Title: Antifungals%20and%20Anti-Tuberculosis%20Agents
1Antifungals and Anti-Tuberculosis Agents
- Christine Kubin, Pharm.D., BCPS
- Clinical Pharmacist, Infectious Diseases
- New York-Presbyterian Hospital
- Columbia University Medical Center
- November 12,2004
2Antifungal Agents
3Fungi
Yeasts
Moulds
Mucormycosis (rarely septate) Rhizopus Rhizomucor
Mucor Absidia Zygomycetes
Aspergillus sp. (septate)
Pneumocystis jervici
Candida sp.
Dimorphic Histoplasmosis Blastomycosis
Coccidioidomycosis Paracoccidioidomycosis
Sporotrichosis Chromoblastomycosis
Cryptococcus neoformans
Dermatophytes Trichophyton Microsporum
Epidermophyton
Miscellaneous Pseudoallerscheria boydii
(Scedosporium apiospermum)
Scedosporium prolificans Penicillium
marneffei Fusarium sp.
Phaeohyphomycosis (dark walled fungi)
4An optimal antifungal drug has..
- Wide spectrum of activity
- Favorable pharmacokinetic profile
- Adequate in vivo efficacy
- Low rate of toxicity
- Low cost
5Risk Factors for Fungal Disease
- Candidiasis
- Antibiotics
- Indwelling catheters
- Hyperalimentation
- Multiple abdominal surgeries
- Prosthetic material
- Severe burns
- Neoplastic diseases/chemotherapy
- Immunosuppressive therapy
- Diabetes mellitus
- Extremes of age
- Aspergillosis
- granulocytopenia (? neutrophil numbers or
function) - T-cell dysfunction
- hematologic and other malignancies
- organ allograft recipients
- immunosuppressive therapy
- corticosteroids
- chronic granulomatous disease
- AIDS
- Burn patients
6Invasive Aspergillosis Mortality
Review of 1941 Patients from 50 Studies
Lin S-J et al, Clin Infect Dis 2001 32358-66
7Systemic Antifungal AgentsBy Mechanism of Action
- Membrane disrupting agents
- Amphotericin B
- Ergosterol synthesis inhibitors
- Azoles
- Nucleic acid inhibitor
- Flucytosine
- Glucan synthesis inhibitors
- Echinocandins
8Amphotericin B
- A polyene
- Clinical use since 1960
- Insoluble in water
- Solubilized by sodium deoxycholate
- Most broad spectrum antifungal
- gold standard
- Pharmacokinetics
- Extensively tissue bound
- Highest concentrations in liver, spleen, bone
marrow with less in kidneys and lung - Half-life
- Tissue 15 days, Plasma 5 days
9Amphotericin B Binds to Ergosterol and Generates
Pores
- Mechanism of action
- Bind to ergosterol and alter cell membrane
permeability ? cell death - Also binds to cholesterol ? adverse effects
-
-
- Clin Microbiol Rev
1999 12 501
10Amphotericin BSpectrum of Activity
- Clinical activity
- Candida sp.
- C. lusitaniae often resistant
- Cryptococcus neoformans
- Blastomycosis
- Histoplasmosis
- Aspergillus sp.
- Zygomycetes
- Rhizopus sp., Mucor sp., etc.
- Little to no activity
- Aspergillus terreus, Fusarium sp.,
Pseudoallescheria boydii, Scedosporium
prolificans, Trichosporon beigelii
11Ampho-Terrible
- Nephrotoxicity
- Risk factors
- Cumulative dose
- Concomitant nephrotoxic agents
- Hypotension
- Intravascular volume depletion
- Pre-existing renal disease
- BMT patients
- Hydration and sodium loading may lessen effects
- Infusion Related Reactions (IRRs)
- Very common
- Most severe with first few doses
- Electrolyte Abnormalities
- ? K, Mg2, PO4
- Other
- Thrombophlebitis (try to avoid peripheral lines)
- Anemia
12Amphotericin B Lipid Formulations
- Amphotericin B Colloidal Dispersion (ABCD)
(Amphotec) - Amphotericin B Lipid Complex (ABLC) (Abelcet)
- Liposomal amphotericin B (AmB) (Ambisome)
- Advantages
- Less nephrotoxicity (still cause nephrotoxicity)
- Lower levels in kidney compared to conventional
ampho - Ambisome ? less IRRs
- Disadvantages
- Cost
- No difference in efficacy compared to
conventional ampho and between lipid products - Allow delivery of higher doses of amphotericin,
but higher doses required for equivalent
antifungal efficacy - Tolerance differences define the upper dose that
can be administered
13Lipid Amphotericin B Product Comparison
14Clinical Case
- 57 y.o. woman with HIV (CD4 27, VL gt100K OIs
thrush, MAC) admitted 3 weeks ago with
increasing SOB. Treated for PCP with T/S,
steroids. Last night, she was transferred to the
MICU febrile to 38.2C, hypotensive (BP 80/60
despite fluids), hypoxic (O2 sat 75), and with
altered MS. Blood, urine, and sputum cultures
were sent. Broad spectrum antibacterials
(vancomycin P/T) started. - The next morning, the lab calls you that the
blood cultures drawn last evening are positive
for yeast. - WHAT ANTIFUNGAL DO YOU START???
15Candidiasis
- What are your choices?
- Amphotericin B
- Fluconazole
- Itraconazole
- Voriconazole
- Caspofungin
16How to Choose?
- Spectrum
- Likely pathogens
- Documented pathogens
- Site of infection
- Concomitant diseases
- Hepatic/renal function
- Toxicities
- Drug Interactions
- IV/PO
- Cost
17Antifungal Timeline
Fluconazole
Caspofungin
Ketoconazole
Amphotericin B
Itraconazole
Flucytosine
Voriconazole
1950
1960
1970
1990
1980
2000
Lipid amphotericin products
18Azole Antifungals
- Imidazoles
- Ketoconazole
- Triazoles
- Itraconazole
- Fluconazole
- Voriconazole
- Mechanism of action
- Inhibit ergosterol synthesis through inhibition
of CYP450-dependent lanosterol 14-?-demethylase - Depletion of ergosterol on fungal cell membrane
- Resistance
- ERG 11 mutations (gene encoding 14-? sterol
demethylase) leading to overexpression - ? azole efflux
- ? production or alteration 14-?-demethylase
Voriconazole
19Comparative PharmacokineticsAzole Antifungals
Ketoconazole Fluconazole Itraconazole Voriconazole
Dosage forms PO IV/PO IV/PO IV/PO
Half-life (h) 8 30 21-64 6
Oral bioavailability () 75 gt90 55 gt95
Effect of gastric pH Decrease None Decrease None
Protein binding High (99) Very Low (12) High (99) Low (58)
CSF penetration Poor (lt10) Excellent (80) Poor (lt10) Good (40-60)
Elimination route Hepatic Renal Hepatic Hepatic
Hepatic/Renal Adjustment Hepatic Renal Hepatic Hepatic
Dose PO 200-400 mg q24h IV/PO 100-400 mg q24h IV 200 mg IV q12h x 2, then 200 mg q24h PO 200 mg q12h IV 6 mg/kg q12h x 2, then 4 mg/kg q12h PO 200 mg q12h (gt40 kg)
20Azole Comparison
Ketoconazole Fluconazole Itraconazole Voriconazole
Adverse effects N/V Anti-androgen effects hepatotoxicity Hepatoxicity (high doses, prolonged tx) GI Hepatoxicity Negative inotropic effects Visual disturbances Hepatotoxicity Rash Hallucinations (4)
Drug Interactions
Induction/ Inhibition Substrate of CYP3A4 Inhibitor CYP1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP3A4 Inhibits CYP3A4 and other CYP isoforms Interacts with enzymes involved with glucuronidation Substrate of CYP3A4 Inhibitor CYP3A4 Substrate and Inhibitor CYP2C19 gt CYP2C9 gt CYP3A4
21Fluconazole
- Favorable pharmacokinetic and toxicity profile
- Low mw and high water solubility ? rapid
absorption and ? bioavailability - gt90 bioavailability (IV and PO interchangeable)
- No dependence on low gastric pH
- Effectively penetrates CSF (50-90 plasma levels)
- Brain and eye too!
- gt90 renal excretion
- Adverse effects
- Very well tolerated
- Even up to 1600 mg/day
- GI, reversible transaminase elevations
- Dose
- 100-800 mg/d (max 1600 mg/d)
- 6 mg/kg/d for susceptible strains (400 mg/d)
- 12 mg/kg/d for S-DD strains (800 mg/d)
- IV and oral interchangeable (gt90
bioavailability)
22Itraconazole
- LIMITATIONS
- Pharmacokinetics
- Only ionized at low pH ? wide interpatient
variability in plasma concentrations - Nonlinear serum PK
- Extensively liver metabolized
- Adverse effects
- Transient GI upset, dizziness, headache
- Hepatotoxicity (5)
- Negative inotrope
- Drug Interactions
- Propensity and extent greater than fluconazole
- Substrate of CYP3A4 and inhibitor of CYP3A4
- Rifampin, phenytoin, phenobarbital
- CYA
- Spectrum
- Paraccoccidiodomycosis, blastomycosis,
histoplasmosis and sporotrichosis, cutaneous and
mucosal candidiasis, Aspergillosis - Dose
- 200-400 mg/d (following a load)
23IV Itraconazole
- Formulated in hydroxypropyl-?-cyclodextrin
- Increases solubility of itraconazole
- Some cyclodextrins are nephrotoxic (? lacking
with this compound) - Dosing
- 200 mg IV q12h x 4 doses, then 200 mg IV q24h
followed by 200 mg PO q12h oral solution - Renal dysfunction
- T1/2 of itraconazole does not differ
- A 6-fold ? cyclodextrin clearance in pts with
CrCLlt20 ml/min (therefore not recommended in pts
with CrCLlt30 ml/min) - Indications
- Pulmonary and extrapulmonary blastomycosis
- Histoplasmosis, including chronic cavitary
pulmonary disease and disseminated, nonmeningeal
histoplasmosis - Pulmonary and extrapulmonary aspergillosis in
patients who are intolerant of or who are
refractory to ampho B - Empiric antifungal therapy in neutropenic
patients
24Voriconazole
- Second generation synthetic derivative of
fluconazole - addition of methyl group to the propyl backbone
- substitution of triazole moiety with a
fluropyrimidine group - Active against yeast and moulds
- Fungicidal in vitro against Aspergillus spp.,
Scedosporium spp., Fusarium spp. - Fungistatic in vitro against Candida spp.
- Indications
- Invasive aspergillosis
- Esophageal candidiasis
- Fungal infections caused by Scedosporium
apiospermum and Fusarium spp. in patients
intolerant of or refractory to other therapy
25Azole Antifungals Spectrum of Activity
Organism Ketoconazole Fluconazole Itraconazole Voriconazole
Yeast
C. albicans
Resistant yeasts
Other yeasts
Cryptococcus
Moulds
Aspergillus 0 0
Other moulds 0 0
Zygomycetes 0 0 0 0
Endemic fungi
26VoriconazolePrecautions (AND LIMITATIONS?)
- Adverse effects
- Transient, dose related visual disturbances (30)
- Mechanism unknown ? electrical currents in
retina - Elevated liver function tests (13)
- Greater frequency for voriconazole than for
fluconazole - May be dose-related
- Skin reactions (6)
- Dosing
- Intravenous
- 6 mg/kg IV q12h x 2 doses, then 4 mg/kg IV q12h
- Oral (gt95 bioavailability on empty stomach)
- lt40 kg 100 mg PO q12h
- gt40 kg 200 mg PO q12h
- Organ dysfunction
- Renal disease
- Oral dosing recommended in patients with CrCLlt50
ml/min - IV vehicle, sulfobutyl ether beta-cyclodextrin,
accumulates
27VoriconazoleDrug Interactions
- Metabolized through CYP2C19 gt CYP2C9 gt CYP3A4
- Also inhibitor of these enzyme systems
Contraindications Dose Adjustment of Voriconazole Dose Adjustment and/or Monitoring of other Drugs No Dose Adjustment of Voriconazole or other Drugs Required
Rifampin Rifabutin Sirolimus Barbiturates (long-acting) Carbamazepine Astemizole Cisapride Terfenadine Pimozide Quinidine Ergot alkaloids Phenytoin Cyclosporine Tacrolimus Omeprazole Warfarin Phenytoin Sulfonylureas Statins Benzodiazepines Dihydropyridine CCBs Vinca alkaloids HIV PIs and NNRTIs (other than indinavir) Indinavir Mycophenolate mofetil Cimetidine Ranitidine Macrolide antibiotics Prednisolone Digoxin
Pfizer. Vfend package insert 5/02
28Flucytosine (5-FC)
- Mechanism of action
- Flucytosine is deaminated to 5-fluorocytosine
(5-FC) - Incorporated into RNA and disrupts protein
synthesis - Resistance
- Develops during therapy, especially monotherapy
- Single point mutation
- Loss of permease necessary for cytosine transport
- ? activity of UMP pyrophosphorylase or cytosine
deaminase - Spectrum
- Cryptococcus neoformans
- Candida sp. (except C. krusei)
- Little to no activity against Aspergillus sp. and
other molds
29Flucytosine
- Pharmacokinetics
- Oral only
- Distribution
- CSF levels 75 of serum levels
- Elimination
- 90 excreted via glomerular filtration
- Half-life 3-6 hours
- Renal/hepatic disease
- Dose adjust in renal dysfunction
- Adverse effects
- Dose-dependent bone marrow suppression (? WBC, ?
platelets) - GI (nausea/vomiting/diarrhea)
- Clinical uses
- Cryptococcal meningitis, hepatosplenic
candidiasis, Candida endophthalmitis - Used in combination ONLY (usually with
amphotericin) - Minimizes development of resistance
- Amphotericin potentiates uptake
30Echinocandins
- Caspofungin (Cancidas)
- Micafungin (FK-463)
- Anidulafungin (VER-002)
- Mechanism of action
- Non-competitively inhibit ß (1,3)-D-glucan
synthase, blocking synthesis of ß (1,3)-D-glucan,
thereby compromising the integrity of the fungal
cell wall - Glucan maintains osmotic integrity of the fungal
cell wall and play a key role in cell division
and cell growth - Resistance
- Little known
- Spectrum
- Aspergillus sp. (static)
- Rapidly cidal class of drugs against Candida sp.
- Lack of activity against Cryptococcus,
zygomycetes
31Fungal cell wall components
b 1-6 Branched Glucan
b 1-6 Tail
Fibrous (b -(1,3) Glucan
Surface-Layer Mannoprotein
Chitin
Entrapped Mannoprotein
Glycosyl Phosphatidylinositol (GPI) Anchor
(to mannoproteins)
Plasma Membrane (phospholipid bilayer)
Regulatory Subunit (GTPase)
Plasma Membrane
Catalytic subunit
GTP
Continuous fibrils of Glucan
b (1,3) Glucan Synthase Enzyme Complex Non-competi
tive Inhibition by Lipopeptide Class of
Antifungals (Enchinocandins, Pneumocandins,
Papulacandins)
UDP glucose
Ergosterol
Chitin Synthase
1. Adapted from Kurtz, MB, ASM News, Jan 98,
Vol 64, No 1, pp. 31-9. 2. Walsh, TJ, et al,
The Oncologist, 2000, 5120-135 3. Module 1,
Introduction to Medical Mycology, Merck Co.
Inc, , 2000, pp 8-11.
32Understanding Aspergillus
- Echinocandins are cidal for the growing tips and
some interior cells - Static, non-growing interior cells are not killed
Visible Light
Stain only the viable fungal segments
Douglas CM et al. ICAAC 2000, Abstract 1683
33Echinocandins - spectrum
Very Active C. parapsilosisC.
gulliermondiiA. fumigatusA. flavusA.
terreusC. lusitaniae Low MIC, but without
fungicidal activity in most instances.
Some Activity C. immitisB.
dermatididisScedosporium speciesP. variotiiH.
capsulatum Detectable activity, which might
have therapeutic potential for man (in some cases
in combination with other drugs).
- Highly Active
- C. albicans
- C. glabrata
- C. tropicalis
- C. krusei
- C. kefyr
- P. carinii
- Very low MIC, with fungicidal activity and good
in-vivo activity. - only active against cyst forms, and probably
only useful for prophylaxis
Denning DW, Lancet 2003 (Oct 4)1142-51.
34CaspofunginAdverse effects
- Clinical experience to date suggests that these
drugs are extremely well-tolerated - Most common AEs are infusion related
- Phlebitis/Thrombophlebitis (11.3-15.5)
- Mild to moderate infusion-related AE including
- fever (3.6-26.2)
- headache(6-11.3)
- erythema(1.2-1.5)
- rash (0-4.6)
- Symptoms consistent with histamine release (2)
- Most AEs were mild and did not require treatment
discontinuation - Most common laboratory AE
- Asymptomatic elevation of serum transaminases
(10.6-13)
Cancidas Product Information, Merck Co. Inc.
May 2004
35How to Choose?
- Spectrum
- Likely pathogens
- Documented pathogens
- Site of infection
- Concomitant diseases
- Hepatic/renal function
- Toxicities
- Drug Interactions
- IV/PO
- Cost
36Clinical Case continued.
- Later that afternoon, the lab updates the blood
culture results to - yeast, not C. albicans
- Do you change the patients antifungal
coverage?
37Is yeast, not C. albicans the same as
fluconazole-resistant yeast???
Sometimes, but not always!
38Susceptibility of Candida sp. to Antifungal
Agents
39In vitro Susceptibility Testing of Candida
(NCCLS) (mcg/mL)
40Nosocomial Bloodstream Pathogens49 US Hospitals
Rank Pathogen No. of isolates Crude mortality ()
1 Coagulase-negative Staphylococci 3908 31.9 21
2 Staphylococcus aureus 1928 15.7 25
3 Enterococci 1354 11.1 32
4 Candida sp 934 7.6 40
5 E. coli 700 5.7 24
6 Klebsiella sp 662 5.4 27
7 Enterobacter sp 557 4.5 28
8 Pseudomonas sp 542 4.4 33
41Epidemiology of Candida Species Over the Years..
42Treament of Candidemia
- Unknown Candida sp.
- Fluconazole
- Normal or high dose
- Caspofungin
- Voriconazole
- Lipid amphotericin B
- Known Candida sp.
- Based on species and susceptibility results
- Comorbid conditions/toxicities
Yeast cells and pseudohyphae in material from the
oral cavity, KOH preparation, phase-contrast
microscopy.
43Aspergillosis
- Risk factors
- granulocytopenia (? neutrophil numbers or
function) - T-cell dysfunction
- hematologic and other malignancies
- organ allograft recipients
- immunosuppressive therapy
- corticosteroids
- chronic granulomatous disease
- AIDS
- Burn patients
- Drug therapy options
- Amphotericin B
- Itraconazole
- Caspofungin
- Voriconazole
Methenamine silver (GMS) stained tissue section
of lung showing dichotomously branched, septate
hyphae of Aspergillus fumigatus.
44Mortality Due to Invasive Mycoses
United States, 1980-1997
McNeil MM, et al. Clin Infect Dis 200133641-7
45Combination therapy???
46Current Therapies Mechanism of Action
Agent
Fungal Cell Target
Activity
Amphotericin B1
Fungal cell membrane1
Binds to ergosterol causes cell death1
Inhibits CYP450enzyme responsiblefor ergosterol
synthesis damages cytoplasmic membrane2
Azoles2
Fungal cell membrane2
Fungal cell wall
Inhibits glucan synthesis disrupts cell-wall
structure
Caspofungin acetate (Cancidas)
- Fungizone package insert.
- Sporanox package insert.
47Combination Antifungal Therapy
- Fungi more difficulty to diagnose, less amenable
to treatment, and associated with highest
attributable mortality compared to bacterial
pathogens - Often consider combination therapy in refractory
mycoses - Benefits
- Improved clinical and microbiologic outcome
- Decreased toxicity
- Decreased likelihood of resistance
- Broader spectrum in empiric therapy
- Little objective clinical data
48Estimated Antifungal Costs
Drug Dose Route Cost per day
Fluconazole 400 mg q24h 400 mg q24h PO IV 22 124
Itraconazole 200 mg q12h 200 mg q24h IV 340 170
Conv amphotericin B 70 mg q24h IV 7
Abelcet 350 mg q24h IV 330
Ambisome 350 mg q24h IV 570
Caspofungin (Cancidas) 70 mg x 1 50 mg q24h IV 400 310
Voriconazole (Vfend) 420 mg q12h 280 mg q12h 200 mg q12h IV IV PO 490 290 60
49How to Choose?
- Spectrum
- Likely pathogens
- Documented pathogens
- Site of infection
- Concomitant diseases
- Hepatic/renal function
- Toxicities
- Drug Interactions
- IV/PO
- Cost
50Conclusions
- Fungal infections in immunocompromised hosts
associated with high mortality - Treatment options AND the host are less than
ideal - Current and future antifungal agents associated
with advantages and disadvantages - Optimize therapy to improve outcome
- Every clinical situation is different
51Anti-Tuberculosis Agents
52Anti-Tuberculosis Agents
- First-line Drugs
- Rifampin
- Isoniazid
- Pyrazinamide
- Ethambutol
- Streptomycin
- Second-line Drugs
- Rifabutin
- Quinolones
- Capreomycin
- Amikacin, kanamycin
- Para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS)
- Cycloserine
- Ethionamide
53Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy
- Goals
- Kill TB rapidly
- Prevent emergence of resistance
- Eliminate persistent bacilli from the host to
prevent relapse - Drug therapy
- First line agents
- Greatest efficacy with acceptable toxicity
- Second-line agents
- Less efficacy, greater toxicity, or both
- If properly used, can achieve cure rate 98
- Increasing prevalence of multidrug resistant TB
(MDRTB)
54General Principles
- Drug therapy regimens
- Latent TB
- Isoniazid (INH)
- Active TB
- Combination therapy!!!
- RIPE
- Toxicities
- Hepatoxicity
- Risk factors multiple hepatotoxic agents,
alcohol abuse - Regimen and Dosing
- Adherence is important (DOT)
- Daily vs. TIW
Early bactericidal activity Sterilizing activity Prevent emergence of resistance
Rifampin ? ?? ??
Isoniazid ?? ? ??
Pyrazinamide X ?? X
Ethambutol ? X ?
Streptomycin X X ?
55First Line Agents
- Isoniazid
- Inhibits mycolic acid synthesis
- Long-chain fatty acids of the mycobacterial cell
wall - Bactericidal against growing MTB
- Bacteriostatic against nonreplicating MTB
- PO only
- Metabolized in liver by N-acetyltransferase
- Slow vs. fast acetylators
- Half life 2-4 hrs vs. 0.5-1.5 hrs
- gt80 Chinese and Japanese patients are rapid
acetylators - Drug interactions more likely in slow acetylators
- Toxicities
- ? serum transaminases (AST, ALT)
- Peripheral neuropathy ? administer pyridoxine
(vitamin B6) daily - ? risk alcoholics, children, diabetics,
malnourished, dialysis patients, HIV
56First Line Agents
- Rifampin
- Inhibits DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
- Bactericidal (very effective)
- IV/PO
- Toxicities
- ? hepatic enzymes (AST, ALT, bilirubin, alkaline
phosphatase) - GI
- Red-orange discoloration of body fluids
- Urine, tears, sweat, contact lenses, etc.
- Rash
- DRUG INTERACTIONS, DRUG INTERACTIONS, DRUG
INTERACTIONS - Potent inducer of CYP450 metabolism (?
concentrations of other drugs)
57First Line Agents
- Pyrazinamide
- Mechanism unknown
- Fatty acid synthetase-1
- Bactericidal
- PO only
- Metabolized in the liver, but metabolites are
renally excreted - Toxicities
- ? liver enzymes
- Hyperuricemia
- Nausea/vomiting
- Ethambutol
- Inhibits cell wall components
- Bacteriostatic
- PO only
- Renal excretion
- Toxicities
- Optic neuritis (dose-related)
- Hyperuricemia
58First Line Agents
- Streptomycin
- Inhibits protein synthesis (aminoglycoside)
- Bactericidal
- Poor activity in acidic environment of closed
foci - Not good sterilizing drug
- IM/IV
- Renal excretion
- Toxicities
- Vestibular toxicity (dizziness, problems with
balance, tinnitus) - nephrotoxicity
59Second Line Agents
- Rifabutin
- Often used as an alternative to rifampin
- Not as potent inducer CYP450
- Drug interactions still important
- PO only
- Toxicities
- Uveitis (ocular pain, blurred vision)
- Quinolones
- Levofloxacin, moxifloxacin, gatifloxacin
- bactericidal
- IV/PO
- Uses
- MDR-TB
- IV alternative
- Well tolerated option
- Toxicities
- Nausea, abdominal pain
- Headache, insomnia, restlessness
60Second Line Agents
- Capreomycin
- Uses
- MDR-TB
- IM/IV
- Cross-resistance with aminoglycosides
- Toxicities
- Injection pain
- Hearing loss, tinnitus
- Renal dysfunction
- Amikacin, kanamycin
- Aminoglycosides
- Cross-resistance with streptomycin
- Uses
- MDR-TB
- IV/IM alternative
- Toxicities
- Renal toxicity
- Hearing loss, tinnitus
- Para-amino salicylic acid (PAS)
- Uses
- MDR-TB (bacteriostatic)
- PO only
- Toxicities (can be severe)
- GI
- Hepatotoxicity
- hypothyroidism
61Second Line Agents
- Cycloserine
- Uses
- MDR-TB (bacteriostatic)
- PO only
- Toxicities
- Central nervous system effects (confusion,
irritability, somnolence, headache, vertigo,
seizures) - Peripheral neuropathy
- Ethionamide
- Uses
- MDR-TB (bacteriostatic)
- PO only
- Toxicities
- Nausea/vomiting
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Psychiatric disturbances
- ? liver enzymes
- ? glucose
62Drug-Resistant TB
- Acquired resistance
- Suboptimal therapy that encourages selective
growth of mutants resistant to one or more drugs - Primary resistance
- Infection from a source case who has
drug-resistant disease - Factors leading to suboptimal therapy
- Intermittent drug supplies
- Use of expired drugs
- Unavailability of combination preparations
- Use of poorly formulated combination preparations
- Inappropriate drug regimens
- Addition of single drugs to failing regimens in
the absence of bacteriologic control - Poor supervision of therapy
- Unacceptably high cost to patient (drugs, travel
to clinic, time off work)
63Anti-TB TherapyCase 1
- 37 y.o. homeless man presents with cough, 25-lb
weight loss over past 3 months, night sweats, and
fever. - CXR RUL cavity
- Admitted and placed in respiratory isolation.
- Sputum AFB smear , HIV test -.
- Anti-TB regimen to be started
- How many drugs to start?
- 4 initially
- What drugs to start?
- RIPE
- Additional therapy/counseling?
- Pyridoxine 50 mg daily
- Red-orange discoloration of body fluids
- What to monitor?
- Baseline and follow up LFTs (rifampin, INH, PZA)
- Signs and symptoms of peripheral neuropathy (INH)
- Visual changes (ethambutol)
64Anti-TB TherapyCase 2
- 28 y.o. M, HIV (last CD4 48, VL 1000) started on
AZT/3TC and LPV/r 3 weeks ago. Presents now
with cough, fever, night sweats. - CXR ?LUL infiltrate
- AFB smear , TB amplification
- Anti-TB treatment to be started
- How many drugs to start?
- 4 initially
- What drugs to start?
- Rifabutin IPE
- Pyridoxine 50 mg daily
- What to monitor?
- LFTs, visual changes, signs and symptoms of
peripheral neuropathy
65Anti-TB TherapyCase 2 (cont.)
- 6 days later the patient becomes hypoxic,
hypotensive, and suffers a cardiac arrest.
Intubated and transferred to the ICU. - On pressors, ?LFTs (shock), ?SCr
- Team decides to start antibacterials and wants to
continue anti-TB drugs, but question the
patients GI absorptive capacity. - What do you do?
- Change anti-TB drugs to IV
- Rifampin IV, INH IV, streptomycin IV,
levofloxacin IV - Adjust all for renal function
- d/c antiretrovirals
- Rifampin contraindicated due to drug interactions
- No immediate need to continue ART in critical
setting
66QUESTIONS?