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The effect of diabetes mellitus on the pharmacokinetics of TB Drugs in Tanzanian patients Charles Mtabho Meatu District Council Meatu, Simiyu- Tanzania AMREF’s First International Health Conference (From Evidence to action:Lasting change for Africa) Monday 24th – Wednesday 26thNovember 2014 Nairobi-Kenya Safari Park Hotel 5/23/2017 1 Introduction Diabetes mellitus is a well-known risk factor for TB With the global increase in cases of type 2 DM, the association between TB and DM is re-emerging TB is more difficult to treat in diabetic patients — less favourable response to TB treatment 5/23/2017 2 ……introduction DM patients have lower plasma concentrations of certain drugs1,2 Absorption, distribution, metabolism and/or excretion of drugs are changed If this also applies to anti-TB drugs, this may at least partly explain the slower response to TB treatment in patients with DM 1.Gwilt et al. (1991). Clin Pharmacokinet 2.Dostalek et al. (2012) Clin Pharmacokinet 5/23/2017 3 ……introduction Indonesian study1- exposure to rifampicin was 53% lower in patients with TB and DM, compared with patients with TB only3 —this was attributed to DM and to the higher weight of patients with DM Indonesian study2- no differences in drug exposure4 Peruvian study- No difference in PK parameters5 3.Nijland et al. Clin Infect Dis 2006 4.Ruslami et al. AAC 2010 5.Requena-Mendez et al AAC 2012 5/23/2017 4 ……introduction These findings need more research – Ethnic differences – Study African TB patients because the African continent has the highest TB incidence and mortality rates • Tanzania in 2012, the incidence rate of TB was 169 per 100,000 population • The diabetes prevalence in adults 20-79 is estimated at 7.8% in 2013. 5/23/2017 5 Methods Study design -observational pharmacokinetic study 20 TB patients without DM and 20 TB patients with DM were recruited at Mawenzi Hospital as well as other hospitals around the region which treat TB TB was diagnosed according to the Tanzanian guideline and practice- clinical symptoms and signs, chest x-ray examination, sputum smear microscopy Diabetic patients were included if they had a previously established diagnosis of DM and diagnosis was confirmed at the time of PK sampling 5/23/2017 6 ……methods Patients with a body weight above 50 kg received 4 FDC tablets daily (300 mg INH, 600 mg RIF, 1600 mg PZA and 900 mg ETH), those below 50 kg received 3 FDC tablets (225 mg INH, 450 mg RIF, 1200 mg PZA and 675 mg ETH) Diabetic patients were either on dietary management alone, or oral hypoglycaemic agents and/or injectable insulin. 5/23/2017 7 ……methods Sample collection – PK sampling done after 2 weeks, given the expected steady state of the drugs – Patients fasted at least 8hrs before drug intake and took a standardised breakfast within 30 minutes after drug intake – Serial venous blood samples before, and at 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 24 hours after observed TB drug intake – Plasma was separated and kept frozen at -80oC 5/23/2017 8 ……methods Pharmacokinetic analysis – Plasma concentrations of INH, acetylisoniazid, RIF, desacetylrifampicin, PZA & ETH were assessed by validated high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) – Pharmacokinetic evaluations were performed using noncompartimental methods in WinNonLin – PK parameters; Cmax , Tmax, AUC0-24h, T1/2, CL, Vz 5/23/2017 9 ……methods Statistical analysis – Data was presented as mean (SD), median (IQR) – Comparison of subgroups - two-sample t-test or Wilcoxon rank-sum test Univariate and Multivariate analyses to assess the effects of age, sex, body weight, dose in mg/kg, HIV status, acetylator status, fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c on the AUC0-24h and Cmax of the four first-line TB drugs All statistical analyses were performed using SPSS version 20 (SPSS Inc, Chicago II). 5/23/2017 10 Results Parameter TB-DM TB P-value 5[25%] 4[20%] 0.705** Age (years; median[IQR]) 49(40-56) 38(30-42) 0.001* Body weight (kg; mean[SD]) 58.7(12.3) 55.7(6.4) 0.346 BMI(kg/m2 mean[SD]) 20.6(4.0) 19.5(2.4) 0.293 Rifampicin Isoniazid 9.8(1.4) 10.4(0.9) 0.118 4.9(0.7) 5.2(0.5) 0.118 Pyrazinamide 25.5(3.8) 27.8(2.4) 0.029 18(2.5) 19.1(1.7) 0.118 15.9(13.1-18) 6.95(5.7-7.4) 7(35%) 7(35%) - 106.4[22.7] - - Sex (female, n[%]) TB drugs Dose per kg (mg/kg, mean[SD]) Ethambutol FBG(mmol/L, median(IQR)) HIV positive, n(%) HBA1c(mmol/mol; mean[SD]) <0.001* *Mann-Whitney U test **chi square test 5/23/2017 11 Pharmacokinetic parameters of tuberculosis drugs in Tanzanian diabetic and non-diabetic TB patients in northern Tanzania Drug/PK parameter p-value TB-DM TB 29.91[1.77] 39.91[1.26] 0.044 7.92[1.71] 8.92[1.28] 0.373 9[47.4] 7[35.0] 0.433 Rifampicin AUC0-24, h*mg/L Cmax, mg/L Proportion with Cmax below reference range, n[%]c Tmax, h[IQR]b 2.12[1.03-3.30] 1.08[0.98-2.05] 0.027 T1/2, h 1.44[1.30] 1.80 [1.38] 0.026 Vz, L 38.74[1.79] 37.30 [1.31] 0.794 CL, L/h 18.60[1.74] 14.40 [1.24] 0.063 Isoniazid AUC0-24, h*mg/L 5.41[2.61] 10.61[1.94] 0.015 Cmax, mg/L 1.65[2.15] 2.77[1.45] 0.010 Proportion with Cmax below reference range, n[%]c 14 [73.7] 11 [55.0] 0.224 Tmax, h[IQR]b 1.03[0.97-2.08] 1.07[0.98-1.19] 0.855 T1/2, h 2.55[1.51] 2.54[1.61] 0.985 188.78[2.26] 99.19[1.26] 0.002 51.31[2.78] 26.89[1.84] 0.021 Vz, L CL, L/h 5/23/2017 12 Geometric mean steady-state plasma concentration-time profiles of rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol in TB-DM patients (solid line graph, n=19) and TB only patients (dotted graph, n=20) 5/23/2017 13 5/23/2017 14 ….. results Based on the metabolic ratio of acetylisoniazid concentration over isoniazid concentration at 3 hours post dose – 55.6% of the diabetic versus 47.4% of the non-diabetic TB patients were fast acetylators. The difference was not statistically significant (chi square = 0.248, p value 0.618) 5/23/2017 15 ….. results Univariate analysis Analysis of the association between PK parameters AUC0-24 and Cmax of the TB drugs and explanatory variables (age, sex, body weight, dose per Kg, HIV status, acetylator status, FBG, HbA1c) —Age significantly correlated only with Cmax of isoniazid (Spearman’s rho = -0.392, p = 0.014) —Fast acetylators had significantly lower AUC0-24 (geometric means 4.1 versus 16.2 h*mg/L, p = <0.001) and Cmax (1.6 versus 3.1 mg/L, p = 0.001) values of isoniazid than slow acetylators 5/23/2017 16 ….. results In a multiple linear regression analysis with age, sex, dose per kg, HIV status and acetylator status DM remained an independent predictor of the PK of isoniazid and rifampicin All PK parameters for Pyrazinamide and Ethambutol were not significantly different between diabetic and non-diabetic TB patients 5/23/2017 17 Discussion/conclusion First report describing (PK) parameters of TB drugs in diabetic and non-diabetic TB patients using intensive PK sampling in an African population Similar studies in Indonesia and Peru have shown contradicting results —Indonesian study-1 concluded that DM was associated with a strong decrease in plasma concentrations of rifampicin —Indonesian study-2 , no significant difference —Peruvian study- no significant difference 5/23/2017 18 …. discussion/conclusion Our study — distinctively different ethnic population — intensive (9 sampling points over 24 hrs) PK sampling — All 4 standard TB drugs in 40 patients, with validated methods Indonesian study2 concludes weight differences between diabetic and non-diabetic TB patients were basis for low PK —Although we did not match our patients for body weight, the distribution of body weight the same between diabetic and non-diabetic TB patients —body weight was no predictor of exposure to TB drugs in our multiple linear regression analyses 5/23/2017 19 …. discussion/conclusion There is no evidence that antidiabetic drugs lower the concentration of TB drugs We believe the differences in PK are due to DM Substantiated by similar associations that we found between FBG levels and exposure to rifampicin and isoniazid in our population 5/23/2017 20 …. discussion/conclusion Since increasing the dose of TB drugs may result in increased plasma concentrations of the drugs and improved treatment outcome; —Individualization of the dosages and therapeutic drug monitoring in diabetic TB patients are necessary —Or in developing countriesincreasing the doses of TB drugs (especially rifampicin and isoniazid) in the whole population of diabetic —To this end, higher doses of TB drugs have been shown to be safe and tolerable 5/23/2017 21 Study limitations Unequal age distribution between the groups – Age has been found not to be associated with pharmacokinetics of TB drugs in many studies We didn’t match for sex and weight – however the distribution of the parameters was the same in the two groups – Age, gender and dose/kg were no significant predictors in multiple regression analyses The number of patients (n=39) may be high for a PK study with intensive PK sampling, yet is relatively low for multiple regression with several explanatory variables 5/23/2017 22 Acknowledgements – Study participants – Staff at Mawenzi Hospital and KCMC – Laboratory technicians at the Department of Clinical Pharmacy of the Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen in the Netherlands for their technical support Financial support – African Poverty Related Infection Oriented Research Initiative (APRIORI), a research network grant from the Netherlands Foundation for the Advancement of Tropical Research (NWO-WOTRO) – PANACEA – UNESCO 5/23/2017 23 Thank you 5/23/2017 24