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Models of antimicrobial pressure on intestinal bacteria of the treated host populations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 May 2017

V. V. VOLKOVA*
Affiliation:
Department of Diagnostic Medicine/Pathobiology, Institute of Computational Comparative Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State University, Mosier Hall, KS 66506, USA
C. L. CAZER
Affiliation:
Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Schurman Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
Y. T. GRÖHN
Affiliation:
Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Schurman Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
*
*Author for correspondence: V. V. Volkova, Department of Diagnostic Medicine/Pathobiology, Institute of Computational Comparative Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State University, Mosier Hall, KS 66506, USA. (Email: vv88@vet.k-state.edu)
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Summary

Antimicrobial drugs are used to treat pathogenic bacterial infections in animals and humans. The by-stander enteric bacteria of the treated host's intestine can become exposed to the drug or its metabolites reaching the intestine in antimicrobially active form. We consider which processes and variables need to be accounted for to project the antimicrobial concentrations in the host's intestine. Those include: the drug's fraction (inclusive of any active metabolites) excreted in bile; the drug's fractions and intestinal segments of excretion via other mechanisms; the rates and intestinal segments of the drug's absorption and re-absorption; the rates and intestinal segments of the drug's abiotic and biotic degradation in the intestine; the digesta passage time through the intestinal segments; the rates, mechanisms, and reversibility of the drug's sorption to the digesta and enteric microbiome; and the volume of luminal contents in the intestinal segments. For certain antimicrobials, the antimicrobial activity can further depend on the aeration and chemical conditions in the intestine. Model forms that incorporate the inter-individual variation in those relevant variables can support projections of the intestinal antimicrobial concentrations in populations of treated host, such as food animals. To illustrate the proposed modeling framework, we develop two examples of treatments of bovine respiratory disease in beef steers by oral chlortetracycline and injectable third-generation cephalosporin ceftiofur. The host's diet influences the digesta passage time, volume, and digesta and microbiome composition, and may influence the antimicrobial loss due to degradation and sorption in the intestine. We consider two diet compositions in the illustrative simulations. The examples highlight the extent of current ignorance and need for empirical data on the variables influencing the selective pressures imposed by antimicrobial treatments on the host's intestinal bacteria.

Information

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 
Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a) Generalized schematic of modeling the intestinal concentrations of antimicrobials in the host's intestine. In simple font are the processes that have been characterized in PK models related to therapeutic effects of antimicrobial drugs. In Italics and underlined are further processes that need to be characterized. (b) Adaptation of the framework for oral CTC treatment in cattle. (c) Adaptation of the framework for parenteral treatment by cephalosporin ceftiofur in cattle.

Figure 1

Table 1. Parameters proposed to be related to the drug intestinal concentrations, and the parameter distributions used to model variability in possible concentrations of CTC in the small and large intestines of beef cattle during the 5-day per os treatment

Figure 2

Table 2. Parameters proposed to be related to the metabolite intestinal concentrations, and the parameter distributions used to model variability in possible concentrations of antimicrobially active ceftiofur metabolites in the small and large intestines of cattle treated with ceftiofur parenterally

Figure 3

Fig. 2. Simulated distributions of possible antimicrobially active CTC concentrations in the intestines of beef steers during a 5-day oral CTC treatment and the intestinal elimination period, allowing variation in the variables related to the drug intestinal fate (1000 model simulations). Concentrations in (a) small and (b) large intestines with a grain-based diet. Concentrations in (c) small and (d) large intestines with a hay-based diet.

Figure 4

Table 3. Parameters associated with the maximum concentrations of CTC in the lower 2/3 of small intestines of beef cattle during the 5-day per os treatment

Figure 5

Table 4. Parameters associated with the maximum concentrations of CTC in the large intestines of beef cattle during the 5-day per os treatment

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Table 5. Parameters associated with the maximum concentrations of antimicrobially active ceftiofur metabolites in the lower 2/3 of small intestines of beef cattle administered ceftiofur parenterally

Figure 7

Table 6. Parameters associated with the maximum concentrations of antimicrobially-active ceftiofur metabolites in the large intestines of beef cattle administered ceftiofur parenterally

Figure 8

Fig. 3. Simulated distributions of possible concentrations of antimicrobially active ceftiofur metabolites in (a) small and (b) large intestines of beef steers during a treatment by injection of a sustained-release ceftiofur formulation and the intestinal elimination period, allowing variation in the variables related to the metabolite intestinal fate (1000 model simulations). In the current model the metabolites transit with the liquid digesta phase (no dependency on the host's diet is included).

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