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In the early 1990s, soon after
ciprofloxacin entered the market, it was used for S. pneumoniae. It did not work
very well, and it was withdrawn from this indication. In retrospect we can understand why
it did not do well. When you plot the ciprofloxacin pharmacokinetic curve relative to MIC
and MPC, you see that ciprofloxacin concentration barely exceeds the MIC (filled circles).
Levofloxacin, however, (open circles), climbs much higher relative to the MIC, and so it
is expected to give a better cure rate. Indeed, it is considered to be quite effective.
However, you will notice that levofloxacin is inside the selection window throughout
therapy. Thus we predicted (14) that widespread resistance to levofloxacin would arise. The
question of which compound would selectively enrich mutants more rapidly is complex
because non-topoisomerase mutants tend to be recovered in great numbers when drug
concentrations are near the MIC. When drug concentrations are higher in the window, the
abundant non-topoisomerase mutants are not recovered. Moreover, the higher concentrations
tend to more effectively eliminate susceptible cells, thereby elevating the chance that
host defenses will remove resistant mutants. It is not likely to be helpful for
ciprofloxacin concentration to drop well below the MIC where selective pressuure is weak
because susceptible cell outgrowth will occur. |