New and Repurposed Drugs for the Treatment of Active Tuberculosis: An Update for Clinicians
Jéssica Díaz, Ahmed A. Abulfathi, Lindsey HM te Brake, Jakko van Ingen, Saskia Kuipers, Cécile Magis-Escurra, J. A. M. Raaijmakers, Elin M. Svensson, et al. (9 authors)
Respiration · 2022-12
Abstract
Although tuberculosis (TB) is preventable and curable, the lengthy treatment (generally 6 months), poor patient adherence, high inter-individual variability in pharmacokinetics (PK), emergence of drug resistance, presence of comorbidities, and adverse drug reactions complicate TB therapy and drive the need for new drugs and/or regimens. Hence, new compounds are being developed, available drugs are repurposed, and the dosing of existing drugs is optimized, resulting in the largest drug development portfolio in TB history. This review highlights a selection of clinically available drug candidates that could be part of future TB regimens, including bedaquiline, delamanid, pretomanid, linezolid, clofazimine, optimized (high dose) rifampicin, rifapentine, and para-aminosalicylic acid. The review covers drug development history, preclinical data, PK, and current clinical development.
MeSH terms
- Clofazimine
- Medicine
- Bedaquiline
- Rifapentine
- Drug
- Dosing
- Intensive care medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Rifampicin
- Pharmacokinetics
- Pharmacology
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis