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Characterization of the Synergistic Antibacterial Effect of Verapamil on Bacterial Isolates From Cancer Patients

A

Assiut University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Multi Drug Resistant Organisms
Antibiotic Resistance

Treatments

Drug: verapamil

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07505446
Verapamil use in MDR bacteria

Details and patient eligibility

About

Multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria represent a significant global health challenge, particularly among immunocompromised populations such as cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. These patients are highly susceptible to severe infections due to weakened immune defenses, often necessitating the use of broad-spectrum or combination antibiotic therapy. Combination regimens may enhance treatment efficacy through synergistic effects, helping to overcome bacterial resistance mechanisms and improve clinical outcomes.

In recent years, there has been growing interest in the use of non-antibiotic drugs as adjunctive agents to enhance antimicrobial activity. These agents, often referred to as antibiotic adjuvants or resistance modifiers, may improve antibiotic effectiveness through mechanisms such as inhibition of bacterial efflux pumps, disruption of biofilm formation, or interference with resistance pathways.

Verapamil, a widely used calcium channel blocker, has demonstrated potential antimicrobial and resistance-modifying properties. Experimental evidence suggests that verapamil can inhibit bacterial efflux pumps, thereby increasing intracellular concentrations of antibiotics and enhancing their activity against resistant organisms.

This study aims to evaluate the in vitro synergistic antibacterial activity of verapamil in combination with selected antibiotics against MDR, extensively drug-resistant (XDR), and pandrug-resistant (PDR) bacterial isolates obtained from cancer patients. Standard microbiological methods will be used to determine antimicrobial susceptibility and minimum inhibitory concentrations, while combination effects will be assessed using established synergy testing approaches.

The findings of this study may contribute to identifying novel, cost-effective strategies to combat antimicrobial resistance through drug repurposing and optimization of existing antibiotic therapies.

Full description

This study evaluates the potential synergistic antibacterial effect of verapamil in combination with selected antibiotics against multidrug-resistant (MDR), extensively drug-resistant (XDR), and pandrug-resistant (PDR) bacterial isolates obtained from cancer patients.

  1. Study Samples Clinical specimens will be collected as part of routine diagnostic care from cancer patients.

    Specimen types may include:

    Blood Urine Respiratory samples Wound swabs Other relevant clinical specimens Only non-duplicate bacterial isolates will be included. Only isolates classified as MDR, XDR, or PDR will be selected for further analysis.

  2. Isolation of Bacterial Isolates Specimens will be cultured using standard microbiological techniques.

    Culture media will include:

    Blood agar MacConkey agar Plates will be incubated under appropriate conditions (temperature and atmosphere) according to standard laboratory protocols.

  3. Identification of Bacteria

    Bacterial isolates will be identified using:

    Colony morphology Gram staining Biochemical tests Where available, automated identification systems will be used. Identification procedures will follow standard microbiological guidelines.

  4. Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (AST)

    AST will be performed according to:

    Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI), 2025 guidelines

    Methods include:

    Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion method Automated susceptibility testing systems (if available) Results will be interpreted using CLSI breakpoints. Quality control will be ensured using standard reference strains.

  5. Preparation of Verapamil

    Verapamil stock solution will be prepared:

    Under aseptic conditions Using sterile distilled water or appropriate solvent Serial dilutions will be prepared to achieve required working concentrations.

  6. Determination of Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations (MICs)

    MICs for:

    Selected antibiotics Verapamil

    Will be determined using:

    Broth microdilution method

    Procedures include:

    Preparation of serial twofold dilutions Standardization of bacterial inoculum (e.g., 0.5 McFarland) Incubation under appropriate conditions MIC values will be recorded as the lowest concentration inhibiting visible growth.

  7. Assessment of Synergistic Activity

    Synergy testing will be performed using:

    Checkerboard assay

    Interaction between verapamil and antibiotics will be evaluated by calculating:

    Fractional Inhibitory Concentration Index (FICI)

    Interpretation of FICI:

    ≤ 0.5 → Synergistic > 0.5 - 1 → Additive > 1 - 4 → Indifferent > 4 → Antagonistic

  8. Additional/Confirmatory Testing

    Where applicable, additional methods may be used:

    Disk diffusion-based combination testing These methods will support and validate synergy findings.

  9. Exploratory Analysis

    If significant synergy is observed:

    Further analysis may be conducted to investigate resistance mechanisms

    This may include:

    Evaluation of changes in resistance patterns Analysis of resistance-related gene expression (if feasible)

  10. Quality Control and Laboratory Standards

All procedures will follow:

Standard microbiological protocols Institutional biosafety regulations

Quality assurance measures will be applied to ensure:

Accuracy Reproducibility Reliability of results

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Bacterial isolates from clinical samples submitted for the SECI laboratory for culture and sensitivity testing that are:
  2. MDR: resistant to one or more agent within three or more of antimicrobial classes
  3. XDR: resistant to one or more agent within all but two antimicrobial classes
  4. PDR: resistant to all agents within all antimicrobial classes.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Bacterial isolates from non-cancer patients.
  2. Contaminant or non-pathogenic isolates.
  3. Duplicate isolates from the same patient with identical antibiogram.
  4. Bacterial isolates that are neither MDR, XDR OR PDR.

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Ahmed I Khalaf Mohamed, Demonstrator; Enas A Daef, professor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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