| Literature DB >> 30670438 |
Jose Francis1, Simbarashe P Zvada1, Paolo Denti2, Mark Hatherill3, Salome Charalambous4, Stanley Mungofa5, Rodney Dawson6, Susan Dorman7, Nikhil Gupte7, Lubbe Wiesner1, Amina Jindani8, Thomas S Harrison8, Adeniyi Olagunju9, Deirdre Egan10, Andrew Owen10, Helen M McIlleron1.
Abstract
Rifapentine is a rifamycin used to treat tuberculosis. As is the case for rifampin, plasma exposures of rifapentine are associated with the treatment response. While concomitant food intake and HIV infection explain part of the pharmacokinetic variability associated with rifapentine, few studies have evaluated the contribution of genetic polymorphisms. We evaluated the effects of functionally significant polymorphisms of the genes encoding OATP1B1, the pregnane X receptor (PXR), constitutive androstane (CAR), and arylacetamide deacetylase (AADAC) on rifapentine exposure. Two studies evaluating novel regimens among southern African patients with drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis were included in this analysis. In the RIFAQUIN study, rifapentine was administered in the continuation phase of antituberculosis treatment in 1,200-mg-once-weekly or 900-mg-twice-weekly doses. In the Daily RPE study, 450 or 600 mg was given daily during the intensive phase of treatment. Nonlinear mixed-effects modeling was used to describe the pharmacokinetics of rifapentine and to identify significant covariates. A total of 1,144 drug concentration measurements from 326 patients were included in the analysis. Pharmacogenetic information was available for 162 patients. A one-compartment model with first-order elimination and transit compartment absorption described the data well. In a typical patient (body weight, 56 kg; fat-free mass, 45 kg), the values of clearance and volume of distribution were 1.33 liters/h and 25 liters, respectively. Patients carrying the AA variant (65.4%) of AADAC rs1803155 were found to have a 10.4% lower clearance. HIV-infected patients had a 21.9% lower bioavailability. Once-weekly doses of 1,200 mg were associated with a reduced clearance (13.2%) compared to that achieved with more frequently administered doses. Bioavailability was 23.3% lower among patients participating in the Daily RPE study than in those participating in the RIFAQUIN study. This is the first study to report the effect of AADAC rs1803155AA on rifapentine clearance. The observed increase in exposure is modest and unlikely to be of clinical relevance. The difference in bioavailability between the two studies is probably related to the differences in food intake concomitant with the dose. HIV-coinfected patients had lower rifapentine exposures.Entities:
Keywords: AADACzzm321990; SLCO1B1zzm321990; pharmacogenetics; population pharmacokinetics; rifapentine; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30670438 PMCID: PMC6437540 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.01964-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.938
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients
| Demographic or clinical characteristic | Values for patients from the following study: | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daily RPE, 450 mg ( | Daily RPE, 600 mg ( | RIFAQUIN, 900 mg ( | RIFAQUIN, 1,200 mg ( | Overall ( | |
| No. of samples for PK | 166 | 130 | 416 | 432 | 1,144 |
| No. of males/no. of females | 33/11 | 32/9 | 72/44 | 81/44 | 218/108 |
| No. (%) of HIV-positive patients | 6 (13.6) | 7 (17.1) | 30 (25.9) | 16(12.8) | 59(18.1) |
| Median (range) age (yr) | 29 (19–61) | 29 (18–63) | 31 (19–64) | 34 (19– 80) | 32 (18–80) |
| Median (range) wt (kg) | 55 (45–79) | 55 (45–94) | 55 (38–77) | 57 (38– 78) | 56 (38–94) |
| Median (range) FFM (kg) | 47 (32–58) | 47 (32–56) | 45 (27–62) | 45 (27–60) | 45 (27–62) |
PK, pharmacokinetic.
Final parameter estimates for rifapentine population pharmacokinetic model
| Parameter | Estimate | Variability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | 95% CI | % CV | 95% CI | |
| CL | 1.33 | 1.14, 1.54 | 23.0 (IIV) | 17.7, 28.6 |
| 25 | 21.9, 28.4 | 12.8 (IIV) | 8.8, 17.4 | |
| 0.814 | 0.568, 1.26 | 48.9 (IOV) | 36.4, 59.8 | |
| MTT (h) | 1.47 | 1.20, 1.78 | 37.4 (IOV) | 28.3, 48.6 |
| NN | 10.2 | 6.70, 14.0 | ||
| 1 (fixed) | 20.3 (IOV) | 14.9, 26.4 | ||
| Proportional residual error (%) | 9.56 | 7.09, 13.2 | ||
| Additive residual error (mg/liter) | 0.247 | 0.143, 0.401 | ||
| Effect of HIV+ on | −21.9 | −33.2, −6.64 | ||
| Effect of group on 1,200-mg dose in RIFAQUIN study on CL (%) | −13.2 | −22.8, −4.36 | ||
| Effect of Daily RPE study on | −23.3 | −35.6, −9.25 | ||
| −10.4 | −17.3, −3.53 | |||
CL, oral clearance; V, apparent volume of distribution in the central compartment; k, first-order absorption rate constant; MTT, absorption mean transit time; NN, number of hypothetical transit compartments; F, oral bioavailability; HIV+, human immunodeficiency virus positivity; AADAC, arylacetamide deacetylase gene; IIV, interindividual variability; IOV, interoccasion variability; CV, coefficient of variation; CI, confidence interval.
The typical values of clearance and volume of distribution reported for a patient with a body weight of 56 kg and FFM of 46 kg.
The 95% confidence interval of parameter estimates was obtained with sampling importance resampling (SIR; n = 1,000) of the final model.
FIG 1Visual predictive check (VPC) for the final rifapentine population pharmacokinetic model in log scale, stratified according to the different dose groups in the analysis. The lower, middle, and upper solid lines are the 2.5th, 50th, and 97.5th percentiles of the observed plasma concentration, respectively. The shaded areas are the 95% confidence intervals for the same percentiles, obtained from resimulations of the same trial.
Observed genotype and allele frequency of single nucleotide polymorphisms in the study
| Genotype | Genotype (frequency | Allele (frequency) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AA (8, 4.94) | AG (43, 26.5) | GG (111, 68.5) | A (0.18) | G (0.82) | |
| CC (15, 9.26) | CT (52, 32.1) | TT (95, 58.6) | C (0.25) | T (0.75) | |
| CC (71, 44.1) | CT (72, 44.7) | TT (18, 11.2) | C (0.67) | T (0.34) | |
| TT (116, 71.6) | CT (39, 24.1) | CC (7, 4.3) | T (0.84) | C (0.16) | |
| GG (3, 1.85) | GA (53, 32.7) | AA (106, 65.4) | G (0.18) | A (0.82) | |
Data are for 162 patients, unless indicated otherwise.
The data in parentheses represent the number, percent, of patients.
Data are available only for 161 patients.