The Potentiation Activity of Azithromycin in Combination with Colistin or Levofloxacin Against Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilm Infection

Infect Drug Resist. 2024 Mar 28:17:1259-1266. doi: 10.2147/IDR.S438576. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Objective: Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) often displays drug resistance and biofilm-mediated adaptability. Here, we aimed to evaluate the antibiofilm efficacy of azithromycin-based combination regimens.

Methods: Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs), minimal biofilm eradication concentrations (MBECs), and MBEC-combination of azithromycin, colistin, amikacin, and levofloxacin to bioluminescent strain PAO1 and carbapenem-resistant PAO1 (CRPAO1) were assessed. An animal biofilm infection model was established and detected using a live animal bio-photonic imaging system.

Results: In vitro, PAO1 and CRPAO1 were susceptible to colistin, amikacin, and levofloxacin, while they were unsusceptible to azithromycin. The combinations based on azithromycin have no synergistic effect on biofilm in vitro. In vivo, azithromycin plus colistin or levofloxacin could shorten the PAO1 biofilm eradication time, which totally eradicates the biofilm in all mice on the 8th or 6th day, while monotherapy only eradicate biofilm in 70% or 80% mice on the 8th day. For CRPAO1 biofilm, only azithromycin-colistin combination and colistin monotherapy eradicated the bacteria in 60% and 40% of mice at the 6th day.

Conclusion: Azithromycin-based combinations containing levofloxacin or colistin had no synergistic effect in vitro, and they are promising for clinical applications due to the good synergistic activity against PAO1 biofilms in vivo.

Keywords: Pseudomonas aeruginosa; azithromycin; biofilm; combinations.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundations of China (82073894 and 81770004), Cultivation Project of PLA General Hospital for Distinguished Young Scientists (2020-JQPY-004) and New Medicine Clinical Research Fund (4246Z512).