IntroductionGuideline-based therapy for Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) pulmonary disease achieves sustained sputum conversion rates in only 43–53% of patients. Repurposing of β-lactam antibiotics such as ertapenem could expedite design of more efficacious regimens, compared to developing new drugs. MethodsWe performed an ertapenem exposure-response study in the hollow fibre system model of intracellular MAC (HFS-MAC). We recapitulated human-like intrapulmonary concentration-time profiles of eight once-daily intravenous doses of ertapenem over 28 days and performed repetitive sampling for drug concentration-time profiles and MAC burden. The % of time concentration persisted above MIC (%TMIC) mediating either 50% or 80% of maximal effect (E50, EC80) were identified. The EC80 was used as target exposure in a 10 000 subject Monte Carlo experiments for ertapenem doses of 1G, 2G, or 4G administered once versus twice daily. ResultsThe ertapenem MIC ranged from 0.5 to 2 mg/L on three occasions. Ertapenem achieved a half-life of 4.04 ± 0.80 h in the HFS-MAC and killed a maximum of 2.17 log10 CFU/mL below day 0. The EC50 was %TMIC of 75.9% (95% confidence interval: 68.43%–86.54%) and the EC80 was %TMIC of 100%. Target attainment probability was >90% for 1G twice daily up to an MIC of 2 mg/L, while for 2G twice daily the susceptibility MIC breakpoint was 4–8 mg/L. ConclusionsErtapenem microbial kill below day 0 burden was better than guideline-based therapy drugs in the HFS-MAC in the past. Ertapenem is a promising drug for novel combination therapies for MAC lung disease.