Abstract

Amphotericin B (AmB) is a very effective antifungal agent for most systemic fungal infections. However, the relatively high toxicity of this drug imposes limits on its clinical usefulness. Most of the current work in this field is devoted to the search for less-toxic formulations of the drug. Here we describe the effects of three surfactants, one anionic and the other two nonionic, on the aggregation state of AmB in solutions which were injected intravenously into mice. The degree of aggregation of AmB was monitored spectroscopically and by light scattering. The toxicity was expressed as percentage of survivors. These results were compared with those obtained with doses of AmB the same as those present in a commercial formulation of AmB, Fungizone. Two surfactants, lauryl sucrose and sodium deoxycholate, used at concentrations which induced monomerization of AmB, substantially decreased the acute toxicity of AmB to mice. Conversely, the third surfactant, Tween 80, showed a synergistic potentiation of the toxicity of the antibiotic. A good correlation was found between the in vivo toxicity and the aggregation state of AmB in injected solutions. Solutions in which AmB was almost entirely monomeric were half as toxic after 24 h and about six times less toxic after 1 week than the corresponding solutions of Fungizone.

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