Are Antibiotic Cocktails Effective?

Technion researchers discover antibiotic combinations that reduce staphylococcus aureus clearance

Researchers at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology have developed a technique to measure the long-term effects of antibiotic combinations, or cocktails. These combinations are of serious interest to the scientific and medical communities because the use of single antibiotics often leads to the rapid development of bacterial resistance to these drugs.

The research published in Nature was led by Technion researchers Professor Roy Kishony from the Faculty of Biology and Dr. Viktória Lázár, a postdoctoral student in his lab who is now working at the Synthetic and Systems Biology Unit of the Biological Research Centre in Szeged, Hungary.

Professor Roy Kishony

Professor Roy Kishony

The researchers discovered that in many cases, a combination of several antibiotics may actually reduce the treatment’s effectiveness in the long term – meaning that the combination of drugs could prove to be inferior to the success of each individual drug. However, they point to specific combinations that do manage to prevent the development of resistance and thus protect the patient for a long period from the aggressive bacteria.

The bacterium tested in the study is Staphylococcus aureus, a particularly violent bacterium that has developed resistance to many types of antibiotics. This bacterium is responsible for a significant part of nosocomial (in-hospital or in-clinic) infections. The study was conducted both in cultures of this bacterium in the lab and in an animal model – larvae of the Galleria mellonella moth.

Antibiotics are a family of drugs that play a central role in modern medicine and save lives on a daily basis. The natural antibiotic substances that developed during evolution in fungi and yeast were discovered about a century ago in the research of Londoner Sir Alexander Fleming, Australia-born Howard Walter Florey, and immigrant to England from Berlin who was of Russian-German-Jewish descent Ernst Boris Chain. The three shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 1945. In the past century, antibiotic treatment has saved hundreds of millions of people.

However, the success of antibiotic therapy has turned into a double-edged sword because the widespread use of these anti-bacterial drugs leads to the evolutionary development of bacteria that develop resistance. This trend raises a justified fear of a post-antibiotic era, or a period when bacteria will no longer respond to antibiotic drugs and people will die, as in the past, from infections that are now considered mild and not dangerous.

Dr. Viktória Lázár

Dr. Viktória Lázár

The laboratory of Prof. Kishony, one of the leading experts in the field of antibiotic resistance, develops methods that make it possible to estimate in advance the resistance of a given bacterium to a given antibiotic in the present and even to predict the resistance level it is expected to develop in the future. In the current study, a combination of different antibiotic drugs that prevent the formation of resistance was examined.

The researchers noted that the COVID-19 pandemic has increased the use of antibiotics, even though SARS-CoV-2 is not affected by antibiotics on account of it being a virus and not a bacterium. However, giving antibiotics helps COVID-19 patients to avoid secondary bacterial infections. With the growth of antibiotic use, the evolution of resistant Staphylococcus aureus strains accelerates.

To summarize, the Technion researchers discovered that combinations of antibiotics may harm the effectiveness of the treatment and point to specific combinations that speed up or inhibit the development of resistant bacteria. In doing so, they help pave the way for more effective treatments and the curbing of the “resistance epidemic” that threatens humanity.

Artistic rendering of Technion researchers’ results, demonstrating that interactions among antibiotics often harm the effectiveness of the treatment. Published in Nature, the results undermine the general antimicrobial belief that “more is better,” showing that the clearance efficacy of drug cocktails is often weaker than that of any of the single drugs alone. (Credit: Eniko Kolliger)

Artistic rendering of Technion researchers’ results, demonstrating that interactions among antibiotics often harm the effectiveness of the treatment. Published in Nature, the results undermine the general antimicrobial belief that “more is better,” showing that the clearance efficacy of drug cocktails is often weaker than that of any of the single drugs alone. (Credit: Eniko Kolliger)

Click here for the paper in the Nature