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Role of chemotherapeutic antagonism in opportunistic infections.
Castelli, M; Baggio, G; Ruberto, A I; Malagoli, M; Casolari, C; Rossi, T; Galatulas, I.
Afiliación
  • Castelli M; Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Modena, Italy.
Anticancer Res ; 17(6D): 4339-44, 1997.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9494530
ABSTRACT
The most widely-known anti-tumor drugs often induce marked immunosuppression which can give rise to one or more sepses. Anti-infection measures immediately applied can sometimes prove largely ineffective or even useless, the patient dying not as a result of the spread of the tumour but as a direct consequence of opportunistic infection. We postulate that antagonism between anti-tumour and antimicrobial drugs may also play an important part in this. By way of illustration of this hypothesis, we have studied the action of a number of known inhibitors of peptidoglycan synthesis and of DNA-gyrases on certain strains of Gram-positive and Gram-negative microorganisms cultured in medium containing various concentrations of some of the best-known anti-tumour antimetabolites. The experimental data show that antimicrobial and anti-tumour drugs can sometimes induce synergic or indifferent chemotherapeutic interactions with many bacteria, while in others the effect is antagonistic. In practice, the action of the drugs could lead to bacterial selectivity, which, in conjunction with immunosuppression and the presence of resistant strains, could favour the evolution of opportunistic infection.
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Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Infecciones Oportunistas / Bacterias Gramnegativas / Bacterias Grampositivas / Antibacterianos / Antineoplásicos Idioma: En Revista: Anticancer Res Año: 1997 Tipo del documento: Article
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Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Infecciones Oportunistas / Bacterias Gramnegativas / Bacterias Grampositivas / Antibacterianos / Antineoplásicos Idioma: En Revista: Anticancer Res Año: 1997 Tipo del documento: Article