QUINOLONES
Copyright, Purdue Research Foundation, 1996
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NOTE: "**" indicates item not in notes in BIRC AM of 4/17/96
Overview
- Quinolones -- not new
- General spectrum -- gram(-)
- nalidixic acid (NegGramR)
- UTI only
- Rapid resistance a problem
- oxolinic acid (UtiBIDR)
- FLUOROquinolones -- relatively new - 1990s
- General spectrum -- broad
- Veterinary Medicine
- enrofloxacin (BaytrilR) -- companion animals
- sarafloxacin (SarafloxR) -- poultry
- FDA/CVM -- Banned extralabel use in food animals, Fall '95
- CDC opposed to use of this group in animals!
- Human Medicine
- norfloxacin (NoroxinR)
- ciprofloxacin (CiproR)
- Act on DNA
Structure and Chemical Characteristics
- Zwitterions -- so no easy prediction of ion trapping
- Piperazinyl group
- Increases activity against Pseudomonas spp.
- Fluorine atom
- Increases activity agaisnt some gram(+) bacteria
- Incompatibilities
- Large inocula
- Bivalent cations (e.g., Mg++)
- Acidic pH
- Urine
Mechanism of Action
- Cidal at 1 to 4-fold MIC
- Inhibits relaxation of supercoiled (packed) DNA needed for DNA replication
- Increases double-strand DNA breakage
- Inhibit the A subunit of DNA gyrase, a type II topoisomerase
- The type II topoisomerase --
- nicks & seals DNA during replication
- needed for DNA to uncoil and recoil
- Gyrase required for plasmid replication
- Fluoroquinolones may reduce plasmid mediated resistance in other drugs
- Bacteria DO become resistant to these drugs
- MAJOR CONCERN of Center for Disease Control & Prevention!!!!
- Don't believe the salesmen and ads
- AUC is crucial to killing**
- Enrofloxacin experiments in animal models [Meinen et al., '95]
- Dogs & mice /w Staph and E. coli
- Found Peak and AUC crucial, not time above MIC
- Killing concentration dependent, not time dependent
Resistance
- Major problem with nalidixic acid -- compliance (q6h)
- Develops slowly by mutation
- Reduction of gyrase affinity for gyrase
- Decreased penetration due to loss of key membrane proteins
- Cross resistance among fluoroquinolones
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption/administration
- Injectable
- Oral
- F= >70% (humans)
- F= >80% dogs -- enrofloxacin
Distribution
- Nalidixic acid -- only UTI
Insufficient conc. elsewhere
- Fluoroquinolones
- Cross membranes well
- Wide distribution
- respiratory tract
- prostate
- bone
- cartilage
- CSF
Elimination
- Renal excrection - active drug
- Probenecid sensitive
- Half-life
- Dog -- enrofloxacin = >3 hr
- Humans -- ciprofloxacin and norfloxacin = 3-4 hr
Adverse effects
Allergies
- Hypersensitivity can occur
- Contraindicates use
Biological effects
Direct toxicity
- Generally low toxicity -- recommended doses
- PO enrofloxacin rarely causes vomition (0.7%)
- Crystallization in acid urine
- Avoid in pregnant animals
- Monkeys -- embryonic loss, vomiting, anorexia
- Arthropathies / cartilage deterioration
- Avoid severe exercise
- Avoid dogs <1 yr old
- Young dogs
- Lameness observed w/in 2 days
- Typically resolved by 8 wks after stop
- Erosion of articular cartilage
- Contraindicated
- Small dogs & medium -- before 2 to 8 months
- Large dogs -- up to 18 months
- Cats -- also sensitive
- High doses
- Humans
- < 3% & mild
- nausea
- upper GI discomfort
- dizziness
- rarely cause cessation
- Joint toxicity
- Contraindicated up to 18 yrs
Drug interaction
- May interfere with hepatic biotransformation
Indications
- Inactive vs anaerobes
- Claims for enrofloxacin (BaytrilR) Dogs
- Dermal infections -- wounds and abscesses
- Susceptible strains of E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae,
Proteus mirabilis, and Staphylococcus aureus,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa if increase dose
(Bowersock'95)
- Respiratory infections -- pneumonia, tonsilitis, rhinitis
- caused by susceptible strains of E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus
- Urinary cystitis
- caused by susceptible strains of E. coli, Proteus mirabilis,
and Staphylococcus aureus.
- Claims for enrofloxacin -- cats
- Dermal infections -- wounds and abscesses
- caused by susceptible strains of Pasteurella multocida,
Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Claims for sarafloxacin (SarafloxR) -- poultry only
- Water soluble powder for PO
- Injectable
- NOT USE EXTRA-LABEL in Food animals
- Humans
- Norfloxacin better for UTI
- Ciprofloxacin -- wide range of infections
- pneumonias, bone infections,
diarrhea, skin infections and urinary tract infections.
- Extra-label
- Dogs -- norfloxacin -- Enterococcus spp. infections
- Dogs -- norfloxacin -- better than enrofloxacin or ciprofloxacin for enteric Streptococci
(Bowersock'95)
References
- USPDI91: USP Drug Information for the Health Care Professional,
11th edition, 1991. U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention, Inc., Rockville,
MD.
- Walker, R.C. and A.J. Wright. The Quinolones. Mayo Clin Proc
62:1007-1-12, 1987.
- Mobay/Haver promotional material for Baytril[R], December 1988.
- News article -- CVM Bans Extra-label Fluoroquinolone, JAVMA 208(1):11, 1996
- Barragry'94 -- Tetracyclines, Chloramphenicol, and Quinolones, Chapter 11, in Barragry, Thomas B., Veterinary Drug Therapy, Lea & Febiger, Philadelphia, 1994. Chapter 11.
- Meinen, J.B., J.T. McClure, E. Rosin, 1996, Pharmacokinetics of enrofloxacin in clinically normal dogs and mice and drug pharmacodynamics in neutropenic mice with Eschericia coi and staphylococcal infections. Am J Vet Res 56(9):1219-1224.
Study Questions
- How does the spectrum of action of nalidixic acid differ from
those of the newer fluoroquinolones?
- How does the tendency for bacteria to develop of resistance
to fluroquinolones compare with nalidixic acid?
- How do the sites of susceptible infections compare for nalidixic
acid versus the fluoroquinolones?
- What tissue is most susceptible to quinolone toxicity? Are
fluoroquinolones usually very toxic otherwise?
- Should quinolone derivatives be used in rapidly growing animals
and humans?
- On what is the manufacturer's claim based that fluoroquinolones
cannot be cross-resistant with other antiinfective agents?
- Can fluoroquinolones be used "extra-label" in food producing animals?
- What does it mean that killing of Staphylocci and E. coli
is "concentration" dependent and not "time" dependent?
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Gordon L. Coppoc, DVM, PhD
Professor of Veterinary Pharmacology
Head, Department of Basic Medical Sciences
School of Veterinary Medicine
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1246
Tel: 317-494-8633Fax: 317-494-0781
Email: coppoc@vet.purdue.edu
Last modified
9:32 AM on 4/17/96
GLC