Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of efavirenz-based ART on the pharmacokinetics of rifampicin and its primary metabolite in patients coinfected with TB and HIV

Jesper Sundell, Emile Bienvenu, Angela Äbelö, Michael Ashton

2021Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effects of concomitant efavirenz-based ART and genetic polymorphism on the variability in rifampicin and 25-desacetylrifampicin pharmacokinetics. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Plasma concentrations of rifampicin and 25-desacetylrifampicin from 63 patients coinfected with TB and HIV were analysed by LC-MS/MS followed by non-linear mixed-effects modelling. Patients were genotyped for SLCO1B1 (463 C>A, 388 A>G, 11187 G>A, rs4149015, 521 T>C and 1436 G>C) and SLCO1B3 (334 T>G). RESULTS: One-compartment disposition models described the observations adequately. The oral clearances of rifampicin and 25-desacetylrifampicin were 140% and 110% higher, respectively, in patients on concomitant efavirenz-based ART. Rifampicin bioavailability was also lower in patients on concomitant ART. Further, although not included in the final model, a lower relative bioavailability in carriers of WT SLCO1B3 334 T>G compared with carriers of mutations in the genotype was estimated. CONCLUSIONS: The results presented indicate both pre-systemic and systemic induction by efavirenz-based ART affecting rifampicin pharmacokinetics. The described drug-drug interaction has a clinical impact on rifampicin exposure prior to steady state and may impact the early bactericidal activity in patients on efavirenz-based ART.

Topics & Concepts

EfavirenzRifampicinPharmacokineticsConcomitantBioavailabilityPharmacologyMetaboliteReverse-transcriptase inhibitorSLCO1B1MedicineGenotypeHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Internal medicineChemistryPharmacogeneticsTuberculosisAntiretroviral therapyImmunologyViral loadBiochemistryPathologyGeneTuberculosis Research and EpidemiologyHIV/AIDS drug development and treatmentDrug Transport and Resistance Mechanisms