| Literature DB >> 29066867 |
Chunlan Zheng1, Xiufen Hu2, Li Zhao1, Minhui Hu1, Feng Gao3.
Abstract
Rifapentine is a rifamycin derivate approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1998 for the treatment of active, drug-susceptible tuberculosis (TB). In 2014, rifapentine was approved for the treatment of latent TB infection in patients at high risk of progression to active disease and is currently under evaluation by the European Medicines Agency. Expanding indications of rifapentine largely affect diabetes patients, since about one-third of them harbor latent TB. Clinical consequences of rifapentine use in this population and potentially harmful interactions with hypoglycemic agents are widely underexplored and generally considered similar to the ones of rifampicin. Indeed, rifapentine too may decrease blood levels of many oral antidiabetics and compete with them for protein-binding sites and/or transporters. However, the two drugs differ in protein-binding degree, the magnitude of cytochrome P450 induction and auto-induction, the degree of renal elimination, and so on. Rifapentine seems to be more suitable for use in diabetes patients with renal impairment, owing to the fact that it does not cause renal toxicity, and it is eliminated via kidneys in smaller proportions than rifampicin. On the other hand, there are no data related to rifapentine use in patients >65 years, and hypoalbuminemia associated with diabetic kidney disease may affect a free fraction of rifapentine to a greater extent than that of rifampicin. Until more pharmacokinetic information and information on the safety of rifapentine use in diabetic patients and drug-drug interactions are available, diabetes in TB patients treated with rifapentine should be managed with insulin analogs, and glucose and rifapentine plasma levels should be closely monitored.Entities:
Keywords: antituberculosis treatment; glucose intolerance; hyperglycemia; rifamycin; safety
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29066867 PMCID: PMC5644564 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S146506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Pharmacokinetic characteristics of rifapentine and rifampicin after oral administration
| PK properties | Rifapentine | Rifampicin |
|---|---|---|
| Intestinal absorption | Increases with food | Decreases with food |
| Substrate of ABCB1 | Yes | Yes |
| Inducer of ABCB1 | No | Yes |
| Bioavailability after administration per os (%) | ~70 | ~90 |
| Cmax (h) | 2.5–5.5 | 2–4 |
| Plasma protein binding (%) | ~99 | ~80 |
| Biotransformation | Hepatic esterase | Hepatic esterase |
| CYP450 induction | 3A4, 2C8/9 | 1A2, 3A4, 2C8/9/19 |
| Magnitude of CYP450 induction | ++ | +++ |
| Auto-induction | No | Yes |
| Half-life (h) | ~10–15 | ~2–5 |
| Main elimination route | Hepatic | Hepatic |
| Renal elimination (%) | ~15 | ~30 |
Abbreviations: PK, pharmacokinetic; Cmax, maximal concentration; CYP, cytochrome P.
Crossed metabolic pathways of rifapentine/rifampicin and oral antidiabetics
| Oral hypoglycemic agent | Antituberculosis drug
| |
|---|---|---|
| Rifapentine | Rifampicin | |
| Nateglinide (Starlix®) | 3A4/2C9 | 3A4/2C9 |
| Repaglinide (Prandin®) | 3A4/2C8 | 3A4/2C8 |
| Pioglitazone (Actos®) | 3A4/2C8 | 3A4/2C8 |
| Rosiglitazone (Avandia®) | 2C8/9 | 2C8/9 |
| Glibenclamide (Glyburide®) | 3A4 | 3A4 |
| Gliclazide (Diamicron®) | 2C8/9 | 2C8/9/19 |
| Gliquidone (Glurenorm®) | 3A4/2C9 | 3A4/2C9/19/1A2 |
| Sitagliptin (Januvia®) | 3A4/2C8 | 3A4/2C8 |
| Saxagliptin (Onglyza®) | 3A4 | 3A4 |
| Bromocriptine mesylate (Cycloset®) | 3A4 | 3A4 |
Abbreviation: DPP-IV, dipeptidyl peptidase IV.
Possible PK interactions between rifapentine/rifampicin and hypoglycemic agents and their expected clinical effects
| Interaction level | Possible PK interaction | Expected clinical effect |
|---|---|---|
| Transporter level (ABCB1) | Rifapentine: competition with SU and SGLT-2 inhibitors. Decreased levels of SU and SGLT-2 inhibitors | Lack of hypoglycemic efficacy, possibly greater with rifampicin |
| Rifampicin: competition with SU and SGLT-2 inhibitors and induction of ABCB1. | ||
| Decreased levels of SU and SGLT-2 inhibitors | ||
| Protein-binding level | Rifapentine: competition for protein-binding sites with SU, glinides, SGLT-2 inhibitors, detemir, degludec, and liraglutide. Increased levels of oral antidiabetic drugs and/or rifapentine | Possible potentiation of hypoglycemic and/or antituberculosis effects, and increased risk of dose-dependent adverse effects. |
| Rifampicin: competition for protein-binding sites with SU, glinides, SGLT-2 inhibitors, detemir, degludec, and liraglutide. Increased levels of oral antidiabetic drugs and/or rifampicin | The interaction may be stronger with rifapentine than with rifampicin | |
| Hepatic metabolism level | Rifapentine: induction of CYP3A4 and CYP2C8/9 and decreased levels of nateglinide, repaglinide, pioglitazone, rosiglitazone, glibenclamide, gliquidone, gliclazide, sitagliptin, and saxagliptin | Rifapentine: hyperglycemia |
| Rifampicin: induction of CYP3A4, CYP2C8/9/19, CYP1A2, and auto-induction. | Rifampicin: hyperglycemia and diminished antituberculosis efficacy over time | |
| Rifapentine/rifampicin: induction by antidiabetics with CYP3A4-inducing potential, like bromocriptine. Decreased levels of both rifapentine and rifampicin | Lack of antituberculosis efficacy, possibly greater with rifampicin owing to auto-induction |
Abbreviations: PK, pharmacokinetic; SU, sulfonylureas; CYP, cytochrome P.