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Antimycobactrial Drugs Parvaneh Rahimi-Moghaddam MD PhD Department of Pharmacology Iran University of Medical Sciences. Epidemiology. Nearly up to 1/3 of the global population is infected with M tuberculosis and at risk of developing the disease.
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Antimycobactrial DrugsParvanehRahimi-Moghaddam MD PhDDepartment of PharmacologyIran University of Medical Sciences
Epidemiology • Nearly up to 1/3 of the global population is infected with M tuberculosis and at risk of developing the disease. • More than eight million people develop active tuberculosis (TB) every year, and about two million die.
Treatment Problems (WHO) • Co-infection with HIV significantly increases the risk of developing TB. • Mycobacterium aviumcomplex is associated with AIDS-related TB. • Multidrug resistance, which is caused by poorly managed TB treatment, is a growing problem of serious concern.
Extensively Drug-Resistant TB • Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR TB) is a relatively rare type of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB). • It is resistant to almost all drugs used to treat TB.
Treatment Problems • Slowly growing organisms • Lipid-rich mycobacterial cell wall • Intracellular organism • Ability to develop resistance to single drug Mycobacteria G(-) bacteria
Drug Used in TB • First-line agents: • Isoniazid (INH) • Rifampin (RIF) • Pyrazinamide (PZA) • Ethambutol (EMB) • Streptomycin (SM)
Approach in TB Treatment • INH + rifampin(9 months) 95 - 98% cure rate • Plus PZA (first 2 months) reduce total duration to6 months
TB Treatment Regimen • Initiation of therapy INH + rifampin + PZA + ethambutol(or streptomycin)for 2 months • Continuation phase INH + rifampin for 4 (or 7) months
Treatment Failure • Defined as positive cultures after 4 months of treatment in patients for whom medication ingestion was ensured • Single new drug should never be added to a failing regimen; it may lead to acquired resistance to the added drug
Isoniazid • Structural similarity to pyridoxine • Bactericidal for actively growing bacilli • Active against both extra- and intra-cellular organisms
Isoniazid • Mechanism of action • A prodrug activated by catalase-peroxidase (KatG) • Inhibits synthesis of mycolic acids.
Isoniazid • Resistance • Frequency about 1:106 • Most commonly results from mutations in different genes such as KatG (high-level resistance)
Isoniazid • Pharmacokinetics • Readily absorbed • Well distributed (including CNS) • Extensive metabolism (rapid & slow acetylation) • Average half-lives are less than 1h (rapid) & 3h (slow)
Isoniazid • Clinicaluses • Treatment of TB (300 mg once daily or 900 mg twice weekly; pyridoxine is recommended for patients predisposing to neuropathy) • Prevention of active TB in people with latent tuberculosis (eg, a positive tuberculin test) as a single agent for 9 months
Adverse Reaction of Isoniazid • Allergic reactions • Fever • skin rashes • drug-induced SLE • Direct toxicity 1) Hepatitiswith greater risk in alcoholics and possibly during pregnancy & postpartum (1% of isoniazid recipients) 2) Peripheral & central neuropathy
Adverse Reaction of Isoniazid • Peripheral neuropathy infrequently seen with the standard 300 mg adult dose • Is due to a relative pyridoxine deficiency
Rifampin • Effective in vitro against: • G(+) & G(-) cocci • Some enteric bacteria • Mycobacteria • Chlamydia • Bactericidal for mycobacteria including intracellular organisms
Rifampin • Antimicrobial activity • Binds firmly to b-subunit of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase & inhibits RNA synthesis
Rifampin • Resistance • Polymerase gene mutations (1:106) • Pharmacokinetics • Well absorbed & excreted mainly into the bile (enterohepatic circulation). • Distributed widely (crosses BBB if inflammation present).
Rifampin • Clinical uses(600 mg/d or twice weekly) • Mycobacterial infections (also for prophylaxis) • Other indications
Rifampin • Clinical uses • Other indications: 1) Elimination of meningococcalcarriage 2) Elimination of staphylococcalcarriage (with a second agent) 3) Staphylococcalprosthetic valve endocarditis
Rifampin • Adverse reactions • A harmless orange color • Cholestatic jaundice & hepatitis • Flu-like syndrome (< twice weekly) • fever, chills, myalgia • hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia • Induction of cytochrome P450 isoforms
Ethambutol • Inhibits synthesis of arabinoglycan via inhibition of arabinosyl transferases. • Resistance is due to mutations in the enzyme gene. • Pharmacokinetics • Well absorbed& excreted about 50% in urine in unchanged form. • Crosses BBB if inflammation is present.
Ethambutol • Clinical use • Treatment of TB (single daily dose or twice weekly) • Tuberculous meningitis (with higher dose)
Ethambutol • Adverse reactions • Optic neuritis resulting in: • loss of visual acuity • red-green color blindness • Contraindicated in very young children
Pyrazinamide • Is converted to pyrazinoic acid (active form) by mycobacteria pyrazinamidase. • Drug target & mechanism of action is unknown • Resistance • Impaired uptake of drug • Mutations in pyrazinamidase gene
Pyrazinamide • Clinical uses • An important drug used in short-course of TB treatment (active against intracellular organisms) • Adverse reactions • Hepatotoxicity • Hyperuricemia
Streptomycin • Active mainly against extracellular bacilli • Is indicated in injectable drug needed severe TB eg, meningitis & disseminated disease
Second-Line Drugs • Usually considered only in case of: • resistance to first-line agents • failure of clinical response to conventional therapy • serious treatment-limiting adverse drug reactions • expert guidance is available to deal with the toxic effects
Second-Line Drugs • Less effective and more toxic effects • Include (in no particular order): • Amikacin • Kanamycin • Capreomycin • p-amino salicylic acid • Streptomycin • Ethionamide • Fluoroquinolones
Third-Line Drugs least effective and most toxic • Linezolid • Rifabutin • Rifapentine
Licensed Antifungal Agents:The Pace Quickens ravuconazole anidulafungin 20 posaconazole micafungin Caspofungin voriconazole Nyotran AmBisome Amphotec Abelcet 10 itraconazole fluconazole ketoconazole terbinafine miconazole Griseofulvin 5-flucytosine AmphotericinB Nystatin 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
Classification of Antifungal Agents • Systemic drugs for systemic infections (oral or parenteral) • Oral drugs for mucocutaneous infections • Topical drugs for mucocutaneous infections
Amphotericin B • A polyene macrolide • Pharmacokinetics • Poorly absorbed from the GI • Serum t1/2 is approximately 15 days
Amphotericin B • Mechanism of action • Binds to ergosterol & alters the permeability • Exerts fungicidal effect
OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH Mode of Action of Polyenes Ergosterol Aqueous pore Cytoplasmic membrane Hydrophobic side Hydrophilic side Amphotericin B
Polyenes Form Non-Specific Poresin The Membrane Extracellular medium Ergosterol Amphotericin B Cytoplasm Aqueous pore
Amphotericin B • Antifungal activity • The broadest spectrum of action • Clinical uses • Drug of choice for all life-threatening mycotic infections • Empiric therapy if a systemic fungal infection is suspected • Topical use eg, mycotic corneal ulcers
Amphotericin B • Adverse effects • Infusion-related toxicity • Cumulative toxicity 1) Renal damage (reversible & irreversible) 2) Anemia (due to reduced erythropoietin production) 3) Abnormalities in liver function tests 4) Seizures & chemical arachnoiditis (after intrathecal therapy)
Liposomal Amphotericin B • Advantages • Lipid packaged drug will bind to the mammalian membrane less readily. • Furthermore, some fungi contain lipases that may liberate free drug directly at the site of infection.
Properties of Conventional Amphotericin B & Some Lipid Formulations
Flucytosine (5-FC) • A pyrimidine analog • Narrower spectrum of action than amphotericin B • Pharmacokinetics • Is well absorbed • Penetrates well into all tissues including CNS • Eliminated by glomerular filtration with a half-life of 3-4 hours
Flucytosine (5-FC) • Mechanism of action • 5-FC into the cell • 5-FC → 5-FU (5-fluorouracil) → phosphorylated derivatives → inhibits DNA & RNA synthesis • Synergy with amphotericin B cytosine permease
Flucytosine (5-FC) • Clinical uses • Cryptococcal meningitis (+ amphotericin B) • Chromoblastomycosis (+ itraconazole) • Adverse effects • Metabolism by intestinal flora (5-FC → 5-FU) bone marrow toxicity
Azoles (Imidazoles & Triazoles) • Imidazoles: • Ketoconazole • Miconazole • Clotrimazole • Triazoles: • Itraconazole • Fluconazole • Voriconazole • Posaconazole