Rifampin, which exhibits good intracellular diffusion and in vitro bactericidal activity on brucella, is effective in experimental
brucellosis in mice, without selection of resistant strains. It was therefore legitimate to use
rifampin in man since conventional treatment of acute
brucellosis is followed by recurrence in 15% (
tetracycline alone) or 3.7% (
streptomycin-
tetracycline combination) of cases.
Rifampin was given to 13 patients with
brucellosis (acute
brucellosis in 8, osteoarticular
brucellosis in 3 and chronic
brucellosis in 2).
Rifampin was given as sole
therapy in a daily dosage of 600 to 1 200 mg. A
tetracycline was subsequently needed in three cases, in combination with
rifampin in two, and as replacement
therapy in one. Treatment lasted 20 to 60 days in acute
brucellosis and 2 to 15 months in other forms. Only one failure was recorded among the 11 cases of acute or localized
brucellosis. Conversely, effectiveness of
rifampin proved incomplete (1 case) or null (1 case) in chronic forms. The satisfactory effectiveness of
rifampin is confirmed by a review of the literature which found 17 reports addressing the subject. These include 324 cases of
brucellosis treated by
rifampin, as sole
therapy in 255 patients, with only 24 failures ascribable to faulty dosage. Indeed,
rifampin must be given for at least 30 days, in a minimal daily dosage of 600 mg or 10 mg per kg, in a single dose.
Cotrimoxazole is an antagonist and should not be associated with
rifampin. Conversely,
tetracyclines are synergistic and their association, which is useless in acute
brucellosis, is helpful in localized and chronic forms.