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Combination Antifungal Therapy By Amy Barnett, Doctor of Pharmacy Candidate University of Florida College of Pharmacy.

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Presentation on theme: "Combination Antifungal Therapy By Amy Barnett, Doctor of Pharmacy Candidate University of Florida College of Pharmacy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Combination Antifungal Therapy By Amy Barnett, Doctor of Pharmacy Candidate University of Florida College of Pharmacy

2 Fungal Infections: high risk populations Neutropenic patients Solid organ transplant patients Diabetes Patients Immunocompromised Intensive care populations Premature infants Surgical populations

3 Most common fungal pathogens Candida Aspergillus Cryptococcus

4 Antifungal Classification Azoles –1st gen: fluconazole, itraconazole, ketoconazole –2nd gen: voriconazole Polyenes –Conventional AmphoB (Amphocin) –Liposomal AmphoB (AmBisome) –Colloidal AmphoB (Amphotec) –Lipid complex AmphoB (Abelcet) 5-Flucytosine Echinocandins –Caspofungin, anidulafungin, micafungin

5 Azoles Mechanism –Inhibits ergosterol biosynthesis by inhibition of 14-a-demethylase Adverse effects –Nausea; diarrhea; abdominal pain; rash; edema; CHF; pulmonary edema; inc LFTs Spectrum –Fluconazole: candida (not C.krusei), cryptococcus neoformins, histoplasma capsulatum –Itraconazole: above + aspergillus, coccidiodes immitis, paracocciodes, blastomycosis –Voriconazole: aspergillus, fusarium, scedosporium apiospermum, candida

6 Polyenes Mechanism –Binds directly to ergosterol to alter cell membrane activity Adverse effects –Fever, chills, phlebitis, anaphylaxis give APAP and benadryl prior to infusion –Increased creatinine (prevention:saline load), hypokalemia (prevention:IV K+ replacement or amiloride 5-10mg/day), renal tubular acidosis Spectrum –Broad spectrum: active against most fungal pathogens

7 5-flucytosine Mechanism –FU  FUTP  inhibits protein synthesis –FU  FUM  interfere with DNA synthesis Adverse effects –Bone marrow suppression, CNS effects, GI upset, rash, inc LFTs, inc SCr/BUN Spectrum –Systemic candidiasis, cryptococcus –Used synergistically with AmphoB –Rapid resistance when used alone –Excellent CNS penetration

8 Echinocandins Mechanism –Non-competitive inhibitor of glucan synthase (critical component of the cell wall) Adverse effects –Pain at injection site, inc LFTs, flushing Spectrum –Aspergillus, candida

9 Studied Combinations Fluconazole + Ampho B –Candidemia Ampho B + 5-flucytosine –HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis Ampho B + fluconazole + 5-flucytosine –HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitits Voriconazole + caspofungin –Aspergillus

10 Ampho B plus fluconazole N=219 non-neutropenic pts with candidemia Treatment groups: –Fluconazole + placebo –Fluconazole + AmphoB Doses: fluconazole 800 mg qd +/- AmphoB 0.6- 0.7mg/kg/day Results: Combination therapy was not antagonistic and trended toward improved success (p=0.043) and increased eradication from the bloodstream (p=0.02). Rex, John H., Peter G Pappas, et al. Clin Inf Diseases 2003;36:1221-8

11 Selected antifungal drug interactions for Candida Table I. Combination In vitro In vivo Amphotericin B + flucytosine S, Add, I S, Add Amphotericin B + itraconazole Ant I, Ant Amphotericin B + fluconazole Add, I, Ant I, Ant Amphotericin B + terbinafine S, Add ND Amphotericin B + echinocandin S, Add, I I Amphotericin B + rifampicin S I Fluconazole + echinocandin I ND Flucytosine + fluconazole S, I, Ant S, Add, I Add = additive; Ant = antagonistic; I = indifferent; ND = insufficient data available; S = synergistic. Baddley, John W., et al. Drugs 2005;65(11):1461-1480

12 AmphoB + fluconazole + 5- flucytosine N=64 pts HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis Treatment Groups –AmphoB or –AmphoB + flucytosine or –AmphoB + fluconazole or –AmphoB + flucytosine + fluconazole Dosing: AmphoB 0.7mg/kg/day; flucytosine 100mg/kg/day; fluconazole 400mg/day Results: inc clearance with AmphoB + flucytosine regimen compared to AmphoB alone (p=0.006), AmphoB + fluconazole (p=0.02), or triple therapy (p=0.02). Brouwer, Annemarie E, et al. The Lancet 2004; 363:1764-1767.

13 Selected antifungal drug interactions for Cryptococcus Table II. Combination In vitro In vivo Amphotericin B + flucytosine S, I S, I Amphotericin B + itraconazole I S, I Amphotericin B + fluconazole S, I A, I Flucytosine + fluconazole S, Add, I S, I Add = additive; I = indifferent; S = synergistic. Baddley, John W., et al. Drugs 2005;65(11):1461-1480

14 Voriconazole + caspofungin N=87 transplant pts with Aspergillosis Treatment groups: –Voriconazole + caspofungin –AmphoB (as a control group) Doses: voriconazole 6mg/kg q12h x 1 day, then 4mg/kg q12h; caspofungin 70mg/day x 1 day, then 50mg/day; AmphoB 5-7.4mg/kg/d. Results: 90 day survival was significantly inc in transplant pts with renal failure (p=0.022) and those with A. fumigatus infection (p=0.019) compared to the control group. Singh, Nina, Ajit P Lamaye, et al. Transplantation 2006; 81(3): 320-326.

15 Selected antifungal drug interactions for Aspergillus Table III. Combination In vitro In vivo Amphotericin B + flucytosine S, Add, I S, Add, I Amphotericin B + itraconazole Ant Ant Amphotericin B + fluconazole I, Ant I Amphotericin B + terbinafine Add, I I Amphotericin B + echinocandin S, Add, I S, Add, I Amphotericin B + rifampicin S, I Add ExS triazole + echinocandin S, Add S, Add Amphotericin B + ExS triazole I ND Itraconazole + nikkomycin Z S ND Add = additive; Ant = antagonistic; ExS triazole = extendedspectrum azole (posaconazole, voriconazole or ravuconazole); I = indifferent; ND = insufficient data available; S = synergistic. Baddley, John W., et al. Drugs 2005;65(11):1461-1480

16 Advantages/Disadvantages of Combination Therapy Advantages: Additive or synergistic effects Increased spectrum of activity Decreased resistance Disadvantages: Antagonistic effects Increased risk of drug interactions Increased toxicity Increased cost Baddley, John W., et al. Drugs 2005;65(11):1461-1480

17 Conclusions Severe infections High risk patients More studies with more combinations –More consistent results –Combinations with other AmphoB formulations Micafungin + liposomal AmphoB (AmBisome) Anidulafungin + lipid complex AmphoB (Abelcet)

18 References Baddley, John W. and Peter G Pappas. Antifungal Combination Therapy: clinical potential. Drugs 2005; 65(11): 1461-1480. Brouwer, Annemarie, Adul Rajanuwong, et al. Combination antifungal therapies for HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis: a randomised trial. The Lancet 2004; 363: 1764-1767. Kullberg BJ, JD Sobel, et al. Voriconazole versus a regimen of amphotericin B followed by fluconazole for candidaemia in non-neutropenic patients: a randomised non-inferiority trial. The Lancet 2005;366:1435-42. Lacy, CF, et al. Lexi-Comp’s Drug Information Handbook. 13th ed. Rex, John H., Peter G Pappas, et al. A randomized and blinded multicenter trial of high- dose fluconazole plus placebo versus fluconazole plus amphotericin B as therapy for candidemia and its consequences in nonneutropenic subjects. Clin Inf Diseases 2003;35:1221-8 Singh, Nina, Ajit P Lamaye, et al. Combination voriconazole and caspofungin as primary therapy for invasive aspergillosis in solid organ transplant recipients: A prospective multicenter, observational study. Transplantation 2006; 81(3): 320- 326.


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