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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Activity of telithromycin against key pathogens associated with community-acquired respiratory tract infections.

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the correlation between in vitro susceptibility of isolates and clinical outcomes with telithromycin in respiratory tract infections. METHODS: The activity of telithromycin was determined by in vitro susceptibility testing of key respiratory tract pathogens isolated from patients with community-acquired pneumonia, acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis or acute maxillary sinusitis enrolled in 14 Phase III/IV clinical trials evaluating the clinical efficacy of telithromycin. RESULTS: In this pooled analysis, telithromycin mode minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and MIC90, respectively, were: 0.016 and 0.03 mg/l against Streptococcus pneumoniae (n=626); 0.03 and 0.5 mg/l for penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae (n=56); 0.03 and 1 mg/l for erythromycin-resistant S. pneumoniae (n=81); 2 and 4 mg/l against Haemophilus influenzae (including beta-lactamase producers; n=627); both 0.12 mg/l for Moraxella catarrhalis (n=159) and both 0.25 mg/l for Staphylococcus aureus (n=124). Telithromycin (5 or 7-10 days) resulted in overall clinical and bacteriologic success rates of 88.1% (1593/1808) and 89% (1593/1789), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: High levels of in vitro susceptibility to telithromycin are paralleled by high rates of clinical cure and bacteriologic eradication.[1]

References

  1. Activity of telithromycin against key pathogens associated with community-acquired respiratory tract infections. Low, D.E., Felmingham, D., Brown, S.D., Rangaraju, M., Nusrat, R. J. Infect. (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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