ABSTRACT:
Current therapy for pulmonary tuberculosis involves 6 months of treatment with isoniazid, pyrazinamide, rifampin, and ethambutol or streptomycin for reliable treatment efficacy. The long treatment period increases the probability of noncompliance, leading to the generation of multidrug-resistant isolates of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
. A treatment option that significantly shortened the course of therapy, or a new class of antibacterial effective against drug-resistant
M. tuberculosis
would be of value. ABT-255 is a novel 2-pyridone antibacterial agent which demonstrates in vitro potency and in vivo efficacy against drug-susceptible and drug-resistant
M. tuberculosis
strains. By the Alamar blue reduction technique, the MIC of ABT-255 against susceptible strains of
M. tuberculosis
ranged from 0.016 to 0.031 μg/ml. The MIC of ABT-255 against rifampin- or ethambutol-resistant
M. tuberculosis
isolates was 0.031 μg/ml. In a murine model of pulmonary tuberculosis, 4 weeks of oral ABT-255 therapy produced a 2- to 5-log
10
reduction in viable drug-susceptible
M. tuberculosis
counts from lung tissue. Against drug-resistant strains of
M. tuberculosis
, ABT-255 produced a 2- to 3-log
10
reduction in viable bacterial counts from lung tissue. ABT-255 is a promising new antibacterial agent with activity against
M. tuberculosis
.