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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Building and prospective validation of promising mono- and combination regimens that optimize killing of CRAB and CR-Klebsiella pneumoniae and for resistance suppression in murine pneumonia models


Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Recipient Organization University of Florida
Country United States
Start Date Aug 08, 2024
End Date May 31, 2029
Duration 1,757 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10763472
Grant Description

Project Abstract/Summary Project #3 The incidence of serious infections, including pneumonia, by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB) and carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) is rising. Infections caused by CRAB and CRKP are associated with high rates of treatment failure and mortality because only a limited number of

antibiotics are active against these multi-drug resistant bacteria and these microbes often become resistant to the prescribed antibiotics during the treatment course. This Project will leverage mechanistic assays from our Gram-negative Toolbox for a novel murine pneumonia model in which antibiotic-directed bacterial killing and

resistance amplification/suppression can be quantified to rationally optimize combination dosage regimens. We will prospectively validate the efficacy of these regimens to combat CRAB and CRKP and will counter-select for resistance. Our overarching hypothesis is that highly effective therapy for CRAB and CRKP infections requires

combination regimens that maximize bacterial killing and suppress resistance emergence. We further hypothesize that the immune system plays an important role in enhancing bacterial killing and suppressing resistance in a mouse pneumoniae model. To show this, we will utilize both a neutropenic and a novel

immunocompetent murine model of pneumonia. We hypothesize that it is critical to achieve rapid and extensive initial bacterial killing by rationally optimized antibiotic combination therapies, in order to unleash the effects of granulocytes. The mechanistic insights from Project #1 and the Mechanistic Assay Core #2 will provide an

innovative, rational path for building highly effective combination dosage regimens. These will be prospectively validated using dynamic in vitro infection models (i.e. the hollow fiber system) in Project #2. The present project provides a second stage in vivo validation in novel mouse pneumonia models. Taken together, this highly

integrated approach will allow us to translate mechanistic insights from our latest Gram-negative toolbox assays via the hollow fiber and murine infection models to robust and efficacious dosage regimens against CRAB and CRKP for future testing in clinical trials. We will employ humanized dosage regimens in mice to mirror the plasma

concentration time profiles in humans. All data from our mechanistic assays and our in vitro and mouse infection models will be integrated into translational mathematical pharmacokinetic / pharmacodynamic models by the Mathematical Modeling Core #3. This integrated approach will provide robust and efficacious antibiotic

combination dosage regimens that maximize bacterial killing, suppress resistance, and leverage the effect of the immune system involving available antibiotics and those in clinical drug development. These mechanistically optimized regimens will make a tangible difference of combating CRAB and CRKP for years to come.

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University of Florida

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