Beyond Rifampin: Evaluating Rifapentine and Rifabutin as Alternative Treatments for Tuberculous Meningitis
Xueyi Chen, Carlos E Ruiz-Gonzalez, Yuderleys Masias-Leon, Medha Singh, Oscar J Nino-Meza, Charles A. Peloquin, Dmitri Artemov, Sanjay K Jain
The Journal of Infectious Diseases · 2026-02
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculous meningitis (TB meningitis), the most severe form of tuberculosis (TB), carries high mortality and neurological sequelae, and current rifampin-based regimen are limited by poor central nervous system penetration. Alternative rifamycins like rifapentine and rifabutin, with different pharmacokinetic profiles, are effective for treating drug-susceptible pulmonary TB, with rifapentine now forming the basis of a WHO-approved 4-month daily rifapentine-moxifloxacin regimen, and retrospective studies showing that rifabutin-based regimens are effective and well-tolerated, both drugs still need dedicated evaluation in TB meningitis. METHODS: Mice were intracranially inoculated with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and treated with rifamycin (rifampin, rifapentine or rifabutin)-based regimens at human equipotent doses. We assessed the bactericidal activities of the three regimens, rifamycin tissue concentrations, brain inflammation [brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), tissue immunofluorescence, cytokines] and neuronal injury. RESULTS: Both rifapentine- and rifabutin-containing regimens demonstrated bactericidal activity in the brain, similar to or better than the standard rifampin-containing regimen, as well as reduced neuroinflammation and brain injury. CONCLUSION: Alternate rifamcyins, rifapentine and rifabutin, show therapeutic activity and neuroprotective effects, supporting their evaluation in clinical trials for treating TB meningitis.
MeSH terms
- Rifapentine
- Rifabutin
- Medicine
- Rifamycin
- Meningitis
- Clinical trial
- Tb treatment
- Internal medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Cephalosporin
- Antibacterial agent
- Bacterial meningitis
- Pharmacotherapy
- Tuberculous meningitis
- Pharmacology
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Randomized controlled trial
- Antibiotics