Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering (Sep 2010)

Antibiotic cycling versus mixing: The difficulty of using mathematicalmodels to definitively quantify their relative merits

  • Robert E. Beardmore,
  • Rafael Peña-Miller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3934/mbe.2010.7.923
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
pp. 923 – 933

Abstract

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We ask the question Which antibiotic deployment protocols select best against drug-resistant microbes: mixing or periodic cycling? and demonstrate that the statistical distribution of the performances of both sets of protocols, mixing and periodic cycling, must have overlapping supports. In other words, it is a general, mathematical result that there must be mixing policies that outperform cycling policies and vice versa. As a result, we agree with the tenet of Bonhoefer et al. [1] that one should not apply the results of [2] to conclude that an antibiotic cycling policy that implements cycles of drug restriction and prioritisation on an ad-hoc basis can select against drug-resistant microbial pathogens in a clinical setting any better than random drug use. However, nor should we conclude that a random, per-patient drug-assignment protocol is the de facto optimal method for allocating antibiotics to patients in any general sense.

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