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Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Evidence From a Phase 3 Trial to Support Flat-Dosing of Rifampicin for Tuberculosis.

Authors :
Ngo, Huy X
Xu, Ava Y
Velásquez, Gustavo E
Zhang, Nan
Chang, Vincent K
Kurbatova, Ekaterina V
Whitworth, William C
Sizemore, Erin
Bryant, Kia
Carr, Wendy
Weiner, Marc
Dooley, Kelly E
Engle, Melissa
Dorman, Susan E
Nahid, Payam
Swindells, Susan
Chaisson, Richard E
Nsubuga, Pheona
Lourens, Madeleine
Dawson, Rodney
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases; 6/15/2024, Vol. 78 Issue 6, p1680-1689, 10p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background The optimal dosing strategy for rifampicin in treating drug-susceptible tuberculosis (TB) is still highly debated. In the phase 3 clinical trial Study 31/ACTG 5349 (NCT02410772), all participants in the control regimen arm received 600 mg rifampicin daily as a flat dose. Here, we evaluated relationships between rifampicin exposure and efficacy and safety outcomes. Methods We analyzed rifampicin concentration time profiles using population nonlinear mixed-effects models. We compared simulated rifampicin exposure from flat- and weight-banded dosing. We evaluated the effect of rifampicin exposure on stable culture conversion at 6 months; TB-related unfavorable outcomes at 9, 12, and 18 months using Cox proportional hazard models; and all trial-defined safety outcomes using logistic regression. Results Our model-derived rifampicin exposure ranged from 4.57 mg · h/L to 140.0 mg · h/L with a median of 41.8 mg · h/L. Pharmacokinetic simulations demonstrated that flat-dosed rifampicin provided exposure coverage similar to the weight-banded dose. Exposure-efficacy analysis (n = 680) showed that participants with rifampicin exposure below the median experienced similar hazards of stable culture conversion and TB-related unfavorable outcomes compared with those with exposure above the median. Exposure-safety analysis (n = 722) showed that increased rifampicin exposure was not associated with increased grade 3 or higher adverse events or serious adverse events. Conclusions Flat-dosing of rifampicin at 600 mg daily may be a reasonable alternative to the incumbent weight-banded dosing strategy for the standard-of-care 6-month regimen. Future research should assess the optimal dosing strategy for rifampicin, at doses higher than the current recommendation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10584838
Volume :
78
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177927011
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciae119