Coccidioidal meningitis is a devastating disease that requires long-term th
erapy with little hope of cure. A rabbit model of coccidioidal meningitis w
as used to compare the therapeutic efficacies of fluconazole (FCZ) and itra
conazole (ITZ). Hydrocortisone-treated male New Zealand white rabbits were
infected intracisternally with 5.0 x 10(4) to 5.4 x 10(4) arthroconidia of
Coccidioides immitis. Oral treatment with polyethylene glycol 200 (PEG) (n
= 9), FCZ (n = 8; 80 mg/kg of body weight/day), or ITZ (n = 8; 80 mg/kg/day
) began 5 days after infection and continued for 28 consecutive days. Both
FCZ and ITZ reduced the number of CFU of C. immitis organisms in the spinal
cord and brain compared with the number in PEG-treated animals (P less tha
n or equal to 0.003), but the results for FCZ and ITZ were not different fr
om each other. Histopathologic severity (semiquantitative scoring system by
an observer blinded to treatment) was equally reduced in both FCZ and ITZ
treatment groups compared with that in controls (P less than or equal to 0.
0004). Both treatments resulted in lower cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) protein
concentrations and leukocyte counts and faster clearing of C. immitis from
CSF compared with the results for PEG-treated controls. Neither drug affect
ed CSF glucose levels. Both compounds were effective at reducing neurologic
al and systemic signs and extending survival (P less than or equal to 0.014
). FCZ was more effective at reducing head and body shakes, posture changes
, and incontinence; ITZ was more effective at reducing continuous fever. Me
an levels of FCZ and ITZ in the serum and CSF were determined by bioassay;
at 17 to 26 h postdosing, levels were 28.1 to 40.0 and 22.4 to 29.9 mu g/ml
, respectively, for FCZ and 0.77 to 2.51 and 0 mu g/ml, respectively, for I
TZ. The sera of most animals developed antibody to C. immitis, but azole tr
eatment attenuated antibody development in CSF and its titer. Ln conclusion
, both FCZ and ITZ were efficacious, but neither was curative in a rabbit m
odel of coccidioidal meningitis.