1 / 18

Anti-TB Agents

Anti-TB Agents. Dr. Jeff Hobden MIP. Mycobacterium tuberculosis. TB is hard to kill with antibiotics Slow growth Fortified cell wall Intracellular growth Very good at developing resistance to single agents. Treatment of TB – Old School. Surgical collapse of infected lung

zinnia
Download Presentation

Anti-TB Agents

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Anti-TB Agents Dr. Jeff Hobden MIP

  2. Mycobacterium tuberculosis • TB is hard to kill with antibiotics • Slow growth • Fortified cell wall • Intracellular growth • Very good at developing resistance to single agents

  3. Treatment of TB – Old School • Surgical collapse of infected lung • Vitamin D & heliotherapy (can you say “melanoma” • Bed rest and fresh air

  4. Modern Treatment of TB – A Rigorous Course of Multiple Antibiotics • First line drugs • Isoniazid • Rifampin • Ethambutol • Streptomycin • Pyrazinomide • Second line drugs • Moxi-or gatifloxacin • Ethionamide • Aminosalicylic acid • Cycloserine • Amikacin and kanamycin • Capreomycin • linezolid 6 months of taking a handful of pills!

  5. Multi-Drug Resistant TB

  6. Isoniazid (INH) • Synthetic hydrazide of isonicotinic acid • Requires catalase-peroxidase for activation • Bacteriocidal for growing cells, static for resting cells • Prevents synthesis of mycolic acids

  7. Isoniazid (INH) • Oral or parental • Water soluble, penetrates into caseous material of granuloma • Acetylated and secreted into urine • Rate of secretion has racial component • Toxicity • Rash and fever (UC) • Jaundice (rare) • Peripheral neuritis (rare)

  8. Rifamycins • Natural and semi-derived from filamentous soil bacteria • Complex macrocyclic antibiotics • Members of the class • Rifabutin (for HIV+) • Rifapentine • Rifampin = rifampicin (for everyone else)

  9. Rifamycins • Broad spectrum, bactericidal • Inhibit DNA-dependent RNA polymerase • Resistance generated by altering target

  10. Rifamycins • Administered orally • Absorbed in GI tract • Asprin will interfere with its absorbance • Wide distribution • Can discolor body waste, saliva, tears orange-red • Acetylated and then excreted into bile and ultimately pooped out

  11. Uses of Select Rifamycins • Rifampicin • Treatment of TB • Prophylaxis against meningocccus • Staph infections • Rifabutin and rifapentine • TB therapy for HIV+ patients • MAC infections

  12. Toxicity/Contraindications of Rifamycins • Rifampicin • Flu-like illness (common) • Decreases half life of many drugs by inducing CYPs • HIV protease inhibitors and non-nucleoside RT inhibitors • Corticosteroids • Oral contraceptives • Rifambutin • Induces CYPs but not to the same degree as rifampicin • Rash, red pee, neutropenia, leukopenia (common)

  13. Ethambutol • Inhibits arabinosyl transferases involved in cell wall synthesis • Given orally and excreted mostly unchanged in the urine • Dose dependent diminished visual acuity

  14. Pyrazinamide • Synthetic pyrazine analog of nicotinamide • Bactericidal at weak pH, where TB can be found in MF • Inhibits fatty acid synthase I gene

  15. Pyrazinamide • Oral administration • Excellent penetration • Hydrolyzed and hydroxylated before being excreted by kidneys • Hepatotoxicity (uncommon) • Hyperuricermia – gout (rare)

  16. Mechanisms of Action

  17. Mechanisms of Resistance

  18. The End! Finally…

More Related