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Combo of Three Antibiotics Can Kill Deadly Staph Infections

September 21, 2015
0

Three antibiotics that, individually, are not effective against a drug-resistant staph infection can kill the deadly pathogen when combined as a trio, according to new research.

The researchers, at Washington University School of Medicine (WUSM), St. Louis, have killed the bug-methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-in test tubes and laboratory mice, and believe the same three-drug strategy may work in people.

“MRSA infections kill 11,000 people each year in the United States, and the pathogen is considered one of the world’s worst drug-resistant microbes,” said principal investigator Gautam Dantas, PhD, an associate professor of pathology and immunology. “Using the drug combination to treat people has the potential to begin quickly because all three antibiotics are approved by the FDA.”

The study is published online in Nature Chemical Biology.

The three drugs-meropenem, piperacillin, and tazobactam-are from a class of antibiotics called beta-lactams that has not been effective against MRSA for decades.

Working with collaborators in the microbiology laboratory at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, Dantas’ team tested and genetically analyzed 73 different variants of the MRSA microbe to represent a range of hospital-acquired and community-acquired forms of the pathogen. The researchers treated the various MRSA bugs with the three-drug combination and found that the treatments worked in every case.

Then, in experiments conducted by collaborators at the University of Notre Dame, the team found that the drug combination cured MRSA-infected mice and was as effective against the pathogen as one of the strongest antibiotics on the market.

“Without treatment, these MRSA-infected mice tend to live less than a day, but the three-drug combination cured the mice,” Dantas said. “After the treatment, the mice were thriving.”

The researchers also found that the drugs didn’t produce resistance in MRSA bacteria-an important finding since more and more bacteria are developing resistance to available drugs.

“This three-drug combination appears to prevent MRSA from becoming resistant to it,” Dantas said. “We know all bacteria eventually develop resistance to antibiotics, but this trio buys us some time, potentially a significant amount of time.”

Dantas’ team also is investigating other antibiotics thought to be ineffective against various bacterial pathogens to see if they, too, may work if used in combination with other drugs.

“We started with MRSA because it’s such a difficult bug to treat,” he said. “But we are optimistic the same type of approach may work against other deadly pathogens, such as Pseudomonas and certain virulent forms of E. coli.”

This article was adapted from information provided by Washington University.

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