| Literature DB >> 30870476 |
Charlotte Seijger1, Wouter Hoefsloot1, Inge Bergsma-de Guchteneire1, Lindsey Te Brake2, Jakko van Ingen3, Saskia Kuipers3, Reinout van Crevel4, Rob Aarnoutse2, Martin Boeree1, Cecile Magis-Escurra1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence suggests that higher rifampicin doses may improve tuberculosis (TB) treatment outcome.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30870476 PMCID: PMC6417786 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213718
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of TB patients treated with high-dose rifampicin (n = 88).
| Characteristics | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 71 (80) |
| Age (years) [median] | 45 (15–86) |
| Body weight (kg) [median] | 60.5 (31–115) |
| Body Mass Index (kg/m2) [median] | 20.5 (11.9–36.6) |
| European Region | 42 (47.7) |
| Eastern Mediterranean Region | 21 (23.9) |
| African Region | 14 (15.9) |
| South East Asia Region | 6 (6.8) |
| Region of the Americas | 5 (5.7) |
| Pulmonary | 47 (53.4) |
| Central nervous system | 20 (22.7) |
| Other extrapulmonary | 21 (23.9) |
| Diabetes Mellitus | 17 (19.3) |
| Gastrointestinal tract anomalies | 8 (9.1) |
| Renal failure | 4 (4.5) |
| Liver cirrhosis | 1 (1.1) |
| HIV co-infection | 4 (4.5) |
| N = 57 | |
| Relapse TB | 12 (21.1) |
| Delayed sputum culture conversion | 12 (21.1) |
| Delayed clinical response | 14 (24.6) |
| HIV co-infection | 4 (7) |
| Diabetes Mellitus | 12 (21.1) |
| Gastrointestinal malabsorption | 8 (14) |
| Severe weight loss or BMI < 18.5 kg/m2 | 18 (31.6) |
| Alcohol abuse | 12 (21.1) |
| History of drug abuse | 7 (12.3) |
| Renal failure | 4 (7) |
| Liver cirrhosis | 1 (1.8) |
| Rifampicin related drug interaction | 4 (7) |
a Results are expressed as n (%), or in case of age, body weight and BMI in median (minimum–maximum).
b Other co-morbidities were respiratory, cardiovascular and auto-immune mediated diseases.
c Multiple indications can be present in one patient. Sometimes TDM was indicated for other TB drugs than rifampicin (eg renal failure), but rifampicin was also measured.
d Malabsorption due to abdominal tuberculosis localisation (n = 3), history of gastro-intestinal resection (n = 2), colitis ulcerosa (n = 1), presence of duodenal feeding tube (n = 1).
e Three patients on haemodialysis and one patient with an estimated glomerular filtration rate of 50 ml/min.
f Interaction with mesalazine (n = 2), antiretroviral medication (n = 1) and antiretroviral medication in combination with valproic acid, methadone and pregabalin (n = 1).
Pharmacokinetic parameters of initial high dose rifampicin group in the severe illness group and dose adjustment group.
| Group 1 | Group 2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ||
| Rifampicin dose (mg/kg) | 11.4 (9.6–14.5) | 17.7 (7.8–30.0) | |
| Cmax | 2.8 (0.2–6.6)5 | 5.3 (1.5–13.6)43 | |
| AUC 0–24 | 26.5 (20.1–35.0)2 | 27.7 (8.8–65.7)27 | |
| Rifampicin dose (mg/kg) | 15.1 (13.1–17.3) | 24.9 (21.4–29.0) | 15.2 (7.8–20.9) |
| Cmax | 18.61 | 15.6 (12.9–18.7)3 | 11.6 (6.5–22.1)13 |
| AUC 0–24 | 105.01 | 104.0 1 | 58.4 (42.0–119.4)8 |
| Rifampicin dose (mg/kg) | 18.0 (12.6–27.4) | 22.9 (19.2–26.7) | 18.6 (12.5–27.7) |
| Cmax | 19.3 (13.0–37.3)8 | 19.11 | 16.8 (8.7–29.7)13 |
| AUC 0–24 | 139.5 (103.0–250.0)7 | 79.01 | 85.7 (47.0–150.0)6 |
| Rifampicin dose (mg/kg) | 29.4 | 30.0 | |
| Rifampicin dose (mg/kg) | 30.2 (28.3–32.0) | 28.6 | |
| Cmax | 17.5 | ||
| AUC 0–24 | 117.0 | ||
| Rifampicin dose (mg/kg) | 26.3 | ||
| Cmax | 37.8 | ||
| AUC0-24 | 236 | ||
Group 1: initial high-dose rifampicin due to severe illness.
Group 2: proven low plasma concentrations on standard dose with the dose adjustments made guided by therapeutic drug monitoring.
Results of rifampicin dose per kg bodyweight are expressed as mean (minimum–maximum) and Cmax and AUC0-24 are presented as geometric mean (minimum–maximum).
*Data available in number of patients.
AUC0-24, area under the 24-h concentration-time curve; Cmax, peak plasma concentration. Target Cmax range: ≥8 mg/L and AUC0-24 of 41.1 mg/L, based on a publication in 2014 with population pharmacokinetics [16].