Pharmacokinetics of rifampin and isoniazid in tuberculosis-HIV-coinfected patients receiving nevirapine- or efavirenz-based antiretroviral treatment

N B Bhatt, C Barau, A Amin, E Baudin, B Meggi, C Silva, V Furlan, B Grinsztejn, A Barrail-Tran, M Bonnet, A M Taburet, ANRS 12146-CARINEMO Study Group, V Jani, Nádia Sitoe, Adolfo Vubil, Maria Nhadzombo, Fernando Sitoe, Delário Nhumaio, Odete Bule Rui Bastos, Elizabete Nunes, Paula Samo Gudo, Josué Lima, Mie Okamura, Laura Ciaffi, Agnès Sobry, Mariano Lugli, Bruno Lab, Avertino Barreto, Christophe Michon, Alexandra Calmy, Alpha Diallo, Christine Rouzioux, N B Bhatt, C Barau, A Amin, E Baudin, B Meggi, C Silva, V Furlan, B Grinsztejn, A Barrail-Tran, M Bonnet, A M Taburet, ANRS 12146-CARINEMO Study Group, V Jani, Nádia Sitoe, Adolfo Vubil, Maria Nhadzombo, Fernando Sitoe, Delário Nhumaio, Odete Bule Rui Bastos, Elizabete Nunes, Paula Samo Gudo, Josué Lima, Mie Okamura, Laura Ciaffi, Agnès Sobry, Mariano Lugli, Bruno Lab, Avertino Barreto, Christophe Michon, Alexandra Calmy, Alpha Diallo, Christine Rouzioux

Abstract

This is a substudy of the Agence Nationale de Recherches sur le Sida et les Hépatites Virales (ANRS) Comparison of Nevirapine and Efavirenz for the Treatment of HIV-TB Co-infected Patients (ANRS 12146-CARINEMO) trial, which assessed the pharmacokinetics of rifampin or isoniazid with or without the coadministration of nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-based HIV antiretroviral therapy in HIV-tuberculosis-coinfected patients in Mozambique. Thirty-eight patients on antituberculosis therapy based on rifampin and isoniazid participated in the substudy (57.9% males; median age, 33 years; median weight, 51.9 kg; median CD4(+) T cell count, 104 cells/μl; median HIV-1 RNA load, 5.5 log copies/ml). The daily doses of rifampin and isoniazid were 10 and 5 mg/kg of body weight, respectively. Twenty-one patients received 200 mg of nevirapine twice a day (b.i.d.), and 17 patients received 600 mg of efavirenz once a day (q.d.) in combination with lamivudine and stavudine from day 1 until the end of the study. Blood samples were collected at regular time-dosing intervals after morning administration of a fixed-dose combination of rifampin and isoniazid. When rifampin was administered alone, the median maximum concentration of drug in serum (Cmax) and the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) at steady state were 6.59 mg/liter (range, 2.70 to 14.07 mg/liter) and 27.69 mg · h/liter (range, 11.41 to 109.75 mg · h/liter), respectively. Concentrations remained unchanged when rifampin was coadministered with nevirapine or efavirenz. When isoniazid was administered alone, the median isoniazid Cmax and AUC at steady state were 5.08 mg/liter (range, 1.26 to 11.51 mg/liter) and 20.92 mg · h/liter (range, 7.73 to 56.95 mg · h/liter), respectively. Concentrations remained unchanged when isoniazid was coadministered with nevirapine; however, a 29% decrease in the isoniazid AUC was observed when isoniazid was combined with efavirenz. The pharmacokinetic parameters of rifampin and isoniazid when coadministered with nevirapine or efavirenz were not altered to a clinically significant extent in these severely immunosuppressed HIV-infected patients. Patients experienced favorable clinical outcomes. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration no. NCT00495326.).

Copyright © 2014, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Figures

FIG 1
FIG 1
Study profile. #, one patient with undetectable rifampin levels at the second pharmacokinetic sampling was excluded from the analysis.
FIG 2
FIG 2
Mean ± standard deviation of plasma rifampin (A and B) and isoniazid (C and D) concentration-time profiles during the first 12 h of the 24-h dosing interval in the absence (closed squares and dotted lines) or the presence (closed triangles and solid lines) of nevirapine (A and C) or efavirenz (B and D).
FIG 3
FIG 3
Individual plasma concentrations of rifampin (top) and isoniazid (bottom) drawn 2 h (C2) postdosing before and after starting antiretroviral treatment with nevirapine (left) or efavirenz (right).

Source: PubMed

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