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Anti-Tuberculosis Drugs Overview

This document provides information about anti-tuberculosis drugs. It begins with an introduction to mycobacteria and the major pathogens that cause tuberculosis and leprosy. It then discusses the principle of anti-tuberculosis therapy, which involves interrupting transmission, curing patients, and preventing relapse using a combination of drugs over multiple phases. The document outlines the first-line and second-line drugs used to treat tuberculosis, leprosy, and atypical mycobacteria. It provides details on the mechanisms of action, dosing, and side effects of specific drugs including isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
393 views35 pages

Anti-Tuberculosis Drugs Overview

This document provides information about anti-tuberculosis drugs. It begins with an introduction to mycobacteria and the major pathogens that cause tuberculosis and leprosy. It then discusses the principle of anti-tuberculosis therapy, which involves interrupting transmission, curing patients, and preventing relapse using a combination of drugs over multiple phases. The document outlines the first-line and second-line drugs used to treat tuberculosis, leprosy, and atypical mycobacteria. It provides details on the mechanisms of action, dosing, and side effects of specific drugs including isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol.

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Zijie
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 35

Module: Sem 2 /Respiratory

Plenary:4

ANTI-TUBERCULOSIS
DRUGS

Professor Dr Azizi Ayob (MD, PhD)


Pharmacology
Division of Pathology/School of Medicine
[email protected] (Extn: 2819)
LESSON OUTCOME
At the end of this session, students should be able to:
 Explain the use of multi-drug in the treatment of TB
 Discuss the basis for the two phases of anti TB treatment.
 Differentiate between 1st and 2nd phase treatment
 Describe the mechanism of action and adverse effect of each drug
 List the drugs used for atypical TB infection

2
Introduction: The Major Pathogens

 Mycobacteria are rod-shaped aerobic bacilli.


 It multiply slowly, every 18 to 24 hours in vitro.
 Mycobacterial infections classically result in the formation of slow-growing
and granulomatous lesions.
 The lesion can be in the lungs and other major organs.
 The diseases include:
 Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes the disease known as tuberculosis (TB):
 Pulmonary TB

 Extra-pulmonary TB

 Leprosy
 Non-Tuberculous Pathogenic Mycobacteria

3
Introduction: The Major Pathogens

Mycobacterium
 Mycobacterium tuberculosis, (TB)
 Mycobacterium leprae, (leprosy)
 Mycobacterium bovis

Non-Tuberculous Pathogenic Mycobacteria


 M. avium-intracellulare complex (MAC, TB-like disease in AIDS)
 M. chimaera (Heater-cooler unit transmitted infection in cardiac surgery)
 M. marinum (swimming pool granuloma)
 M. scrofulaceum (cervical adenitis)
 M. chelonei & M. fortuitum (immunocompromised or prosthetic devices
implanted patients only)

4
Introduction: Main Symptoms/Signs

5
The Principle of Therapy:
 Interrupt tuberculosis transmission
- To make the patient non-infectious
 To cure patient (curative) and eradicate the pathogens
- To reduce morbidity and death
 To prevent relapse and emergence of Multidrug-resistant TB
(MDR-TB)
 To achieve the therapeutic objectives
- Combination drug therapy is required
 - Two-Phase Multi-Drug treatment is mandatory

6
OVERVIEW:
ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS

Drug Used in Drug Used in Drugs Used for


Tuberculosis Leprosy Atypical Mycobacteria

First Line Second Line Drugs For Drugs For Minor


Drugs Drugs Major Infections Infections

 Isoniazid, INH(H)  Aminoglycosides


 Rifampicin (R)  Capreomycin
 Pyrazinamide (Z)  Cycloserine
 Ethambutol (E)  PAS (Para-Amino
 Streptomycin (S) Salicylic acid)
(Malaysia and SEA)  Other
TB Treatment
 1st Line Drugs
 Refer to the main combination of drugs for TB therapy
 Isoniazid, INH (H), Rifampicin (R), Pyrazinamide (Z) , Ethambutol (E),
Streptomycin (S)

 2nd Line Drugs


 Typically less effective, more toxic, and less extensively studied
 Used for patients who cannot tolerate the 1st line drug or who are
infected with resistant TB
TB Treatment
 Monotherapy with any single drug is unsatisfactory and
resistance develops.
 Multi-Drug Therapy must be followed (Combination).
 Long duration of treatment for cure – at least 6 months to 12-24
months

Drug combination is given by TWO PHASES


 Initial / Intensive Phase (Bactericidal)
 Continuation / Maintenance Phase (Sterilizing)

9
Multi-Drugs & Two Phases of anti TB treatment

Maintenance/Continuation
Intensive Phase
Phase

Isoniazid

Rifampicin
Pyrazinamide

Ethambutol
Month 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
TB Treatment: NEW CASES
 6-month regimen consisting of:
 2 months of EHRZ (2-EHRZ) followed by
 4 months of HR (4-HR) is recommended for newly-diagnosed
PTB.
 Pyridoxine 10-50 mg daily needs to be added if isoniazid is
prescribed.
 Daily treatment is the preferred regimen.

 Adopted from WHO. Treatment of Tuberculosis Guidelines (4th Ed.), 2010

11
RECOMMENDED Treatment Plan – Category I

Daily 3 times / Week


2 months 4 months
mg/kg Max mg mg/kg Max mg
Isoniazid 5 (4-6) 300 10 (8-12) 900
Rifampicin 10 (8-12) 600 10 (8-12) 600
Pyrazinamide 25 (20-30) 2000 35(30-40)* 3000*

Ethambutol 15 (15-20) 1600 30 (25-35)* 2400*


Streptomycin 15 (12-18) 1000 15 (12-18)* 1500*

Pyridoxine 10 - 50 mg daily needs to be added if isoniazid is prescribed.


* Daily treatment is the preferred regimen.

12
Monitoring for Drug Toxicity

Investigations & Assessment:


 Baseline LFT, RFT, FBC
 H/o alcoholism, liver disease
 Uric acid if ‘Z’ is used
 Visual acuity if ‘E’ is used

Management
 Reassurance
 Stop drug if signs of liver dysfunction – Abdominal pain
 C/I: Thrombocytopenia, shock and renal failure, visual defect
to ‘E’, ototoxicity to ‘S’

13
Flow Chart for the Recommended Treatment of PTB

Follow Up 9 months 12 months 15 months


14
15 OVERVIEW: Mechanisms of action of anti-TB drugs
RIFAMPICIN (Rifampin)

Mechanism of Action:
 Bind to the beta subunit of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
(rpoB) & blocks chain formation in RNA synthesis 
bactericidal (kills intracellular bacteria)
 Resistance occur at 1 in 107 bacilli due to changes in rpoB.

PK:
- Given oral, good distribution.
- Food decreases the rifampin CPmax by one-third; a high-fat meal
increases the AUC of rifapentine by 50%.
- Food has no effect on rifabutin absorption.
- Metabolized and excreted in bile, feces and urine.
- Crosses placenta (avoid in pregnancy)

16
RIFAMPICIN (Rifampin)

Therapeutic uses
 Tuberculosis, 600 mg o.d. 1hr before or 2hr after meal
 Leprosy (Mycobacterium leprae)
 Prophylaxis of meningococcal disease and H.influenzae
meningitis
 Eradication of the staphylococcal nasal carrier state in
patients with chronic furunculosis.
 Brucellosis (rifampin 900 mg daily combined with
doxycycline for 6 weeks)

17
Adverse Effects and Drug Interactions of Rifampicin

Adverse Effects (4%)


 Skin Rash (0.8%), nausea & vomiting (1.5%), fever (0.5%)
 Hepatitis (cholestatic jaundice, liver failure, death)
 Allergy: haemolysis, flu-like (fever, myalgia)(at high dose),
renal damage (light-chain proteinuria, acute tubular necrosis)
 Imparts orange/red colour to urine, sweat, saliva and tear and contact
lenses
 ‘Red-man syndrome’ with overdose

Drug Interactions
 Induces liver CYP enzymes – increase metabolism of digoxin,
quinidine, warfarin, corticosteroids, oral contraceptives, oral anti-
diabetics etc.,

18
PYRAZINAMIDE (analog of nicotinamide)

 MOA:
 Activated inside Mycobacteria to pyrazinoic acid (POA− ) & POAH which acidify
extracellular milieu.
 Subsequent accumulation of POAH acidifies the intracellular milieu and inhibits
enzyme function and collapses the transmembrane proton motive force, thereby
killing the bacteria.
 Also inhibit cell membrane synthesis.
 PK:
 Well absorbed (F >0.9), wide distribution, concentrated in lung (20x),
 Excreted by the kidney.
 Adverse effects:
 Hepatitis (jaundice 2-3%, death),
 Hyperuricaemia (gout),
 Arthralgia,
 GI: Nausea, Vomiting, diarrhoea

19
ISONIAZID, INH (isonicotinic acid hydrazide)

 Antibacterial effect limited to mycobacteria


 Bacteriostatic on resting and bactericidal on growing bacteria
 MOA:
 Activated inside bacillus by KatG to an isonicotinoyl radical,
 Eventually inhibits synthesis of mycolic acid, essential component in cell wall,
leading to cell death.
 PK:
 F=1, rapid absorption
 Enters CNS and casseous focus, metabolized by NAT2,
 Excreted in urine within 24 hr.
 The prevalence of drug-resistant mutants is about 1 in 106 bacilli.

KatG = multifunctional catalase-peroxidase


20
Adverse Effects & Drug Interactions of INH
Adverse Effects:
 Hepatitis (0.1%, increased risk in slow metabolizers and rifampin,
3%). Most cases of hepatitis occur after 4–8 weeks.
 Peripheral neuritis (give prophylactic pyridoxine to patient with DM,
alcoholism, malnutrition, CRF)
 CNS: convulsion, optic neuritis, dizziness
 Allergy: vasculitis, arthritis, skin rashes, SLE

Drug Interactions:
 Inhibit CYP2C19, CYP3A, CYP2D6 and
 Increase toxicity of carbamazepine, diazepam, theophylline,
phenytoin and warfarin

21
ETHAMBUTOL
 MOA:
 Ethambutol inhibits arabinosyl transferase III, thereby disrupts the
assembly of mycobacterial cell wall.
 No activity against other genus.
 PK:
 Bioavailability ~80% after oral administration
 Widely distributed, not metabolized
 >80% excreted unchanged in urine.
 Adverse Effects:
 Optic neuritis (decreased visual acuity and inability to differentiate red/green),
1% - 15%, depends on dose/duration & reversible.

 Rash, drug fever, GI upset, peripheral neuritis, hyperuricemia, headache,


confusion, pruritus and joint pain.

22
Second Line Anti-TB Drugs

Aminoglycosides: Amikacin, Kanamycin


 MOA:
 Inhibits protein synthesis by binding with 30S ribosomal subunit and
causing misreading of the genetic code during translation.
 PK:
 Water soluble, highly polar (ionized), poor GI absorption.
 Need to be given parenterally. Low passage across cell membranes.
 Excreted in urine
 Adverse Effects:
 Ototoxic - vertigo, deafness,
 Nephrotoxic - renal damage
 CI: Pregnancy (deafness in infant)

23
Second Line Anti-TB Drugs
Capreomycin
 Peptide protein synthesis inhibitor, given by injection.
 ADR: nephrotoxic and ototoxic

Cycloserine
 Inhibits cell wall synthesis
 ADR: peripheral neuropathy, depression, psychosis.
Pyridoxine should be given.

PAS (Para-Amino Salicylic acid)


 Folate synthesis antagonist, similar structure to PABA & sulfonamides.
Bacteriostatic.
Active exclusively against M. tuberculosis.
 Good absorption and rapid excretion in urine
 Toxicity: GI upset (give with meals or antacid),
Allergy-fever, joint pain, skin rash, hepatitis, jaundice

24
Second Line Anti-TB Drugs
Quinolones: moxifloxacin, levofloxacin, gatifloxacin
 Both more active against M. tuberculosis than ciprofloxacin (which is
more active against atypical mycobacteria) (bactericidal)
 Inhibit DNA synthesis and supercoiling by binding with
topoisomerase

Linezolid
 Good intracellular concentration. Used for MDR TB. Limited by bone
marrow suppression, irreversible peripheral & optic neuropathy.

Clofazimine
 MOA: Possibly membrane disruption, inhibition of phospholipase A2,
K+ transport, electron transport chain, or efflux pump; generation of
hydrogen peroxide.
ADR: GI disturgance ~50%, skin and body secretion discoloration

25
TB Treatment: COMPLIANCE

Lack of Adherence to Treatment or


Non-compliance  Multi-Drug Resistant TB

Patient and Disease-related


Factors

Provider-related Factors

Drug-related Factors

26
COMPLIANCE:
Poor Tx outcome due to Patient/Drug related Factors

Patient: inadequate drug intake or Drugs: inadequate supply


treatment response or quality
 Lack of belief, information  Poor quality medicines
 Lack of means to adhere to treatment  Unavailability of certain
medicines (stock-outs or
(transport, food, social barriers) delivery disruptions)
 Severity of TB – MDR, XDR TB  Poor storage conditions
 Poverty (Jobless/homeless/nutrition)  Wrong dose or
combination
 Substance abuse/dependence  Poor regulation of
 Adverse effects / complications medicines
 Co-morbidity: Diabetes, HIV

27
COMPLIANCE:
Poor Tx Outcome due to Provider-related Factors: inappropriate
treatment

 Inconvenient clinic hours • Poor patient education


 Inappropriate guidelines • No monitoring of treatment
 Non-compliance with • Poor management of adverse
guidelines drug reactions
 Absence of guidelines • Poor treatment support
 Poor training • Poorly organised or funded TB
 Financial disincentives control programmes

28
Non-compliance due to Drug-related Factors

 Not using FDC (fixed dose combination)


 Adverse drug reactions:
Hepatitis (alcohol abuse, h/o hepatitis C)(HRZ), hyperuricemia (Z)
 Optic neuritis (E)
 Autoimmune thrombocytopenia (R)
 Allergy: Skin eruptions, pruritus, rash

29
FDC (Fixed Dose Combination) in Ministry of Health Malaysia

• 4-Drug combination:
• Isoniazid 75 mg, rifampicin 150 mg, pyrazinamide 400 mg &
ethambutol 275 mg tablet
• 3-Drug combination:
• Isoniazid 75 mg, rifampicin 150 mg & pyrazinamide 400 mg tablet

OTHER TYPES - FIXED-DOSE COMBINATION (FDC) IN MALAYSIA

30
Mechanisms of Drug Resistance in TB
A Drug-resistant TB regimen consists of two phases
(a) First/intensive phase is the period in which the injectable agent is
used
(b) Second/maintenance phase is after the injectable agent has been
stopped.

Medicines Recommended:
A. Fluoroquinolones – levofloxacin, moxifloxacin, gantifloxaxin
B. Second-line injectable agents – amikacin, capreomycin, kanamycin
C. Other core second-line agents – ethionamide, prothionamide,
cycloserine, terizidone, linezolid, clofazimine
D. Add-on agents (not core regimen) – Z, E, Hh, bedaquiline,
delamanid, PAS, meropenem, amoxicillin-clavulanate

32
WHO Categorization of Second-line Anti-TB Drugs
for Rifampicin-resistant & MDR TB

Group A: Group B: Second- Group C: Other core second-line


Fluoroquinolones line injectable agents agents
• Levofloxacin • Amikacin • Ethionamide or Prothionamide
• Moxifloxacin • Capreomycin • Cycloserine or terizidone
• Gatifloxacin • Kanamycin • Linezolid
• Streptomycin • Clofazimine
Group D: Add-on agents (not part of the core multidrug-resistant tuberculosis
regimen)
Group D1: Group D2: Group D3:
• Pyrazinamide • Bedaquline • Para-aminosalicylic acid
• Ethambutol • Delamanid • Imipenem or Meropenem plus
• High-dose INH cilastatin
• Amoxicillin plus clavulanate
• Thioacetazone
Atypical Mycobacteria
 M.avium complex infection observed in immunocompromised
patient.
 Treatment is triple drug therapy with:
 Clarithromycin or azithromycin (SE: cholestatic hepatitis), rifampin
and ethambutol.
 Three times a week and continued 12 months after the negative
culture.
 In cavitatory disease, inj. amikacin or streptomycin can be added
as a 4th drug.
 Resistance is a problem and outcome may not be successful.

34
THANK YOU

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