* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Document
Pharmacognosy wikipedia , lookup
Neuropharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Pharmaceutical industry wikipedia , lookup
Zoopharmacognosy wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Prescription costs wikipedia , lookup
Prescription drug prices in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Nicholas A. Peppas wikipedia , lookup
List of comic book drugs wikipedia , lookup
Drug design wikipedia , lookup
Drug interaction wikipedia , lookup
Drug discovery wikipedia , lookup
Intrapulmonary drug distribution & pharmacodynamic interactions of antifungal drugs with host cells Russell E. Lewis, Pharm.D., FCCP, BCPS Associate Professor University of Houston College of Pharmacy & The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Houston, Texas UH Anti-Infective Research Laboratories Outline How does the pathophysiology of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis impair drug delivery to the site of infection? Are pharmacokinetic differences among antifungal agents important for the treatment of fungal pneumonia? Pathology of acute mould infections neutropenic hosts Inhalation of conidia Conidia reach distal alveolar space and begin to germinate Mononuclear and polymorphonuclear cells clear germinating conidia and hyphal forms Angioinvasive growth In tissue with hemorrhage, thrombosis, hypoxia, necrosis, and dissemination Impaired by neutropenia, glucocorticoids, metabolic abnormalities, concomitant infections Administer drugs to slow fungal proliferation; and reduce, angioinvasion, and dissemination Figure: R. Lewis Pathology of acute mould infections corticosteroid and mixed immunosuppression? Inhalation of conidia Conidia reach distal alveolar space and begin to germinate Mononuclear and polymorphonuclear cells clear germinating conidia and hyphal forms Dysregulated inflammatory response Figure: R. Lewis Angioinvasive growth In tissue with hemorrhage, thrombosis, hypoxia, necrosis, and dissemination Immunopathology hemorrhage, necrosis Progressive thrombosis- inflammation-necrosis impair drug activity in invasive aspergillosis Discrete nodules (neutropenia) Nodular consolidation (steroids) Coagulation necrosis without Inflammatory cells Encompassing hemorrhage Defined nodules with hemorrhage Solid nodular consolidation with necrotic center Dense neutrophilic infiltrate on periphery ∆ 20% in response ~10 days % Cured All treated Voriconazole Amphotericin B Nodular Lesion with Halo Sign (N=143) Greene et al. Clin Infect Dis 2007;44:373-9. Shibuya et al. J Infect Chemother 2004;10:138-45. Nodular lesion without Halo Sign (N=143) Pathogen growth and inflammation in the lung evoke neovascularization and angiogenesis Lung epithelium • How does the pathogen or host immunosuppression affect the angioplasticity of the lung? TNFα IL-8 VEGF HIF-1α bFGF Bone marrow derived pro-angiogenic precursors (CD34+, CD 133+) – Implications for disease pathogenesis? – Implications for drug delivery? Asosingh & Erzuram. Biochem S. Tran 2009;37:805-810. Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis in neutropenic mice is associated with rapid down-regulation of multiple genes involved in angioneogenesis A. fumigatus cyclophosphamide + 1 dose cortisone (neutropenic) whole lung RNA x fold expression corticosteroid only Relative expression by RT-PCR at 24 hr uncoupling of inflammatory-angiogenic response in neutropenic animals? PCR arrays 84 genes angiogenesis pathway controls: same immunosuppression, no infection Ben-Ami et al. Blood ; Advanced access published 2009 In vivo assessment of the anti-angiogenic effects of Aspergillus infection myocutaneous model of aspergillosis (neutropenic, non-lethal) In vivo Matrigel plug (500 µL)bFGF + heparin Will surrounding Aspergillus growth suppress angiogenesis? D+5 endothelial cell migration capillary tube formation D+7 erythrocyte-filled lacunae Remove and image Ben-Ami et al. Blood ; Advanced access published 2009 a Passanti et al. Lab Invest 1992;67:518-528. injected 10 mm from infection site A. fumigatus suppress angiogenesis in an in vivo cutaneous infection model ∆laeA AF 293 Control Day +7 Matrigel plugs Ben-Ami et al. Blood; Advanced access published 2009 Masson trichrome stain Are secondary metabolites responsible for this anti-angiogenic effect? In vitro Matrigel experiments (HUVEC) Growth medium Growth medium A. fumigatus culture filtrate ∆laeA culture filtrate ∆laeA complemented culture filtrate ∆glip Ben-Ami et al. Blood; Advanced access published 2009 Gliotoxin suppresses angioneogensis in a dose-dependent fashion In vitro Matrigel experiments (HUVEC) gliotoxin 3000 ng/mL gliotoxin 30 ng/mL gliotoxin 300 ng/mL control *gliotoxin lung concentrations in experimental pulmonary aspergillosis: 1000-4000 ng/gram lung Ben-Ami et al. Blood; Advanced access published 2009 *Lewis et al. Infect Immun 2005;73:635-637. Pathological features affecting drug delivery depend on host immunosuppression Neutropenic patient Non-neutropenic patient Diminished drug delivery/ efficacy? Diminished drug delivery/ efficacy? immune response Aspergillus inhibition of lung angiogenesis Aspergillus immune response PMN-mediated tissue damage* Impact of changing immune function, co-pathogens? *evidence that gliotoxin also exacerbates this effect in corticosteroid-immunosuppressed mice Effect of amphotericin B on the survival or immunosuppressed mice with invasive pulmonary aspergillosis Corticosteroid Balloy et al. Infect Immunity 2005;73:494-503. Chemotherapy (neutropenic) Immunomodulatory effects of antifungals in the lung Amphotericin B Liposomal amphotericin B Echinocandins Triazoles Dectin-1 TLR2 Activation of TLR2 TLR4 Activation of TLR4 Exposure or immunogenic epitopes in cell wall Fungal sensitization for phagocytosis relative pro-inflammatory potential in the lung? Ben-Ami et al. Clin Infect Dis 2008;47:226-35. Outline How does the pathophysiology of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis impair drug delivery to the site of infection? Are pharmacokinetic differences among antifungal agents important for the treatment of fungal pneumonia? Patterns of drug distribution for currently available antifungals Liver/ Spleen Kidneys Gut/gall bladder Lungs Brain/ CSF Eyes Bladder/ urine AMB + + + + – – – 5FC + + + + + + + FLU + + + + + + + ITR + + + + – – – VOR + + + + + + – POS* + + + + – – – Echino + + + + – – – +, ≥50% of serum concentrations. –, <10% of serum concentrations. *Predicted. 1. Dodds-Ashley ES, et al . Clin Infect Dis. 2006;43:S28-S39. 2. Groll AH, et al. Adv Pharmacol. 1998;44:343-500. 3. Eschenauer G, et al. Ther Clin Risk Manag. 2007;3:71-97. Steady-state concentrations of voriconazole and anidulafungin in plasma, epithelial lining fluid and macrophages in healthy adults Similar data for posaconazole (Conte et al. Antimicrobial Agent Chemother 2009;53:707-7); micafungin (Nicasio et al. Antimicrob Agent Chemother 2009;53:1218-20); itraconazole (Conte et al. Antimicrob Agent Chemother 2004;48:3823-7) Crandon et al. Antimicrob Agent Chemother 2009;Online Publication Sept 21, 2009 Concentration of amphotericin B in lung tissue, ELF, PAMs and PBMs of healthy rabbits after once-daily dosing for 8 daysa Mean concentration + SD in: Drug Dose (mg/kg) Lung tissue (ug/g) ELF (µg/mL) PAM (µg/mL) PBMs (µg/mL) Plasma (µg/mL) DAMB 1 2.71 + 1.22 0.44 + 0.13 8.92 + 2.94 1.20 + 0.83 0.37 + 0.07 ABCD 5 6.29 + 1.17 0.68 + 0.27 5.43 + 1.75 2.44 + 1.90 0.37 + 0.12 ABLC 5 16.26 + 1.62 0.90 + 0.28 89.1 + 37 0.74 + 0.42 0.24 + 0.08 LAMB 5 6.32 + 0.57 2.28 + 0.57 7.52 + 1.43 1.51 + 0.78 26.4 + 4.99 Twenty-four hours after doses of either DAMB, ABCD, ABLC, or LAMB. All values represent the means ± SD from three to seven rabbits in each dosing group. Plasma, concurrent plasma concentrations. P values from comparisons across dosage groups by Kruskal-Wallis nonparametric analysis of variance (ANOVA) were as follows: lung, P = 0.0029; ELF, P = 0.0070; PAMs, P = 0.0246; PBMs, P = 0.4640; and plasma, P = 0.0146. Between-group comparisons using Dunn's correction for multiple comparisons revealed significant differences in lung tissue concentrations between DAMB- and ABLC-treated animals (P < 0.01), in ELF concentrations between DAMB- and LAMB-treated animals (P < 0.01), and in PAM concentrations between ABCD- and ABLC-treated animals (P < 0.05). a Groll et al. Antimicrob Agent Chemother 2006;50:3418-23. Our lipid formulations are engineered to reduce nephrotoxicity, not improve efficacy AMB-d or ABCD 28 days L-AMB 3 mg/kg Liver 100 µg/gram Spleen 50 µg/gram Kidney 15 µg/gram 5-10 µg/gram 0.67 µg/gram 0.1 µg/gram in tissue histologically infected with Aspergillus Lung 1 µg/gram CNS Vogelsinger et al. J Antimicrobial Chemother 2006;57:1153-1160. Paterson et al. J Antimicrob Chemother 2003;52:873-876. “Corpora non agunt nisi fixata” -Paul Erlich The way forward? • Earlier detection= wider window for drug delivery to target tissue • Better understanding of the pathobiology that limits drug delivery – Angioneogenesis, tissue repair – Inflammation – Can we engineer solutions? • How can this knowledge be used to improve therapeutic approaches, especially in chronicallyinfected patients? – Aerosolized, intermittent or novel drug delivery approaches Acknowledgements • M.D. Anderson Cancer Center – – – – Dimitrios P. Kontoyiannis M.D., Sc.D Ronen Ben-Ami, M.D. (angioneogensis work) Nathan Albert, Konstantinos Leventakos, M.D. Gregory May, Ph.D. (∆glip strain) • NP Keller, Wisconsin (∆laeA) • Funding for angioneogensis studies: – EN Cobb Scholar Award (DPK) – NCI Core Center Grant (CA 16672) – NIH (1RO3AI083733-01) Kontoyiannis