4.7 Article

Tigecycline Immunodetection Using Developed Group-Specific and Selective Antibodies for Drug Monitoring Purposes

Journal

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios13030343

Keywords

tigecycline; therapeutic drug monitoring; ELISA; group and selective specificity; pharmacokinetics

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Tigecycline (TGC) is a potent and broad-spectrum antibiotic that can overcome tetracycline resistance. To improve safety and efficacy, an immunodetection method using TGC selective antibodies and group-specific antibodies was developed for therapeutic drug monitoring. The method showed high sensitivity and satisfactory recovery rates in healthy volunteers and COVID-19 patients with secondary bacterial infections. Pharmacokinetic study conducted in critically ill patients supported the suitability of the test for individual therapy monitoring and population pharmacokinetic modeling.
Tigecycline (TGC), a third-generation tetracycline, is characterized by a more potent and broad antibacterial activity, and the ability to overcome different mechanisms of tetracycline resistance. TGC has proven to be of value in treatment of multidrug-resistant infections, but therapy can be complicated by multiple dangerous side effects, including direct drug toxicity. Given that, a TGC immunodetection method has been developed for therapeutic drug monitoring to improve the safety and efficacy of therapy. The developed indirect competitive ELISA utilized TGC selective antibodies and group-specific antibodies interacting with selected coating TGC conjugates. Both assay systems showed high sensitivity (IC50) of 0.23 and 1.59 ng/mL, and LOD of 0.02 and 0.05 ng/mL, respectively. Satisfactory TGC recovery from the spiked blood serum of healthy volunteers was obtained in both assays and laid in the range of 81-102%. TGC concentrations measured in sera from COVID-19 patients with secondary bacterial infections were mutually confirmed by ELISA based on the other antibody-antigen interaction and showed good agreement (R-2 = 0.966). A TGC pharmacokinetic (PK) study conducted in three critically ill patients proved the suitability of the test to analyze the therapeutic concentrations of TGC. Significant inter-individual PK variability revealed in this limited group supports therapeutic monitoring of TGC in individual patients and application of the test for population pharmacokinetic modelling.

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