Ananta Khurana1, Aastha Agarwal1, Ashutosh Singh2, Kabir Sardana1, Manik Ghadlinge3, Diksha Agrawal1, Sanjeet Panesar4, Khushboo Sethia1, Anuradha Chowdhary2. 1. Department of Dermatology, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital and Atal Bihari Vajpayee Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India. 2. Medical Mycology Unit, Department of Microbiology, Vallabhbhai Patel Chest Institute, University of Delhi, New Delhi, India. 3. Department of Pharmacology, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital and Atal Bihari Vajpayee Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India. 4. Department of Community Medicine, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital and Atal Bihari Vajpayee Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With rising resistance to terbinafine, and consistently high MICs to fluconazole and griseofulvin, itraconazole is being increasingly used as a first line drug for tinea corporis/cruris. However, inadequate clinical responses are often seen with it in spite of in vitro susceptibility. This is possibly related to a variable pharmacokinetic profile of itraconazole. The drug serum levels associated with the therapeutic outcome have not been defined in dermatophytic infections. METHODS: Forty treatment naïve patients with tinea corporis/cruris were randomised to one of the three dose groups (100, 200 and 400 mg/day) of itraconazole. The drug serum levels of 21 of these patients were obtained after 2 weeks of treatment and correlated with the final clinical outcome and in vitro antifungal susceptibility data. RESULTS: Trichophyton indotineae was identified by sequencing of ITS region of rDNA and TEF1α. All isolates were sensitive to itraconazole (Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MICs) range: 0.06-0.5 µg/ml), while MICs to terbinafine were uniformly high (range 8-32 µg/ml). Thirty-seven patients (92.5%) achieved complete cure, while three failed treatment. Serum levels achieved with 400 mg/day were significantly higher than levels with 100 or 200 mg dose. All patients with itraconazole serum levels of >0.2 µg/ml were cured, while two out of the 10 patients with serum levels <0.2 µg/ml failed treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Therapeutic failures are uncommon with itraconazole, and the prevalent strain in India has low itraconazole MICs. Treatment failure is likely with itraconazole serum levels of <0.2 µg/ml, while levels >0.2 µg/ml are consistently associated with a positive therapeutic outcome.
BACKGROUND: With rising resistance to terbinafine, and consistently high MICs to fluconazole and griseofulvin, itraconazole is being increasingly used as a first line drug for tinea corporis/cruris. However, inadequate clinical responses are often seen with it in spite of in vitro susceptibility. This is possibly related to a variable pharmacokinetic profile of itraconazole. The drug serum levels associated with the therapeutic outcome have not been defined in dermatophytic infections. METHODS: Forty treatment naïve patients with tinea corporis/cruris were randomised to one of the three dose groups (100, 200 and 400 mg/day) of itraconazole. The drug serum levels of 21 of these patients were obtained after 2 weeks of treatment and correlated with the final clinical outcome and in vitro antifungal susceptibility data. RESULTS: Trichophyton indotineae was identified by sequencing of ITS region of rDNA and TEF1α. All isolates were sensitive to itraconazole (Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MICs) range: 0.06-0.5 µg/ml), while MICs to terbinafine were uniformly high (range 8-32 µg/ml). Thirty-seven patients (92.5%) achieved complete cure, while three failed treatment. Serum levels achieved with 400 mg/day were significantly higher than levels with 100 or 200 mg dose. All patients with itraconazole serum levels of >0.2 µg/ml were cured, while two out of the 10 patients with serum levels <0.2 µg/ml failed treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Therapeutic failures are uncommon with itraconazole, and the prevalent strain in India has low itraconazole MICs. Treatment failure is likely with itraconazole serum levels of <0.2 µg/ml, while levels >0.2 µg/ml are consistently associated with a positive therapeutic outcome.