Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the human vitreous penetration of gatifloxacin in inflamed and non-inflamed eyes after oral administration.
Methods: Vitreous penetration of single-dose (400 mg) oral gatifloxacin was evaluated in patients (n = 33) undergoing vitreous tap during the standard procedure for intravitreal antibiotic injection for acute postoperative endophthalmitis at various time-points. Vitreous penetration of 400 mg oral gatifloxacin was evaluated in the non-inflamed eyes of patients (n = 33) undergoing pars plana vitrectomy at similar time-points. The study was extended to evaluate the vitreous penetration of single-dose oral (800 mg) gatifloxacin at a single time-point in inflamed (n = 10) and non-inflamed (n = 11) eyes.
Results: After 400 mg oral gatifloxacin, inflamed eyes showed mean vitreous concentrations of 0.58+/-0.19 microg/ml, 1.33+/-0.33 microg/ml and 1.30 +/- 0.23 microg/ml at 2, 4 and 6 hours, respectively. The levels reached at 2 and 4 hours were found to be significantly increased compared with those in non-inflamed eyes. At the 800-mg dose, 4-hour vitreous levels in inflamed and non-inflamed eyes were 1.57 +/- 0.3 microg/ml and 1.42 +/- 0.24 microg/ml, respectively. Although the increased dose of gatifloxacin elevated plasma concentration, it failed to raise vitreous levels significantly higher than the 400-mg dose at the 4-hour time-point.
Conclusions: Orally administered gatifloxacin achieves therapeutic levels in both inflamed and non-inflamed human eyes with a spectrum covering the bacterial species most frequently involved in the various causes of endophthalmitis. However, the levels achieved were below the MIC(90) for Pseudomonas aureginosa and Enterococcus.