broth (MHB)/serum minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) ratio of 28.86 for S. suis. Dose-response relationship demonstrated the area under the concentration (AUC)/MIC ratio to be the predictive PK/PD index closely linked to activity (R2 > 0.93). For S. suis infections, the net stasis, 1–log10, and 2–log10 kill effects were achieved at serum AUC24h/MIC targets of 17.9, 49.1, and 166 h, respectively. At the current clinical dose of 6.0 mg/kg, gamithromycin PK/PD cutoff value was determined to be 8 mg/L. A PK/PD-based dose assessment demonstrated that the optimum dose regimen of gamithromycin to achieve effective treatments for the observed wild-type MIC distribution of S. suis in China with a probability of target attainment (PTA) ≥ 90% was 2.53 mg/kg in this study. These results will aid in the development of clinical dose-optimization studies and the establishment of clinical breakpoints for gamithromycin in the treatment of swine respiratory infections due to S. suis.