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What’s the Matter with MICs: Bacterial Nutrition, Limiting Resources, and Antibiotic Pharmacodynamics

Brandon A. Berryhill, Teresa Gil‐Gil, Joshua A. Manuel, Andrew P. Smith, Ellie Margollis, Fernando Baquero, Bruce R. Levin

2023Microbiology Spectrum40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

For studies of antibiotics and how they work, the most-often used measurement of drug efficacy is the MIC. The MIC is the concentration of an antibiotic needed to inhibit bacterial growth. This parameter is critical to the design and implementation of antibiotic therapy. We provide evidence that the use of MIC as the sole measurement for antibiotic efficacy ignores important aspects of bacterial growth dynamics. Before now, there has not been a nexus between bacteria, the conditions in which they grow, and the MIC. Most importantly, few studies have considered sub-MICs of antibiotics, despite their clinical importance. Here, we explore these concentrations in-depth, and we demonstrate MIC to be an incomplete measure of how an infection will interact with a specific antibiotic. Understanding the critiques of MIC is the first of many steps needed to improve infectious disease treatment.

Topics & Concepts

AntibioticsPharmacodynamicsLimitingMicrobiologyMedicinePharmacokineticsBiologyPharmacologyEngineeringMechanical engineeringAntibiotics Pharmacokinetics and EfficacyBacterial Identification and Susceptibility TestingAntibiotic Use and Resistance
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