In-vivo therapeutic efficacy in experimental murine mycoses of a new formulation of deoxycholate-amphotericin B obtained by mild heating.

J Antimicrob Chemother

Laboratoire de Physicochimie Biomoléculaire et Cellulaire, CNRS UA 2056, Université P. et M. Curie, Paris, France.

Published: December 1998

Heat-induced 'superaggregation' of deoxycholate-amphotericin B (AmB-DOC, Fungizone) was shown previously to reduce the in-vitro toxicity of this antifungal agent. We compared AmB-DOC with the formulation obtained by heating the commercial form (Fungizone, Bristol Myers Squibb, Paris, France) for 20 min at 70 degrees C, in the treatment of murine infections. An improvement of antifungal activity was obtained with heated AmB-DOC formulations due to a lower toxicity which allowed the administration of higher drug doses than those achievable with the commercial preparation. Single intravenous injections of heated AmB-DOC solutions were demonstrated to be two-fold less toxic than unheated ones to healthy mice. For mice infected with Candida albicans, the maximum tolerated dose was higher with heated than with unheated AmB-DOC solutions. In the model of murine candidiasis, following a single dose of heated AmB-DOC 0.5 mg/kg, 85% of mice survived for 3 weeks, whereas at this dose the immediate toxicity of the standard formulation in infected mice restricted the therapeutic efficacy to 25% survival. Both formulations were equally effective in increasing the survival time for murine cryptococcal pneumonia and meningoencephalitis. Injection of heated AmB-DOC solutions at a dose two-fold higher than the maximal tolerated dose observed with the unheated preparation (1.2 mg/kg) increased the survival time by a factor of 1.4 in cryptococcal meningoencephalitis. These results indicate that mild heat treatment of AmB-DOC solutions could provide a simple and economical method to improve the therapeutic index of this antifungal agent by reducing its toxicity on mammalian cells.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jac/42.6.779DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

heated amb-doc
16
amb-doc solutions
16
therapeutic efficacy
8
amb-doc
8
antifungal agent
8
tolerated dose
8
survival time
8
heated
5
dose
5
in-vivo therapeutic
4

Similar Publications

The aim of this work was to evaluate how an aqueous micellar system containing Amphotericin B (AmB) and sodium deoxycholate (DOC) can be rebuilt after heating treatment. Also, a review of the literature on the physicochemical and biological properties of this new system was conducted. Heated (AmB-DOC-H) and unheated (AmB-DOC) micelles were then diluted at four different concentrations (50 mg · L(-1), 5 mg · L(-1), 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aim: Heat treatment of deoxycholate-amphotericin B (AmB-DOC) leads to a therapeutically interesting supramolecular rearrangement (h-AmB-DOC); this reformulation improves the therapeutic index of AmB-DOC by reducing amphotericin B (AmB) toxicity in mammalian cell lines from 3- to 10-fold. Its activity in experimentally induced fungal infection in mice remains unchanged compared with AmB-DOC, whereas its activity is 2.5 times higher in Leishmania donovani-infected mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heat-induced superaggregation of amphotericin B attenuates its ability to induce cytokine and chemokine production in the human monocytic cell line THP-1.

J Antimicrob Chemother

February 2003

Departments of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, 26 South Dunlap Street, Memphis, TN 38163, USA.

The cytokine and chemokine response elicited by heat-treated amphotericin B (HT-AmB) was compared with that of untreated amphotericin B (AmB-DOC) in the human monocyte cell line THP-1. AmB-DOC produced dose-dependent increases in interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-1alpha, tumour necrosis factor-alpha, macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha and MIP-1beta at 2 h. HT-AmB induced cytokine and chemokine production at a lower level than those observed with corresponding concentrations of AmB-DOC, while retaining antifungal activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heated (20 min at 70 degrees C) amphotericin B-desoxycholate (hAMB-DOC) was further characterized, as was another formulation obtained after centrifugation (60 min, 3000 x g), hcAMB-DOC. Conventional AMB-DOC consisted of individual micelles (approximately 4 nm in diameter) and threadlike aggregated micelles, as revealed by cryo-transmission electron microscopy. For both hAMB-DOC and hcAMB-DOC, pleiomorphic cobweb structures were observed with a mean particle size of approximately 300 nm as determined by laser diffraction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heat-induced 'superaggregation' of deoxycholate-amphotericin B (AmB-DOC, Fungizone) was shown previously to reduce the in-vitro toxicity of this antifungal agent. We compared AmB-DOC with the formulation obtained by heating the commercial form (Fungizone, Bristol Myers Squibb, Paris, France) for 20 min at 70 degrees C, in the treatment of murine infections. An improvement of antifungal activity was obtained with heated AmB-DOC formulations due to a lower toxicity which allowed the administration of higher drug doses than those achievable with the commercial preparation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!