Pharmacokinetics of standard versus high-dose isoniazid for treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis
Kamunkhwala Gausi, Maxwell Chirehwa, Elisa H. Ignatius, Richard Court, Xin Sun, Laura Moran, Richard Hafner, Lubbe Wiesner, et al. (18 authors)
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy · 2022-06
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The WHO-endorsed shorter-course regimen for MDR-TB includes high-dose isoniazid. The pharmacokinetics of high-dose isoniazid within MDR-TB regimens has not been well described. OBJECTIVES: To characterize isoniazid pharmacokinetics at 5-15 mg/kg as monotherapy or as part of the MDR-TB treatment regimen. METHODS: We used non-linear mixed-effects modelling to evaluate the combined data from INHindsight, a 7 day early bactericidal activity study with isoniazid monotherapy, and PODRtb, an observational study of patients on MDR-TB treatment including terizidone, pyrazinamide, moxifloxacin, kanamycin, ethionamide and/or isoniazid. RESULTS: A total of 58 and 103 participants from the INHindsight and PODRtb studies, respectively, were included in the analysis. A two-compartment model with hepatic elimination best described the data. N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) genotype caused multi-modal clearance, and saturable first-pass was observed beyond 10 mg/kg dosing. Saturable isoniazid kinetics predicted an increased exposure of approximately 50% beyond linearity at 20 mg/kg dosing. Participants treated with the MDR-TB regimen had a 65.6% lower AUC compared with participants on monotherapy. Ethionamide co-administration was associated with a 29% increase in isoniazid AUC. CONCLUSIONS: Markedly lower isoniazid exposures were observed in participants on combination MDR-TB treatment compared with monotherapy. Isoniazid displays saturable kinetics at doses >10 mg/kg. The safety implications of these phenomena remain unclear.
MeSH terms
- Isoniazid
- Ethionamide
- Medicine
- Pharmacology
- Pharmacokinetics
- Regimen
- Pyrazinamide
- Moxifloxacin
- Dosing
- Tuberculosis
- Internal medicine
- Ethambutol