Nystatin is a polyene antimycotic drug to which Candida spp. are sensitive. Nystatin is not absorbed from intact skin or mucous membranes and is considered a "clean" drug as it has no proven side effects.
Uses
Cutaneous,
vaginal,
mucosal and
esophageal Candida infections can be treated with nystatin.
Cryptococcus is also sensitive to nystatin. In the
UK its license for treating neonatal oral
thrush is restricted to those over the age of one month (
miconazole is an appropriate alternative for younger babies).
Nystatin is often used as prophylaxis in patients who are at risk for fungal infections, such as AIDS patients with a low CD4+ count and patients receiving chemotherapy.
It is prescribed in units, with doses varying from 100,000 (for oral infections) to 1 million (for intestinal ones). As it is not absorbed from the gut, it is safe for oral use and does not have problems of drug interactions.
Method of action
Like
amphotericin B and
natamycin, nystatin binds to
ergosterol, the main component of the fungal cell membrane. When present in sufficient concentrations, it forms a pore in the membrane that leads to
K+ leakage and death of the fungus. As mammals do not have ergosterol-based cell membranes, the drug only affects fungi.
Origin
Like many other antimycotics and antibiotics, nystatin is of bacterial origin. It was isolated from
Streptomyces noursei in
1950 by Elizabeth Lee Hazen and Rachel Fuller Brown, who were doing research for the Division of Laboratories and Research of the New York State Department of Health. The soil sample where they discovered nystatin, was from the garden of Hazen's friends called Nourses, therefore the strain was called
noursei. Hazen and Brown named nystatin after the
New York State Public Health Department (now known as the
Wadsworth Center) in 1954.
Brand names
- Nystan® (oral tablets, topical ointment, and pessaries, Bristol-Myers Squibb)
- Infestat®
- Nystamont®
- Nystop® (topical powder, Paddock)
- Nystex®
- Mykinac®
- Nysert® (vaginal suppositories, Procter & Gamble)
- Nystaform® (topical ointment, combined with iodochlorhydroxyquine and hydrocortisone; Bayer)
- Nilstat® (vaginal tablet, Lederle)
- Korostatin® (vaginal tablets, Holland Rantos)
- Mycostatin® (vaginal tablets, Bristol-Myers Squibb)
- Mycolog-II® (topical ointment, combined with triamcinolone; Apothecon)
- Mytrex® (topical ointment, combined with triamcinolone)
- Mykacet® (topical ointment, combined with triamcinolone)
- Myco-Triacet II® (topical ointment, combined with triamcinolone)
Antifungals
Nystatin | Nystatine | Nystatin | Nystatyna | Нистатин