pa-824 and bedaquiline

pa-824 has been researched along with bedaquiline* in 48 studies

Reviews

9 review(s) available for pa-824 and bedaquiline

ArticleYear
Tuberculosis drug discovery: Progression and future interventions in the wake of emerging resistance.
    European journal of medicinal chemistry, 2022, Feb-05, Volume: 229

    The emergence of drug resistance continues to afflict TB control where drug resistant strains have become a global health concern. Contrary to drug-sensitive TB, the treatment of MDR/XDR-TB is more complicated requiring the administration of second-line drugs that are inefficient than the first line drugs and are associated with greater side effects. The emergence of drug resistant Mtb strains had coincided with an innovation void in the field of drug discovery of anti-mycobacterials. However, the approval of bedaquiline and delamanid recently for use in MDR/XDR-TB has given an impetus to the TB drug discovery. The review discusses the drug discovery efforts in the field of tuberculosis with a focus on the strategies adopted and challenges confronted by TB research community. Here, we discuss the diverse clinical candidates in the current TB drug discovery pipeline. There is an urgent need to combat the current TB menace through multidisciplinary approaches and strategies making use of the recent advances in understanding the molecular biology and pathogenesis of Mtb. The review highlights the recent advances in drug discovery, with the host directed therapeutics and nanoparticles-drug delivery coming up as important tools to fight tuberculosis in the future.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Therapy, Combination; Ethambutol; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Humans; Isoniazid; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Pyrazinamide; Rifampin

2022
Systematic review of mutations associated with resistance to the new and repurposed Mycobacterium tuberculosis drugs bedaquiline, clofazimine, linezolid, delamanid and pretomanid.
    The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 2020, 08-01, Volume: 75, Issue:8

    Improved genetic understanding of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) resistance to novel and repurposed anti-tubercular agents can aid the development of rapid molecular diagnostics.. Adhering to PRISMA guidelines, in March 2018, we performed a systematic review of studies implicating mutations in resistance through sequencing and phenotyping before and/or after spontaneous resistance evolution, as well as allelic exchange experiments. We focused on the novel drugs bedaquiline, delamanid, pretomanid and the repurposed drugs clofazimine and linezolid. A database of 1373 diverse control MTB whole genomes, isolated from patients not exposed to these drugs, was used to further assess genotype-phenotype associations.. Of 2112 papers, 54 met the inclusion criteria. These studies characterized 277 mutations in the genes atpE, mmpR, pepQ, Rv1979c, fgd1, fbiABC and ddn and their association with resistance to one or more of the five drugs. The most frequent mutations for bedaquiline, clofazimine, linezolid, delamanid and pretomanid resistance were atpE A63P, mmpR frameshifts at nucleotides 192-198, rplC C154R, ddn W88* and ddn S11*, respectively. Frameshifts in the mmpR homopolymer region nucleotides 192-198 were identified in 52/1373 (4%) of the control isolates without prior exposure to bedaquiline or clofazimine. Of isolates resistant to one or more of the five drugs, 59/519 (11%) lacked a mutation explaining phenotypic resistance.. This systematic review supports the use of molecular methods for linezolid resistance detection. Resistance mechanisms involving non-essential genes show a diversity of mutations that will challenge molecular diagnosis of bedaquiline and nitroimidazole resistance. Combined phenotypic and genotypic surveillance is needed for these drugs in the short term.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Clofazimine; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mutation; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2020
The Lancet Respiratory Medicine Commission: 2019 update: epidemiology, pathogenesis, transmission, diagnosis, and management of multidrug-resistant and incurable tuberculosis.
    The Lancet. Respiratory medicine, 2019, Volume: 7, Issue:9

    The Lancet Respiratory Medicine Commission on drug-resistant tuberculosis was published in 2017, which comprehensively reviewed and provided recommendations on various aspects of the disease. Several key new developments regarding drug-resistant tuberculosis are outlined in this Commission Update. The WHO guidelines on treating drug-resistant tuberculosis were updated in 2019 with a reclassification of second line anti-tuberculosis drugs. An injection-free MDR tuberculosis treatment regimen is now recommended. Over the past 3 years, advances in treatment include the recognition of the safety and mortality benefit of bedaquiline, the finding that the 9-11 month injectable-based 'Bangladesh' regimen was non-inferior to longer regimens, and promising interim results of a novel 6 month 3-drug regimen (bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid). Studies of explanted lungs from patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis have shown substantial drug-specific gradients across pulmonary cavities, suggesting that alternative dosing and drug delivery strategies are needed to reduce functional monotherapy at the site of disease. Several controversies are discussed including the optimal route of drug administration, optimal number of drugs constituting a regimen, selection of individual drugs for a regimen, duration of the regimen, and minimal desirable standards of antibiotic stewardship. Newer rapid nucleic acid amplification test platforms, including point-of-care systems that facilitate active case-finding, are discussed. The rapid diagnosis of resistance to other drugs, (notably fluoroquinolones), and detection of resistance by targeted or whole genome sequencing will probably change the diagnostic landscape in the near future.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Periodicals as Topic; Pulmonary Medicine; Societies, Medical; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2019
New drugs to treat difficult tuberculous and nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease.
    Current opinion in pulmonary medicine, 2019, Volume: 25, Issue:3

    Treatment of drug-sensitive tuberculosis (TB) is effective, whereas that of multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant TB as well as nontuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) disease are less so. Therapy in general requires good adherence to potentially toxic drug regimens over prolonged periods. Poor adherence is associated with resistance development and poor outcome. This review will present promising new treatments, both new drugs and regimens, for difficult mycobacterial pulmonary infections.. A number of new and repurposed drugs including bedaquiline, delamanid, pretomanid, linezolid and clofazimine, and drug regimens, such as the The Evaluation of a Standard Treatment Regimen of Anti-tuberculosis Drugs for Patients With MDR-TB (STREAM) trial regimens, are currently progressing from basic research through clinical trials.

    Topics: Amikacin; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Clofazimine; Diarylquinolines; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Humans; Linezolid; Liposomes; Lung Diseases; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles

2019
New and repurposed drugs to treat multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis.
    Jornal brasileiro de pneumologia : publicacao oficial da Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisilogia, 2018, Volume: 44, Issue:2

    Multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB and XDR-TB, respectively) continue to represent a challenge for clinicians and public health authorities. Unfortunately, although there have been encouraging reports of higher success rates, the overall rate of favorable outcomes of M/XDR-TB treatment is only 54%, or much lower when the spectrum of drug resistance is beyond that of XDR-TB. Treating M/XDR-TB continues to be a difficult task, because of the high incidence of adverse events, the long duration of treatment, the high cost of the regimens used, and the drain on health care resources. Various trials and studies have recently been undertaken (some already published and others ongoing), all aimed at improving outcomes of M/XDR-TB treatment by changing the overall approach, shortening treatment duration, and developing a universal regimen. The objective of this review was to summarize what has been achieved to date, as far as new and repurposed drugs are concerned, with a special focus on delamanid, bedaquiline, pretomanid, clofazimine, carbapenems, and linezolid. After more than 40 years of neglect, greater attention has recently been paid to the need for new drugs to fight the "white plague", and promising results are being reported.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Clinical Trials as Topic; Diarylquinolines; Drug Repositioning; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Humans; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles

2018
ADVANCES IN PHARMACOTHERAPY OF TUBERCULOSIS.
    Acta poloniae pharmaceutica, 2017, Volume: 74, Issue:1

    Tuberculosis remains a growing threat of infectious diseases of twenty-first century. An attempt to find new antituberculosis agents was made especially to treat multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis. One of the most promising drugs is bedaquiline - a new drug approved by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and by the European Union countries. This compound is intended to treat multidrug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis in adult patients in combination regimens in case of impossibility of using other drugs. This paper is also focused on some interesting molecules in treating multidrug-resistant tuberculosis which are currently tested in clinical studies: delamanid (dihydro-nitroimidazooxazole derivative, phase III), AZD5847 (oxazolidinone derivative, phase II), pretomanid (nitroimidazole derivative, phase III), sutezolid (oxazolidinone derivative, phase II) and SQ109 (ethambutol analogue, phase II) and some prospective molecules at the level of preclinical studies e.g., CPZEN-45, SQ609 and SQ641.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Clinical Trials as Topic; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazolidinones; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2017
Novel drugs against tuberculosis: a clinician's perspective.
    The European respiratory journal, 2015, Volume: 45, Issue:4

    The United Nations Millennium Development Goal of reversing the global spread of tuberculosis by 2015 has been offset by the rampant re-emergence of drug-resistant tuberculosis, in particular fluoroquinolone-resistant multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis. After decades of quiescence in the development of antituberculosis medications, bedaquiline and delamanid have been conditionally approved for the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis, while several other novel compounds (AZD5847, PA-824, SQ109 and sutezolid) have been evaluated in phase II clinical trials. Before novel drugs can find their place in the battle against drug-resistant tuberculosis, linezolid has been compassionately used with success in the treatment of fluoroquinolone-resistant multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. This review largely discusses six novel drugs that have been evaluated in phase II and III clinical trials, with focus on the clinical evidence for efficacy and safety, potential drug interactions, and prospect for using multiple novel drugs in new regimens.

    Topics: Adamantane; Antitubercular Agents; Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic; Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic; Diarylquinolines; Drug Therapy, Combination; Ethylenediamines; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Male; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Oxazolidinones; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2015
Tuberculosis: clinical trials and new drug regimens.
    Current opinion in pulmonary medicine, 2014, Volume: 20, Issue:3

    Recent advances in the development of new drugs and regimens provide hope that well tolerated, effective, and shorter-duration treatments for tuberculosis (TB) will become available. This review covers the recent trials of new TB drugs and regimens.. Moxifloxacin and levofloxacin have equally good efficacy and safety in the early phase of treatment of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB), and linezolid has the potential to cure refractory cases of MDR-TB. Bedaquiline and delamanid may be the best drug candidates for enhancing treatment options for MDR-TB. New chemicals, such as sutezolid, AZD5847, PA-824, SQ109, and BTZ043, show potent activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Late-generation fluoroquinolones in combination with the first-line and second-line anti-TB drugs have been used to shorten the treatment duration in drug-susceptible and MDR-TB.. New drugs and new combination regimens in clinical trials are expected to increase therapeutic efficacy and shorten treatment duration in both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB.

    Topics: Acetamides; Adamantane; Antitubercular Agents; Clinical Trials as Topic; Diarylquinolines; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Design; Ethylenediamines; Female; Fluoroquinolones; Humans; Levofloxacin; Linezolid; Male; Moxifloxacin; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Oxazolidinones; Spiro Compounds; Thiazines; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2014
New anti-tuberculosis drugs with novel mechanisms of action.
    Current medicinal chemistry, 2008, Volume: 15, Issue:19

    It is estimated that a third of the world's population is currently infected with tuberculosis, leading to 1.6 million deaths annually. The current drug regimen is 40 years old and takes 6-9 months to administer. In addition, the emergence of drug resistant strains and HIV co-infection mean that there is an urgent need for new anti-tuberculosis drugs. The twenty-first century has seen a revival in research and development activity in this area, with several new drug candidates entering clinical trials. This review considers new potential first-line anti-tuberculosis drug candidates, in particular those with novel mechanisms of action, as these are most likely to prove effective against resistant strains. A brief overview of current first-line and recent drugs (such as fluoroquinolones, rifampicin and isoniazid analogues) is initially presented. This is followed by a description of structure-activity relationships, in vitro and in vivo activity, pharmacokinetics, mechanism of action, combination regimens and clinical trials of the new drug candidates SQ109, PA-824, OPC-67683, TMC207 and others.

    Topics: Adamantane; Animals; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Design; Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial; Ethylenediamines; Humans; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Quinolines; Structure-Activity Relationship; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2008

Trials

9 trial(s) available for pa-824 and bedaquiline

ArticleYear
TB-PRACTECAL: study protocol for a randomised, controlled, open-label, phase II-III trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of regimens containing bedaquiline and pretomanid for the treatment of adult patients with pulmonary multidrug-resistant tubercul
    Trials, 2022, Jun-13, Volume: 23, Issue:1

    Globally rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis disease affects around 460,000 people each year. Currently recommended regimens are 9-24 months duration, have poor efficacy and carry significant toxicity. A shorter, less toxic and more efficacious regimen would improve outcomes for people with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis.. TB-PRACTECAL is an open-label, randomised, controlled, phase II/III non-inferiority trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of 24-week regimens containing bedaquiline and pretomanid to treat rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Conducted in Uzbekistan, South Africa and Belarus, patients aged 15 and above with rifampicin-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis and requiring a new course of therapy were eligible for inclusion irrespective of HIV status. In the first stage, equivalent to a phase IIB trial, patients were randomly assigned one of four regimens, stratified by site. Investigational regimens include oral bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid. Additionally, two of the regimens also included moxifloxacin (arm 1) and clofazimine (arm 2) respectively. Treatment was administered under direct observation for 24 weeks in investigational arms and 36 to 96 weeks in the standard of care arm. The second stage of the study was equivalent to a phase III trial, investigating the safety and efficacy of the most promising regimen/s. The primary outcome was the percentage of unfavourable outcomes at 72 weeks post-randomisation. This was a composite of early treatment discontinuation, treatment failure, recurrence, lost-to-follow-up and death. The study is being conducted in accordance with ICH-GCP and full ethical approval was obtained from Médecins sans Frontières ethical review board, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine ethical review board as well as ERBs and regulatory authorities at each site.. TB-PRACTECAL is an ambitious trial using adaptive design to accelerate regimen assessment and bring novel treatments that are effective and safe to patients quicker. The trial took a patient-centred approach, adapting to best practice guidelines throughout recruitment. The implementation faced significant challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trial was terminated early for efficacy on the advice of the DSMB and will report on data collected up to the end of recruitment and, additionally, the planned final analysis at 72 weeks after the end of recruitment.. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02589782. Registered on 28 October 2015.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Antibiotics, Antitubercular; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Pandemics; Rifampin; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Young Adult

2022
Randomised trial to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of varying doses of linezolid with bedaquiline and pretomanid in adults with pre-extensively drug-resistant or treatment intolerant/non-responsive multidrug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis: study
    BMJ open, 2022, 08-29, Volume: 12, Issue:8

    Drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) is a global public health problem. Patients suffer for months if undiagnosed or treated inadequately, transmitting DR-TB in the community before succumbing to the disease. Early diagnosis, prompt treatment initiation and completion play a significant role in treatment success. However, extended regimens with injectable result in poor treatment adherence and outcomes. Our objective is to evaluate the effectiveness, safety and tolerability of various doses and duration of linezolid (LZD) in combination with bedaquiline (BDQ) and pretomanid (Pa) after 26 weeks of treatment in adults with pre-extensively drug-resistant or treatment intolerant/non-responsive multidrug-resistant pulmonary TB.. A multicentric, randomised pragmatic clinical trial in India will enrol participants in one of the three arms-control arm (arm 1): BDQ, Pa and LZD 600 mg daily for 26 weeks or intervention arms (arm 2): BDQ, Pa and LZD 600 mg for 9 weeks followed by 300 mg for 17 weeks or arm 3: BDQ, Pa and LZD 600 mg for 13 weeks followed by 300 mg for 13 weeks. The primary endpoint is the proportion of patients with favourable outcomes as sustained cure and treatment completion. The secondary endpoint is unfavourable outcomes, including deaths, treatment failure, toxicity/adverse events and lost to follow-up till 48 weeks post-treatment.. The study has been approved by the ethics committees of participating institutes and the National Institute for Research in TB. The trial results will help establish evidence towards a safe and effective dose of LZD that can be used in a fully, all-oral short course regimen for highly DR-TB patients. The results of this study will be shared with the National TB Elimination Programme of the country and the WHO guidelines development group through publications and dissemination meetings.. NCT05040126.

    Topics: Adult; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2022
Bedaquiline-Pretomanid-Linezolid Regimens for Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis.
    The New England journal of medicine, 2022, 09-01, Volume: 387, Issue:9

    The bedaquiline-pretomanid-linezolid regimen has been reported to have 90% efficacy against highly drug-resistant tuberculosis, but the incidence of adverse events with 1200 mg of linezolid daily has been high. The appropriate dose of linezolid and duration of treatment with this agent to minimize toxic effects while maintaining efficacy against highly drug-resistant tuberculosis are unclear.. We enrolled participants with extensively drug-resistant (XDR) tuberculosis (i.e., resistant to rifampin, a fluoroquinolone, and an aminoglycoside), pre-XDR tuberculosis (i.e., resistant to rifampin and to either a fluoroquinolone or an aminoglycoside), or rifampin-resistant tuberculosis that was not responsive to treatment or for which a second-line regimen had been discontinued because of side effects. We randomly assigned the participants to receive bedaquiline for 26 weeks (200 mg daily for 8 weeks, then 100 mg daily for 18 weeks), pretomanid (200 mg daily for 26 weeks), and daily linezolid at a dose of 1200 mg for 26 weeks or 9 weeks or 600 mg for 26 weeks or 9 weeks. The primary end point in the modified intention-to-treat population was the incidence of an unfavorable outcome, defined as treatment failure or disease relapse (clinical or bacteriologic) at 26 weeks after completion of treatment. Safety was also evaluated.. A total of 181 participants were enrolled, 88% of whom had XDR or pre-XDR tuberculosis. Among participants who received bedaquiline-pretomanid-linezolid with linezolid at a dose of 1200 mg for 26 weeks or 9 weeks or 600 mg for 26 weeks or 9 weeks, 93%, 89%, 91%, and 84%, respectively, had a favorable outcome; peripheral neuropathy occurred in 38%, 24%, 24%, and 13%, respectively; myelosuppression occurred in 22%, 15%, 2%, and 7%, respectively; and the linezolid dose was modified (i.e., interrupted, reduced, or discontinued) in 51%, 30%, 13%, and 13%, respectively. Optic neuropathy developed in 4 participants (9%) who had received linezolid at a dose of 1200 mg for 26 weeks; all the cases resolved. Six of the seven unfavorable microbiologic outcomes through 78 weeks of follow-up occurred in participants assigned to the 9-week linezolid groups.. A total of 84 to 93% of the participants across all four bedaquiline-pretomanid-linezolid treatment groups had a favorable outcome. The overall risk-benefit ratio favored the group that received the three-drug regimen with linezolid at a dose of 600 mg for 26 weeks, with a lower incidence of adverse events reported and fewer linezolid dose modifications. (Funded by the TB Alliance and others; ZeNix ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03086486.).

    Topics: Aminoglycosides; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Fluoroquinolones; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles; Rifampin; Risk Assessment; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2022
A 24-Week, All-Oral Regimen for Rifampin-Resistant Tuberculosis.
    The New England journal of medicine, 2022, 12-22, Volume: 387, Issue:25

    In patients with rifampin-resistant tuberculosis, all-oral treatment regimens that are more effective, shorter, and have a more acceptable side-effect profile than current regimens are needed.. We conducted an open-label, phase 2-3, multicenter, randomized, controlled, noninferiority trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of three 24-week, all-oral regimens for the treatment of rifampin-resistant tuberculosis. Patients in Belarus, South Africa, and Uzbekistan who were 15 years of age or older and had rifampin-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis were enrolled. In stage 2 of the trial, a 24-week regimen of bedaquiline, pretomanid, linezolid, and moxifloxacin (BPaLM) was compared with a 9-to-20-month standard-care regimen. The primary outcome was an unfavorable status (a composite of death, treatment failure, treatment discontinuation, loss to follow-up, or recurrence of tuberculosis) at 72 weeks after randomization. The noninferiority margin was 12 percentage points.. Recruitment was terminated early. Of 301 patients in stage 2 of the trial, 145, 128, and 90 patients were evaluable in the intention-to-treat, modified intention-to-treat, and per-protocol populations, respectively. In the modified intention-to-treat analysis, 11% of the patients in the BPaLM group and 48% of those in the standard-care group had a primary-outcome event (risk difference, -37 percentage points; 96.6% confidence interval [CI], -53 to -22). In the per-protocol analysis, 4% of the patients in the BPaLM group and 12% of those in the standard-care group had a primary-outcome event (risk difference, -9 percentage points; 96.6% CI, -22 to 4). In the as-treated population, the incidence of adverse events of grade 3 or higher or serious adverse events was lower in the BPaLM group than in the standard-care group (19% vs. 59%).. In patients with rifampin-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis, a 24-week, all-oral regimen was noninferior to the accepted standard-care treatment, and it had a better safety profile. (Funded by Médecins sans Frontières; TB-PRACTECAL ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02589782.).

    Topics: Administration, Oral; Adolescent; Adult; Antitubercular Agents; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Linezolid; Moxifloxacin; Rifampin; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary; Young Adult

2022
Treatment of Highly Drug-Resistant Pulmonary Tuberculosis.
    The New England journal of medicine, 2020, 03-05, Volume: 382, Issue:10

    Patients with highly drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis have limited treatment options and historically have had poor outcomes.. In an open-label, single-group study in which follow-up is ongoing at three South African sites, we investigated treatment with three oral drugs - bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid - that have bactericidal activity against tuberculosis and to which there is little preexisting resistance. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of the drug combination for 26 weeks in patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis and patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis that was not responsive to treatment or for which a second-line regimen had been discontinued because of side effects. The primary end point was the incidence of an unfavorable outcome, defined as treatment failure (bacteriologic or clinical) or relapse during follow-up, which continued until 6 months after the end of treatment. Patients were classified as having a favorable outcome at 6 months if they had resolution of clinical disease, a negative culture status, and had not already been classified as having had an unfavorable outcome. Other efficacy end points and safety were also evaluated.. A total of 109 patients were enrolled in the study and were included in the evaluation of efficacy and safety end points. At 6 months after the end of treatment in the intention-to-treat analysis, 11 patients (10%) had an unfavorable outcome and 98 patients (90%; 95% confidence interval, 83 to 95) had a favorable outcome. The 11 unfavorable outcomes were 7 deaths (6 during treatment and 1 from an unknown cause during follow-up), 1 withdrawal of consent during treatment, 2 relapses during follow-up, and 1 loss to follow-up. The expected linezolid toxic effects of peripheral neuropathy (occurring in 81% of patients) and myelosuppression (48%), although common, were manageable, often leading to dose reductions or interruptions in treatment with linezolid.. The combination of bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid led to a favorable outcome at 6 months after the end of therapy in a high percentage of patients with highly drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis; some associated toxic effects were observed. (Funded by the TB Alliance and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02333799.).

    Topics: Administration, Oral; Adolescent; Adult; Antitubercular Agents; Bacterial Load; Diarylquinolines; Drug Therapy, Combination; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Female; Humans; Intention to Treat Analysis; Linezolid; Male; Middle Aged; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary; Young Adult

2020
Bedaquiline, moxifloxacin, pretomanid, and pyrazinamide during the first 8 weeks of treatment of patients with drug-susceptible or drug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis: a multicentre, open-label, partially randomised, phase 2b trial.
    The Lancet. Respiratory medicine, 2019, Volume: 7, Issue:12

    New anti-tuberculosis regimens that are shorter, simpler, and less toxic than those that are currently available are needed as part of the global effort to address the tuberculosis epidemic. We aimed to investigate the bactericidal activity and safety profile of combinations of bedaquiline, pretomanid, moxifloxacin, and pyrazinamide in the first 8 weeks of treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis.. In this multicentre, open-label, partially randomised, phase 2b trial, we prospectively recruited patients with drug-susceptible or rifampicin-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis from seven sites in South Africa, two in Tanzania, and one in Uganda. Patients aged 18 years or older with sputum smear grade 1+ or higher were eligible for enrolment, and a molecular assay (GeneXpert or MTBDRplus) was used to confirm the diagnosis of tuberculosis and to distinguish between drug-susceptible and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis. Patients who were HIV positive with a baseline CD4 cell count of less than 100 cells per uL were excluded. Patients with drug-susceptible tuberculosis were randomly assigned (1:1:1) using numbered treatment packs with sequential allocation by the pharmacist to receive 56 days of treatment with standard tuberculosis therapy (oral isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol; HRZE), or pretomanid (oral 200 mg daily) and pyrazinamide (oral 1500 mg daily) with either oral bedaquiline 400 mg daily on days 1-14 then 200 mg three times per week (B. Between Oct 24, 2014, and Dec 15, 2015, we enrolled 180 patients with drug-susceptible tuberculosis (59 were randomly assigned to B. B. TB Alliance, UK Department for International Development, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, US Agency for International Development, Directorate General for International Cooperation of the Netherlands, Irish Aid, Australia Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and the Federal Ministry for Education and Research of Germany.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Moxifloxacin; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Rifampin; South Africa; Sputum; Tanzania; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Uganda

2019
Long-Term Effects on QT Prolongation of Pretomanid Alone and in Combinations in Patients with Tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2019, Volume: 63, Issue:10

    Concentration-QTc modeling was applied to pretomanid, a new nitroimidazooxazine antituberculosis drug. Data came from eight phase 2 and phase 3 studies. Besides pretomanid alone, various combinations with bedaquiline, linezolid, moxifloxacin, and pyrazinamide were considered; special attention was given to the bedaquiline-pretomanid-linezolid (BPaL) regimen that has demonstrated efficacy in the Nix-TB study in subjects with extensively drug-resistant or treatment-intolerant or nonresponsive multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Three heart rate corrections to QT were considered: Fridericia's QTcF, Bazett's QTcB, and a population-specific correction, QTcN. QTc increased with the plasma concentrations of pretomanid, bedaquiline's M2 metabolite, and moxifloxacin in a manner described by a linear model in which the three slope coefficients were constant across studies, visits within study, and times postdose within visit but where the intercept varied across those dimensions. The intercepts tended to increase on treatment to a plateau after several weeks, a pattern termed the secular trend. The slope terms were similar for the three QTc corrections, but the secular trends differed, suggesting that at least some of the secular trend was due to the elevated heart rates of tuberculosis patients decreasing to normal levels on treatment. For pretomanid 200 mg once a day (QD) alone, a typical steady-state maximum concentration of drug in plasma (

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Computer Simulation; Diarylquinolines; Double-Blind Method; Drug Therapy, Combination; Electrocardiography; Heart Rate; Humans; Linezolid; Long QT Syndrome; Models, Statistical; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2019
Bactericidal activity of pyrazinamide and clofazimine alone and in combinations with pretomanid and bedaquiline.
    American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 2015, Apr-15, Volume: 191, Issue:8

    New regimens to shorten tuberculosis treatment and manage patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis who are infected with HIV are urgently needed. Experimental and clinical evidence suggests that the new drugs bedaquiline (B) and pretomanid (Pa), combined with an existing drug, pyrazinamide (Z), and a repurposed drug, clofazimine (C), may assist treatment shortening of drug-susceptible and drug-resistant tuberculosis.. To evaluate the 14-day bactericidal activity of C and Z in monotherapy and in combinations with Pa and B.. Groups of 15 treatment-naive, sputum smear-positive patients with pulmonary tuberculosis were randomized to receive combinations of B with Z-C, Pa-Z, Pa-Z-C, and Pa-C, or C or Z alone, or standard combination treatment for 14 days. The primary endpoint was the mean daily fall in log10 Mycobacterium tuberculosis CFU per milliliter sputum estimated by joint nonlinear mixed-effects Bayesian regression modeling.. Estimated activities were 0.167 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.075-0.257) for B-Pa-Z, 0.151 (95% CI, 0.071-0.232) for standard treatment, 0.124 (95% CI, 0.035-0.214) for B-Z-C, 0.115 (95% CI, 0.039-0.189) for B-Pa-Z-C, and 0.076 (95% CI, 0.005-0.145) for B-Pa-C. Z alone had modest activity (0.036; 95% CI, -0.026 to 0.099). C had no activity alone (-0.017; 95% CI, -0.085 to 0.053) or in combinations. Treatments were well tolerated and safe.. B-Pa-Z, including two novel agents without resistance in prevalent M. tuberculosis strains, is a potential new tuberculosis treatment regimen. C had no measurable activity in the first 14 days of treatment. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01691534).

    Topics: Adult; Antitubercular Agents; Clofazimine; Diarylquinolines; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; HIV Infections; Humans; Male; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2015
14-day bactericidal activity of PA-824, bedaquiline, pyrazinamide, and moxifloxacin combinations: a randomised trial.
    Lancet (London, England), 2012, Sep-15, Volume: 380, Issue:9846

    New drugs, but also shorter, better-tolerated regimens are needed to tackle the high global burden of tuberculosis complicated by drug resistance and retroviral disease. We investigated new multiple-agent combinations over the first 14 days of treatment to assess their suitability for future development.. In this prospective, randomised, early bactericidal activity (EBA) study, treatment-naive, drug-susceptible patients with uncomplicated pulmonary tuberculosis were admitted to hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa, between Oct 7, 2010, and Aug 19, 2011. Patients were randomised centrally by computer-generated randomisation sequence to receive bedaquiline, bedaquiline-pyrazinamide, PA-824-pyrazinamide, bedaquiline-PA-824, PA-824-moxifloxacin-pyrazinamide, or unmasked standard antituberculosis treatment as positive control. The primary outcome was the 14-day EBA assessed in a central laboratory from the daily fall in colony forming units (CFU) of M tuberculosis per mL of sputum in daily overnight sputum collections. Bilinear regression curves were fitted for each group separately and groups compared with ANOVA for ranks, followed by pair-wise comparisons adjusted for multiplicity. Clinical staff were partially masked but laboratory personnel were fully masked. This study is registered, NCT01215851.. The mean 14-day EBA of PA-824-moxifloxacin-pyrazinamide (n=13; 0·233 [SD 0·128]) was significantly higher than that of bedaquiline (14; 0·061 [0·068]), bedaquiline-pyrazinamide (15; 0·131 [0·102]), bedaquiline-PA-824 (14; 0·114 [0·050]), but not PA-824-pyrazinamide (14; 0·154 [0·040]), and comparable with that of standard treatment (ten; 0·140 [0·094]). Treatments were well tolerated and appeared safe. One patient on PA-824-moxifloxacin-pyrazinamide was withdrawn because of corrected QT interval changes exceeding criteria prespecified in the protocol.. PA-824-moxifloxacin-pyrazinamide is potentially suitable for treating drug-sensitive and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Multiagent EBA studies can contribute to reducing the time needed to develop new antituberculosis regimens.. The Global Alliance for TB Drug Development (TB Alliance).

    Topics: Adult; Antitubercular Agents; Aza Compounds; Colony Count, Microbial; Diarylquinolines; Double-Blind Method; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; Fluoroquinolones; Humans; Male; Microbial Viability; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Prospective Studies; Pyrazinamide; Quinolines; Sputum; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary; Young Adult

2012

Other Studies

30 other study(ies) available for pa-824 and bedaquiline

ArticleYear
Regimens for Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis.
    The New England journal of medicine, 2023, 01-12, Volume: 388, Issue:2

    Topics: Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2023
Regimens for Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis.
    The New England journal of medicine, 2023, 01-12, Volume: 388, Issue:2

    Topics: Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2023
Regimens for Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis. Reply.
    The New England journal of medicine, 2023, 01-12, Volume: 388, Issue:2

    Topics: Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2023
Predictions of Bedaquiline and Pretomanid Target Attainment in Lung Lesions of Tuberculosis Patients using Translational Minimal Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Modeling.
    Clinical pharmacokinetics, 2023, Volume: 62, Issue:3

    Site-of-action concentrations for bedaquiline and pretomanid from tuberculosis patients are unavailable. The objective of this work was to predict bedaquiline and pretomanid site-of-action exposures using a translational minimal physiologically based pharmacokinetic (mPBPK) approach to understand the probability of target attainment (PTA).. A general translational mPBPK framework for the prediction of lung and lung lesion exposure was developed and validated using pyrazinamide site-of-action data from mice and humans. We then implemented the framework for bedaquiline and pretomanid. Simulations were conducted to predict site-of-action exposures following standard bedaquiline and pretomanid, and bedaquiline once-daily dosing. Probabilities of average concentrations within lesions and lungs greater than the minimum bactericidal concentration for non-replicating (MBC. The translational modeling approach was successful in predicting pyrazinamide lung concentrations from mice to patients. We predicted that 94% and 53% of patients would attain bedaquiline average daily PK exposure within lesions (C. The translational mPBPK model predicted that the standard bedaquiline continuation phase and standard pretomanid dosing may not achieve optimal exposures to eradicate non-replicating bacteria in most patients.

    Topics: Animals; Antitubercular Agents; Humans; Lung; Mice; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Tuberculosis

2023
Implementation of Bedaquiline, Pretomanid, and Linezolid in the United States: Experience Using a Novel All-Oral Treatment Regimen for Treatment of Rifampin-Resistant or Rifampin-Intolerant Tuberculosis Disease.
    Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, 2023, 10-05, Volume: 77, Issue:7

    Rifampin-resistant tuberculosis is a leading cause of morbidity worldwide; only one-third of persons start treatment, and outcomes are often inadequate. Several trials demonstrate 90% efficacy using an all-oral, 6-month regimen of bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid (BPaL), but significant toxicity occurred using 1200-mg linezolid. After US Food and Drug Administration approval in 2019, some US clinicians rapidly implemented BPaL using an initial 600-mg linezolid dose adjusted by serum drug concentrations and clinical monitoring.. Data from US patients treated with BPaL between 14 October 2019 and 30 April 2022 were compiled and analyzed by the BPaL Implementation Group (BIG), including baseline examination and laboratory, electrocardiographic, and clinical monitoring throughout treatment and follow-up. Linezolid dosing and clinical management was provider driven, and most patients had linezolid adjusted by therapeutic drug monitoring.. Of 70 patients starting BPaL, 2 changed to rifampin-based therapy, 68 (97.1%) completed BPaL, and 2 of the 68 (2.9%) experienced relapse after completion. Using an initial 600-mg linezolid dose daily adjusted by therapeutic drug monitoring and careful clinical and laboratory monitoring for adverse effects, supportive care, and expert consultation throughout BPaL treatment, 3 patients (4.4%) with hematologic toxicity and 4 (5.9%) with neurotoxicity required a change in linezolid dose or frequency. The median BPaL duration was 6 months.. BPaL has transformed treatment for rifampin-resistant or intolerant tuberculosis. In this cohort, effective treatment required less than half the duration recommended in 2019 US guidelines for drug-resistant tuberculosis. Use of individualized linezolid dosing and monitoring likely enhanced safety and treatment completion. The BIG cohort demonstrates that early implementation of new tuberculosis treatments in the United States is feasible.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Rifampin; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; United States

2023
Favourable outcomes in RR-TB patients using BPaL and other WHO-recommended second-line anti-TB drugs.
    The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease : the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, 2023, 08-01, Volume: 27, Issue:8

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; HIV Infections; HIV Seropositivity; Humans; Linezolid; Rifampin; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; World Health Organization

2023
Evaluating the effect of clofazimine against Mycobacterium tuberculosis given alone or in combination with pretomanid, bedaquiline or linezolid.
    International journal of antimicrobial agents, 2022, Volume: 59, Issue:2

    In recent years, clofazimine (CFZ) has been regaining prominence for the treatment of tuberculosis. However, it shows limited efficacy as a single drug and optimal combination partners have not been identified. Therefore, the objective of our analysis was to evaluate the efficacy of CFZ-containing two-drug regimens with pretomanid (PMD), bedaquiline (BDQ) or linezolid (LZD) by: (i) determining their pharmacodynamic (PD) mode of interaction against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) strain H37Rv in log- phase and acid-phase metabolic states, and against Mtb strain 18b in a non-replicating persister (NRP) metabolic state; (ii) predicting bacterial cell kill of the drugs alone and in combination; and (iii) evaluating the relationship between the interaction mode and the extent of bacterial cell kill. The results of our Greco universal response surface analysis showed that CFZ was at least additive with a clear trend towards synergy when combined with PMD, BDQ and LZD against Mtb in all explored metabolic states under in vitro checkerboard assay conditions. The results further showed that all two-drug combination regimens exerted greater bacterial kill than any of the drugs alone. CFZ alone showed the least antimicrobial efficacy amongst the evaluated drugs, and there was a lack of correlation between the mode of interaction and the extent of bacterial kill. However, we may underestimate the effect of CFZ in this screening approach owing to limited in vitro study duration and neglect of target site accumulation. Clofazimine; Pretomanid; Bedaquiline; Linezolid; Combination chemotherapy; Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Clofazimine; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2022
Budgetary impact of using BPaL for treating extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis.
    BMJ global health, 2022, Volume: 7, Issue:1

    Bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid (BPaL) is a new all oral, 6-month regimen comprised of bedaquiline, the new drug pretomanid and linezolid, endorsed by the WHO for use under operational research conditions in patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB). We quantified per-patient treatment costs and the 5-year budgetary impact of introducing BPaL in Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan and Nigeria.. Per-patient treatment cost of BPaL regimen was compared head-to-head with the conventional XDR-TB treatment regimen for respective countries based on cost estimates primarily assessed using microcosting method and expected frequency of each TB service. The 5-year budget impact of gradual introduction of BPaL against the status quo was assessed using a Markov model that represented patient's treatment management and outcome pathways.. The cost per patient completing treatment with BPaL was US$7142 in Indonesia, US$4782 in Kyrgyzstan and US$7152 in Nigeria - 57%, 78% and 68% lower than the conventional regimens in the respective countries. A gradual adoption of the BPaL regimen over 5 years would result in an 5-year average national TB service budget reduction of 17% (US$128 780) in XDR-TB treatment-related expenditure in Indonesia, 15% (US$700 247) in Kyrgyzstan and 32% (US$1 543 047) in Nigeria.. Our study demonstrates that the BPaL regimen can be highly cost-saving compared with the conventional regimens to treat patients with XDR-TB in high drug-resistant TB burden settings. This supports the rapid adoption of the BPaL regimen to address the significant programmatic and clinical challenges in managing patients with XDR-TB in high DR-TB burden countries.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles

2022
Pharmacodynamics and Bactericidal Activity of Combination Regimens in Pulmonary Tuberculosis: Application to Bedaquiline-Pretomanid-Pyrazinamide.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2022, 12-20, Volume: 66, Issue:12

    A critical barrier to codevelopment of tuberculosis (TB) regimens is a limited ability to identify optimal drug and dose combinations in early-phase clinical testing. While pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PKPD) target attainment is the primary tool for exposure-response optimization of TB drugs, the PD target is a static index that does not distinguish individual drug contributions to the efficacy of a multidrug combination. A PKPD model of bedaquiline-pretomanid-pyrazinamide (BPaZ) for the treatment of pulmonary TB was developed as part of a dynamic exposure-response approach to regimen development. The model describes a time course relationship between the drug concentrations in plasma and their individual as well as their combined effect on sputum bacillary load assessed by solid culture CFU counts and liquid culture time to positivity (TTP). The model parameters were estimated using data from the phase 2A studies NC-001-(J-M-Pa-Z) and NC-003-(C-J-Pa-Z). The results included a characterization of BPaZ activity as the most and least sensitive to changes in pyrazinamide and bedaquiline exposures, respectively, with antagonistic activity of BPa compensated by synergistic activity of BZ and PaZ. Simulations of the NC-003 study population with once-daily bedaquiline at 200 mg, pretomanid at 200 mg, and pyrazinamide at 1,500 mg showed BPaZ would require 3 months to attain liquid culture negativity in 90% of participants. These results for BPaZ were intended to be an example application with the general approach aimed at entirely novel drug combinations from a growing pipeline of new and repurposed TB drugs.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2022
Genetic diversity of candidate loci linked to Mycobacterium tuberculosis resistance to bedaquiline, delamanid and pretomanid.
    Scientific reports, 2021, 09-30, Volume: 11, Issue:1

    Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is one of the deadliest infectious diseases worldwide. Multidrug and extensively drug-resistant strains are making disease control difficult, and exhausting treatment options. New anti-TB drugs bedaquiline (BDQ), delamanid (DLM) and pretomanid (PTM) have been approved for the treatment of multi-drug resistant TB, but there is increasing resistance to them. Nine genetic loci strongly linked to resistance have been identified (mmpR5, atpE, and pepQ for BDQ; ddn, fgd1, fbiA, fbiB, fbiC, and fbiD for DLM/PTM). Here we investigated the genetic diversity of these loci across >33,000 M. tuberculosis isolates. In addition, epistatic mutations in mmpL5-mmpS5 as well as variants in ndh, implicated for DLM/PTM resistance in M. smegmatis, were explored. Our analysis revealed 1,227 variants across the nine genes, with the majority (78%) present in isolates collected prior to the roll-out of BDQ and DLM/PTM. We identified phylogenetically-related mutations, which are unlikely to be resistance associated, but also high-impact variants such as frameshifts (e.g. in mmpR5, ddn) with likely functional effects, as well as non-synonymous mutations predominantly in MDR-/XDR-TB strains with predicted protein destabilising effects. Overall, our work provides a comprehensive mutational catalogue for BDQ and DLM/PTM associated genes, which will assist with establishing associations with phenotypic resistance; thereby, improving the understanding of the causative mechanisms of resistance for these drugs, leading to better treatment outcomes.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial; Humans; Mutation; Mycobacterium smegmatis; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Whole Genome Sequencing

2021
Cost-effectiveness of bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid for treatment of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in South Africa, Georgia and the Philippines.
    BMJ open, 2021, 12-03, Volume: 11, Issue:12

    Patients with highly resistant tuberculosis have few treatment options. Bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid regimen (BPaL) is a new regimen shown to have favourable outcomes after six months. We present an economic evaluation of introducing BPaL against the extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) standard of care in three epidemiological settings.. Cost-effectiveness analysis using Markov cohort model.. South Africa, Georgia and the Philippines.. XDR-TB and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) failure and treatment intolerant patients.. BPaL regimen. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: (1) Incremental cost per disability-adjusted life years averted by using BPaL against standard of care at the Global Drug Facility list price. (2) The potential maximum price at which the BPaL regimen could become cost neutral.. BPaL for XDR-TB is likely to be cost saving in all study settings when pretomanid is priced at the Global Drug Facility list price. The magnitude of these savings depends on the prevalence of XDR-TB in the country and can amount, over 5 years, to approximately US$ 3 million in South Africa, US$ 200 000 and US$ 60 000 in Georgia and the Philippines, respectively. In South Africa, related future costs of antiretroviral treatment (ART) due to survival of more patients following treatment with BPaL reduced the magnitude of expected savings to approximately US$ 1 million. Overall, when BPaL is introduced to a wider population, including MDR-TB treatment failure and treatment intolerant, we observe increased savings and clinical benefits. The potential threshold price at which the probability of the introduction of BPaL becoming cost neutral begins to increase is higher in Georgia and the Philippines (US$ 3650 and US$ 3800, respectively) compared with South Africa (US$ 500) including ART costs.. Our results estimate that BPaL can be a cost-saving addition to the local TB programmes in varied programmatic settings.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Cost-Benefit Analysis; Diarylquinolines; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Georgia; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles; Philippines; South Africa; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2021
Sterile tuberculous granuloma in a patient with XDR-TB treated with bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid.
    BMJ case reports, 2021, Dec-07, Volume: 14, Issue:12

    Drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) continues to pose a threat to the global eradication of TB. Regimens for extensively drug-resistant (XDR) TB are lengthy and poorly tolerated, often with unsuccessful outcomes. The TB Alliance Nix-TB trial investigated the safety and efficacy of a 26-week regimen of bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid (BPaL) in participants with XDR-TB, multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB treatment failure or intolerance. In this trial 9 out of 10 participants were cured. We describe a trial participant with XDR-TB who presented with new-onset seizures soon after BPaL treatment completion. Imaging showed a right temporal ring-enhancing lesion, and a sterile tuberculous granuloma was confirmed after a diagnostic, excisional biopsy. Learning points include management of a participant with a tuberculoma after BPaL completion, efficacy of new medications for central nervous system (CNS) TB and a review of their CNS penetration. This is the first case of pretomanid use in CNS TB.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Granuloma; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2021
Tuberculosis treatment: one-shot approach or cascade of regimens?
    The Lancet. Respiratory medicine, 2020, Volume: 8, Issue:2

    Topics: Diarylquinolines; Humans; Moxifloxacin; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2020
Preserved Efficacy and Reduced Toxicity with Intermittent Linezolid Dosing in Combination with Bedaquiline and Pretomanid in a Murine Tuberculosis Model.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2020, 09-21, Volume: 64, Issue:10

    The novel regimen of bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid (BPaL) is highly effective against drug-resistant tuberculosis, but linezolid toxicities are frequent. We hypothesized that, for a similar total weekly cumulative dose, thrice-weekly administration of linezolid would preserve efficacy while reducing toxicity compared with daily dosing, in the context of the BPaL regimen. Using C3HeB/FeJ and BALB/c mouse models of tuberculosis disease, thrice-weekly linezolid dosing was compared with daily dosing, with intermittent dosing introduced (i) from treatment initiation or (ii) after an initial period of daily dosing. In all animals, BPa was dosed daily throughout treatment. Blood counts were used to assess hematologic toxicity. After unexpected findings of apparent antagonism, we conducted additional experiments to investigate strain-to-strain differences in the contribution of linezolid to regimen efficacy by comparing each 1- and 2-drug component to the BPaL regimen in BALB/c mice infected with

    Topics: Animals; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Linezolid; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2020
Estimating the impact of a novel drug regimen for treatment of tuberculosis: a modeling analysis of projected patient outcomes and epidemiological considerations.
    BMC infectious diseases, 2019, Sep-09, Volume: 19, Issue:1

    Regimens that could treat both rifampin-resistant (RR) and rifampin-susceptible tuberculosis (TB) while shortening the treatment duration have reached late-stage clinical trials. Decisions about whether and how to implement such regimens will require an understanding of their likely clinical impact and how this impact depends on local epidemiology and implementation strategy.. A Markov state-transition model of 100,000 representative South African adults with TB was used to simulate implementation of the regimen BPaMZ (bedaquiline, pretomanid, moxifloxacin, and pyrazinamide), either for RR-TB only or universally for all patients. Patient outcomes, including cure rates, time with active TB, and time on treatment, were compared to outcomes under current care. Sensitivity analyses varied the drug-resistance epidemiology, rifampin susceptibility testing practices, and regimen efficacy.. Using BPaMZ exclusively for RR-TB increased the proportion of all RR-TB that was cured by initial treatment from 60 ± 1% to 67 ± 1%. Expanding use of BPaMZ to all patients increased cure of RR-TB to 89 ± 1% and cure of all TB from 87.3 ± 0.1% to 89.5 ± 0.1%, while shortening treatment by 1.9 months/person. In sensitivity analyses, reducing the coverage of rifampin susceptibility testing resulted in lower projected proportions of patients cured under all regimen scenarios (current care, RR-only BPaMZ, and universal BPaMZ), compared to the proportions projected using South Africa's high coverage; however, this reduced coverage resulted in greater expected incremental benefits of universal BPaMZ implementation, both when compared to RR-only BPaMZ implementation and when compared to to current care under the same low rifampin susceptibility testing coverage. In settings with higher RR-TB prevalence, the benefits of BPaMZ were magnified both for RR-specific and universal BPaMZ implementation.. Novel regimens such as BPaMZ could improve RR-TB outcomes and shorten treatment for all patients, particularly with universal use. Decision-makers weighing early options for implementing such regimens at scale will want to consider the expected impact on patient outcomes and on the burden of treatment in their local context.

    Topics: Adult; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Markov Chains; Nitroimidazoles; Prevalence; Pyrazinamide; Rifampin; South Africa; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2019
BPaL approved for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
    The Lancet. Infectious diseases, 2019, Volume: 19, Issue:10

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Approval; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Linezolid; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2019
Are pretomanid-containing regimens for tuberculosis a victory or a victory narrative?
    The Lancet. Respiratory medicine, 2019, Volume: 7, Issue:12

    Topics: Diarylquinolines; Humans; Moxifloxacin; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2019
Bactericidal and Sterilizing Activity of a Novel Regimen with Bedaquiline, Pretomanid, Moxifloxacin, and Pyrazinamide in a Murine Model of Tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2017, Volume: 61, Issue:9

    New regimens based on 2 or more novel agents are sought to shorten or to simplify treatment of tuberculosis (TB), including drug-resistant forms. Prior studies showed that the novel combinations of bedaquiline (BDQ) plus pretomanid (PMD) plus pyrazinamide (PZA) and PMD plus moxifloxacin (MXF) plus PZA shortened the treatment duration necessary to prevent relapse by 2 to 3 months and 1 to 2 months, respectively, compared with the current first-line regimen, in a murine TB model. These 3-drug combinations are now being studied in clinical trials. Here, the 4-drug combination of BDQ+PMD+MXF+PZA was compared to its 3-drug component regimens and different treatment durations of PZA and MXF were explored, to identify the optimal regimens and treatment times and to estimate the likelihood of success against drug-resistant strains. BDQ+PMD+MXF+PZA rendered all mice relapse-free after 2 months of treatment. PZA administration could be discontinued after the first month of treatment without worsening outcomes, whereas the absence of MXF, PZA, or BDQ administration from the beginning necessitated approximately 0.5, 1, or 2 months, respectively, of additional treatment to attain the same outcome.

    Topics: Animals; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Fluoroquinolones; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2017
Easier cure for resistant TB.
    Science (New York, N.Y.), 2017, Feb-17, Volume: 355, Issue:6326

    Topics: AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections; Antitubercular Agents; Baltimore; Clinical Trials as Topic; Diarylquinolines; Drug Therapy, Combination; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Humans; Linezolid; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; South Africa; Sputum; Treatment Outcome

2017
Contribution of Oxazolidinones to the Efficacy of Novel Regimens Containing Bedaquiline and Pretomanid in a Mouse Model of Tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2016, Volume: 60, Issue:1

    New regimens based on two or more novel agents are sought to shorten or simplify treatment of tuberculosis (TB). Pretomanid (PMD) is a nitroimidazole in phase 3 trials that has significant bactericidal activity alone and in combination with bedaquiline (BDQ) and/or pyrazinamide (PZA). We previously showed that the novel combination of BDQ+PMD plus the oxazolidinone sutezolid (SZD) had sterilizing activity superior to that of the first-line regimen in a murine model of TB. The present experiments compared the activity of different oxazolidinones in combination with BDQ+PMD with or without PZA in the same model. The 3-drug regimen of BDQ+PMD plus linezolid (LZD) had sterilizing activity approaching that of BDQ+PMD+SZD and superior to that of the first-line regimen. The addition of PZA further enhanced activity. Reducing the duration of LZD to 1 month did not significantly affect the activity of the regimen. Halving the LZD dose or replacing LZD with RWJ-416457 modestly reduced activity over the first month but not after 2 months. AZD5847 and tedizolid also increased the bactericidal activity of BDQ+PMD, but they were less effective than the other oxazolidinones. These results provide optimism for safe, short-course oral regimens for drug-resistant TB that may also be superior to the current first-line regimen for drug-susceptible TB.

    Topics: Animals; Antitubercular Agents; Bacterial Load; Diarylquinolines; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Combinations; Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial; Drug Synergism; Female; Linezolid; Lung; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Organophosphates; Oxazoles; Oxazolidinones; Pyrazinamide; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2016
TB Alliance regimen development for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
    The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease : the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, 2016, 12-01, Volume: 20, Issue:12

    The recent approval of new tuberculosis (TB) drugs raises hope for new and more effective anti-tuberculosis treatment regimens. The Global Alliance for TB Drug Development (TB Alliance) is committed to ensuring that new anti-tuberculosis drugs fulfill the needs of patients, their families and the local health services that serve the communities. Here we present highlights of the TB Alliance's pipeline of regimen development, with novel regimens for patients with drug-susceptible, multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant TB. The ongoing clinical trials (STAND, NC-005, Nix-TB and LIN-CL001) are outlined and their rationale and goals presented.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Clinical Protocols; Diarylquinolines; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Ethambutol; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Fluoroquinolones; Humans; Isoniazid; Linezolid; Moxifloxacin; Nitroimidazoles; Pyrazinamide; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Research Design; Rifampin; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant

2016
Contribution of the nitroimidazoles PA-824 and TBA-354 to the activity of novel regimens in murine models of tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2015, Volume: 59, Issue:1

    New regimens based on two or more novel agents are sought in order to shorten or simplify the treatment of both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. PA-824 is a nitroimidazo-oxazine now in phase II trials and has shown significant early bactericidal activity alone and in combination with the newly approved agent bedaquiline or with pyrazinamide with or without moxifloxacin. While the development of PA-824 continues, a potential next-generation derivative, TBA-354, has been discovered to have in vitro potency superior to that of PA-824 and greater metabolic stability than that of the other nitroimidazole derivative in clinical development, delamanid. In the present study, we compared the activities of PA-824 and TBA-354 as monotherapies in murine models of the initial intensive and continuation phases of treatment, as well as in combination with bedaquiline plus pyrazinamide, sutezolid, and/or clofazimine. The monotherapy studies demonstrated that TBA-354 is 5 to 10 times more potent than PA-824, but selected mutants are cross-resistant to PA-824 and delamanid. The combination studies revealed that TBA-354 is 2 to 4 times more potent than PA-824 when combined with bedaquiline, and when administered at a dose equivalent to that of PA-824, TBA-354 demonstrated superior sterilizing efficacy. Perhaps most importantly, the addition of either nitroimidazole significantly improved the sterilizing activities of bedaquiline and sutezolid, with or without pyrazinamide, confirming the value of each agent in this potentially universally active short-course regimen.

    Topics: Animals; Antitubercular Agents; Clofazimine; Diarylquinolines; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; Fluoroquinolones; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazines; Oxazoles; Pyrazinamide; Random Allocation; Tuberculosis

2015
Rapid, Semiquantitative Assay To Discriminate among Compounds with Activity against Replicating or Nonreplicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2015, Volume: 59, Issue:10

    The search for drugs that can kill replicating and nonreplicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis faces practical bottlenecks. Measurement of CFU and discrimination of bacteriostatic from bactericidal activity are costly in compounds, supplies, labor, and time. Testing compounds against M. tuberculosis under conditions that prevent the replication of M. tuberculosis often involves a second phase of the test in which conditions are altered to permit the replication of bacteria that survived the first phase. False-positive determinations of activity against nonreplicating M. tuberculosis may arise from carryover of compounds from the nonreplicating stage of the assay that act in the replicating stage. We mitigate these problems by carrying out a 96-well microplate liquid MIC assay and then transferring an aliquot of each well to a second set of plates in which each well contains agar supplemented with activated charcoal. After 7 to 10 days-about 2 weeks sooner than required to count CFU-fluorometry reveals whether M. tuberculosis bacilli in each well have replicated extensively enough to reduce a resazurin dye added for the final hour. This charcoal agar resazurin assay (CARA) distinguishes between bacterial biomasses in any two wells that differ by 2 to 3 log10 CFU. The CARA thus serves as a pretest and semiquantitative surrogate for longer, more laborious, and expensive CFU-based assays, helps distinguish bactericidal from bacteriostatic activity, and identifies compounds that are active under replicating conditions, nonreplicating conditions, or both. Results for 14 antimycobacterial compounds, including tuberculosis (TB) drugs, revealed that PA-824 (pretomanid) and TMC207 (bedaquiline) are largely bacteriostatic.

    Topics: Agar; Antitubercular Agents; Biological Assay; Charcoal; Colony Count, Microbial; Coloring Agents; Diarylquinolines; Fluorometry; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazines; Xanthenes

2015
Rapid evaluation in whole blood culture of regimens for XDR-TB containing PNU-100480 (sutezolid), TMC207, PA-824, SQ109, and pyrazinamide.
    PloS one, 2012, Volume: 7, Issue:1

    There presently is no rapid method to assess the bactericidal activity of new regimens for tuberculosis. This study examined PNU-100480, TMC207, PA-824, SQ109, and pyrazinamide, singly and in various combinations, against intracellular M. tuberculosis, using whole blood culture (WBA). The addition of 1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D facilitated detection of the activity of TMC207 in the 3-day cultures. Pyrazinamide failed to show significant activity against a PZA-resistant strain (M. bovis BCG), and was not further considered. Low, mid, and high therapeutic concentrations of each remaining drug were tested individually and in a paired checkerboard fashion. Observed bactericidal activity was compared to that predicted by the sum of the effects of individual drugs. Combinations of PNU-100480, TMC207, and SQ109 were fully additive, whereas those including PA-824 were less than additive or antagonistic. The cumulative activities of 2, 3, and 4 drug combinations were predicted based on the observed concentration-activity relationship, published pharmacokinetic data, and, for PNU-100480, published WBA data after oral dosing. The most active regimens, including PNU-100480, TMC207, and SQ109, were predicted to have cumulative activity comparable to standard TB therapy. Further testing of regimens including these compounds is warranted. Measurement of whole blood bactericidal activity can accelerate the development of novel TB regimens.

    Topics: Adamantane; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Drug Monitoring; Drug Therapy, Combination; Ethylenediamines; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis; Humans; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazolidinones; Pyrazinamide; Quinolines; Reproducibility of Results; Time Factors

2012
In vitro combination studies of benzothiazinone lead compound BTZ043 against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2012, Volume: 56, Issue:11

    Benzothiazinones (BTZ) are a new class of drug candidates to combat tuberculosis that inhibit decaprenyl-phosphoribose epimerase (DprE1), an essential enzyme involved in arabinan biosynthesis. Using the checkerboard method and cell viability assays, we have studied the interaction profiles of BTZ043, the current lead compound, with several antituberculosis drugs or drug candidates against Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain H37Rv, namely, rifampin, isoniazid, ethambutol, TMC207, PA-824, moxifloxacin, meropenem with or without clavulanate, and SQ-109. No antagonism was found between BTZ043 and the tested compounds, and most of the interactions were purely additive. Data from two different approaches clearly indicate that BTZ043 acts synergistically with TMC207, with a fractional inhibitory concentration index of 0.5. TMC207 at a quarter of the MIC (20 ng/ml) used in combination with BTZ043 (1/4 MIC, 0.375 ng/ml) had a stronger bactericidal effect on M. tuberculosis than TMC207 alone at a concentration of 80 ng/ml. This synergy was not observed when the combination was tested on a BTZ-resistant M. tuberculosis mutant, suggesting that DprE1 inhibition is the basis for the interaction. This finding excludes the possibility of synergy occurring through an off-target mechanism. We therefore hypothesize that sub-MICs of BTZ043 weaken the bacterial cell wall and allow improved penetration of TMC207 to its target. Synergy between two new antimycobacterial compounds, such as TMC207 and BTZ043, with novel targets, offers an attractive foundation for a new tuberculosis regimen.

    Topics: Adamantane; Antitubercular Agents; Aza Compounds; Diarylquinolines; Drug Combinations; Drug Synergism; Ethambutol; Ethylenediamines; Fluoroquinolones; Isoniazid; Meropenem; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Microbial Viability; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Quinolines; Rifampin; Spiro Compounds; Thiazines; Thienamycins

2012
The TB Alliance: overcoming challenges to chart the future course of TB drug development.
    Future medicinal chemistry, 2011, Volume: 3, Issue:10

    The Global Alliance for TB Drug Development (TB Alliance) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to the discovery and development of faster-acting and affordable drugs to fight TB. TB kills nearly 2 million people each year, partly due to the inadequacy of the current treatment. There have been no new drugs registered for TB in more than 40 years, but new partnership models over the past decade have enabled tremendous progress in the pipeline. With 10 clinical compounds now in development globally, the TB Alliance is embarking on a new paradigm of clinical development, one that leverages both new and existing compounds to discover and develop markedly shorter, simpler, faster-acting and less toxic multidrug regimens that can treat both drug-sensitive and multidrug-resistant TB concurrently, dramatically simplifying treatment and facilitating the scale-up of global treatment efforts.

    Topics: Antitubercular Agents; Aza Compounds; Clinical Trials as Topic; Diarylquinolines; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Fluoroquinolones; Humans; Models, Organizational; Moxifloxacin; Nitroimidazoles; Quinolines; Tuberculosis

2011
Sterilizing activity of novel TMC207- and PA-824-containing regimens in a murine model of tuberculosis.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2011, Volume: 55, Issue:12

    To truly transform the landscape of tuberculosis treatment, novel regimens containing at least 2 new drugs are needed to simplify the treatment of both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. As part of an ongoing effort to evaluate novel drug combinations for treatment-shortening potential in a murine model, we performed two long-term, relapse-based experiments. In the first experiment, TMC207 plus pyrazinamide, alone or in combination with any third drug, proved superior to the first-line regimen including rifampin, pyrazinamide, and isoniazid. On the basis of CFU counts at 1 month, clofazimine proved to be the best third drug combined with TMC207 and pyrazinamide, whereas the addition of PA-824 was modestly antagonistic. Relapse results were inconclusive due to the low rate of relapse in all test groups. In the second experiment evaluating 3-drug combinations composed of TMC207, pyrazinamide, PA-824, moxifloxacin, and rifapentine, TMC207 plus pyrazinamide plus either rifapentine or moxifloxacin was the most effective, curing 100% and 67% of the mice treated, respectively, in 2 months of treatment. Four months of the first-line regimen did not cure any mice, whereas the combination of TMC207, PA-824, and moxifloxacin cured 50% of the mice treated. The results reveal new building blocks for novel regimens with the potential to shorten the duration of treatment for both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant tuberculosis, including the combination of TMC207, pyrazinamide, PA-824, and a potent fluoroquinolone.

    Topics: Animals; Antibiotics, Antitubercular; Antitubercular Agents; Colony Count, Microbial; Diarylquinolines; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Administration Schedule; Drug Therapy, Combination; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Nitroimidazoles; Quinolines; Secondary Prevention; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2011
[Some new antitubercular agents].
    Revue medicale suisse, 2008, Mar-19, Volume: 4, Issue:149

    Topics: Acetamides; Antitubercular Agents; Diarylquinolines; Humans; Linezolid; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazoles; Oxazolidinones; Quinolines

2008
Bactericidal activities of R207910 and other newer antimicrobial agents against Mycobacterium leprae in mice.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2006, Volume: 50, Issue:4

    As measured by a proportional bactericidal technique in the mouse footpad system, the bactericidal activity against Mycobacterium leprae of R207910 was equal to that of rifapentine, rifampin, or moxifloxacin and significantly greater than those of minocycline, PA-824, and linezolid. These data suggest that R207910 may play an important role in treatment of leprosy.

    Topics: Acetamides; Animals; Anti-Infective Agents; Aza Compounds; Diarylquinolines; Female; Fluoroquinolones; Leprosy; Linezolid; Mice; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium leprae; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazolidinones; Quinolines

2006
In vitro and in vivo activities of rifampin, streptomycin, amikacin, moxifloxacin, R207910, linezolid, and PA-824 against Mycobacterium ulcerans.
    Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy, 2006, Volume: 50, Issue:6

    Seven antimicrobials were tested in vitro against 29 clinical isolates of Mycobacterium ulcerans. R207910 demonstrated the lowest MIC(50) and MIC(90), followed by moxifloxacin (MXF), streptomycin (STR), rifampin (RIF), amikacin (AMK), linezolid (LZD), and PA-824. All but PA-824 demonstrated an MIC(90) significantly less than the clinically achievable peak serum level. Administered as monotherapy to mice, RIF, STR, AMK, MXF, R207910, and LZD demonstrated some degree of bactericidal activity, whereas PA-824 failed to prevent mortality and to reduce the mean number of CFU in the footpads. Because 4 or 8 weeks of treatment by the combinations RIF-MXF, RIF-R207910, and RIF-LZD displayed bactericidal effects similar to those of RIF-STR and RIF-AMK, these three combinations might be considered as orally administered combined regimens for treatment of Buruli ulcer. Taking into account the cost, potential toxicity, and availability, the combination RIF-MXF appears more feasible for application in the field; additional experiments with mice are warranted to define further its activity against M. ulcerans. In addition, a pilot clinical trial is proposed to test the efficacy of RIF-MXF for treatment of Buruli ulcer.

    Topics: Acetamides; Amikacin; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Anti-Infective Agents; Aza Compounds; Colony Count, Microbial; Diarylquinolines; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Fluoroquinolones; Foot; In Vitro Techniques; Linezolid; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Moxifloxacin; Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous; Mycobacterium ulcerans; Nitroimidazoles; Oxazolidinones; Quinolines; Rifampin; Streptomycin; Survival Analysis; Time Factors

2006