Assessment of Innovative Dry Powders for Inhalation of a Synergistic Combination Against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Infected Macrophages and Mice.

Publication date: May 27, 2025

Background/Objectives: In vitro, vancomycin (VAN) and tetrahydrolipstatin (THL) together have been shown to synergistically inhibit Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the world’s most infectious killer. The poor oral bioavailability of VAN and THL and predominant tropism of Mtb infection to the lungs and alveolar macrophages make pulmonary administration highly attractive. This study aimed to develop and assess the efficacy of dry powders for inhalation of VAN microparticles embedded with THL. Methods: The dry powders produced by spray-drying, with or without hydrogenated castor oil (HCO), were characterized for their physicochemical properties among others by HPLC-DAD. The fast-screening impactor was used to determine powder aerodynamic properties, and VAN and THL releases were established from the paddle over disk method. Biological activities were assessed in a new M. bovis-infected macrophage model and in Mtb-infected mice. Results and Discussion: The addition of 25% HCO enables co-deposition (fine particle dose) at the desired weight ratio and co-releasing of VAN and THL in aqueous media. Microparticles with 0% to 50% HCO drastically reduced cytoplasmic Mycobacterium bovis survival (99. 9% to 62. 5%, respectively), with higher efficacy at low HCO concentration. Consequently, VAN/THL with or without 25% HCO was evaluated in Mtb-infected mice. Although no decrease in Mtb lung burden was observed after two weeks of administration, the endotracheal administration of VAN 500 mg/kg and THL 50 mg/kg with 25% HCO administrated three times during five days concomitantly with daily oral rifampicin (10 mg/kg) demonstrated 2-fold bacterial burden reduction compared to the group treated with RIF alone. Conclusions: HCO was crucial for obtaining a fine particle dose at the synergistic weight ratio (VAN/THL 10:1) and for releasing both drugs in aqueous media. With oral administration of the first-line rifampicin, the dry powder VAN/THL/25% HCO was able to exert a potential anti-tubercular effect in vivo in Mtb-infected mice after five days.

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Concepts Keywords
Attractive macrophage infection model
Dad orlistat
Mice pulmonary delivery
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Oil vancomycin

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Vancomycin
drug DRUGBANK Orlistat
disease MESH infection
drug DRUGBANK Castor oil
drug DRUGBANK Rifampicin
disease MESH Tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH Bacterial Diseases
disease IDO infectious agent
drug DRUGBANK Isoniazid
drug DRUGBANK Pyrazinamide
drug DRUGBANK Ethambutol
disease MESH treatment failure
disease MESH relapse
disease MESH infectious diseases
drug DRUGBANK Water
disease IDO host
disease IDO production
disease MESH obesity
drug DRUGBANK Indoleacetic acid
disease MESH inflammation
pathway REACTOME Release
disease IDO process
drug DRUGBANK Cisplatin
drug DRUGBANK Tocofersolan
drug DRUGBANK Medical air
drug DRUGBANK Aluminium
drug DRUGBANK Ethanol
drug DRUGBANK Flunarizine
drug DRUGBANK Formic Acid
drug DRUGBANK Platinum
disease MESH Weight losses
disease MESH depression
disease IDO assay
drug DRUGBANK Sulodexide
drug DRUGBANK Phosphate ion
drug DRUGBANK Sodium lauryl sulfate
drug DRUGBANK Acetate ion
drug DRUGBANK BCG vaccine
disease IDO colony
drug DRUGBANK Amikacin
disease MESH sterility
disease IDO cell
drug DRUGBANK Glycerin
disease IDO bacteria
disease IDO quality
disease MESH posture
drug DRUGBANK Dextrose unspecified form
drug DRUGBANK Ketamine
drug DRUGBANK Xylazine
drug DRUGBANK Aspartame
disease IDO reagent
disease IDO drug susceptibility
drug DRUGBANK Methyl isocyanate
drug DRUGBANK Fica
drug DRUGBANK Carboxymethylcellulose
disease MESH death
drug DRUGBANK Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
disease IDO virulence
disease MESH granulomas
disease MESH necrosis

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