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Section 6 Synthetic antimicrobial agents Yun-Bi Lu, PhD 卢韵碧 Dept. of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University [email protected] Contents • Quinolones ( 喹诺酮类) • Sulfonamides ( 磺胺类) • Other Synthetic antimicrobial Trimethoprim (甲氧苄啶) Nitrofurans (硝基呋喃类) Contents • Quinolones ( 喹诺酮类) • Sulfonamides ( 磺胺类) • Other Synthetic antimicrobial Trimethoprim (甲氧苄啶) Nitrofurans (硝基呋喃类) From chloroquine to nalidixic acid 喹诺酮类 (Quinolones) Generation 1 2 3 4 Example Nalidixic acid Pipemidic acid Norfloxacin Clinfloxacin time 萘啶酸 1962 吡哌酸 1973 诺氟沙星 克林沙星 1990’s First generation fluoroquinolones From ofloxacin to levofloxacin Fluoroquinolones Fluoroquinolones • broad antimicrobial activity • effective after oral administration • relatively few side effects • resistance to their action does not develop rapidly. General properties of Quinolones 1. Antimicrobial activity & spectrum: (1) bactericidal and have significant PAE. (2) aerobic G- bacteria, Pesudomonas, aerobic G+ bacteria, Chlamydia spp.(衣 原体), Legionella pneumophila(军团菌) , anaerobic bacteria, mycobacteria(分枝杆 菌), multiple-resistance strains. Mechanism of action DNA gyrase Topoisomerase Key enzymes in DNA replication: bacterial DNA is supercoiled. Mechanism of action porin DNA gyrase Gram (-) Topo isomerase Gram (+) Mechanism of action DNA gyrase Catalytic subunite Fluoroquinolones: 4 stacked molecules DNA gyrase ATP binding subunite Mechanism of resistance decreased permeability active efflux system porin DNA gyrase Gram (-) Topo isomerase mutation of the enzymes Gram (+) ADME of fluoroquinolones • Absorption: well absorbed; bound by divalent cations – Do not administer with iron, magnesium, calcium • Distribution: all distribute widely (even in CSF), and most concentrate in urine • Metabolism: – hepatic metabolism diminishes the activity of norfloxacin and ciprofloxacin – Several have predominately hepatic clearance (Grepafloxacin, Sparfloxacin, Trovafloxacin) • Excretion: urinary excretion predominates for the first generation fluoroquinolones ADME of fluoroquinolones Clinical Uses • • • • Urinary tract infections. GI and abdominal infections. Respiratory tract infections. Bone, joint and soft tissues infections, Osteomyelitis. • Meningitis • STD: Neisseria gonorrhea (奈瑟氏淋球 菌)and Chlamydia (衣原体,Quinolone resistance in gonorrhea increasing) Adverse reactions •Gastrointestinal effects. •CNS side effects. •Allergic reaction. •Hepatotoxicity, nephrotoxicity. •Joint/cartilage toxicity, Tendinopathy –Achilles tendon rupture –Limited FDA approval for children Fluoroquinolones agents • • • • • • • • • Norfloxacin (诺氟沙星) Ciprofloxacin (环丙沙星) Ofloxacin (氧氟沙星) Levofloxacin (左氧氟沙星) Lomefloxacin (洛美沙星) Fleroxacin (氟罗沙星) Sparfloxacin (司帕沙星) Clinafloxacin (克林沙星) Gatifloxacin (加替沙星) Contents • Quinolones ( 喹诺酮类) • Sulfonamides ( 磺胺类) • Other Synthetic antimicrobial Trimethoprim (甲氧苄啶) Nitrofurans (硝基呋喃类) Inhibitors of Folate Synthesis 2,4-Diaminoazobenzen-4’-sulfonamide Prontosil Gerhard Domagk Nobel Laureate 1939 First Aid Packet carried by U.S. Soldiers in World War II http://home.att.net/~steinert/wwii.htm Sulfonamides Antimicrobial activity: • A wide antimicrobial spectrum. • Exerting only bacteriostatic effect. Mechanism of action Pteridine+PABA Dihydropteroate synthase Blocked by sulfonamides Dihydropteroic acid glutamate Dihydrofolic acid Dihydrofolate reductasease NADPH Blocked by trimethoprim NADPH Tetrahydrofolic acid Mechanism of Resistance • A lower affinity for sulfonamides by the dihydropteroate synthase • Decreased cell permeability or active efflux of the drug • An alternative pathway to synthesis the essential metabolites • An increased production of essential metabolites ADME of sulfonamides • Approximately 70%-100% of an oral dose is absorbed. • Distributing throughout all tissues of the body, even in CSF ( sulfadiazine and sulfisoxazole, may be effective in meningeal infections) ;readily passing though the placenta. • Metabolized in the liver by acetylation. ADME of sulfonamides • Eliminated mainly in the urine as the unchanged drug and metabolic product. In acid urine, the eliminated may precipitate, thus induced renal disturbance. Clinical uses • Systemic infections. • Intestinal infections. • Infections of burn and wound. Adverse reactions • • • • • • Urinary tract disturbances Hypersensitivity reaction Hematopoietic system disturbances Kernicterus (胆红素脑病) Hepatitis GI effects Drugs interactions • All sulfonamides are bound in varying degree to plasma protein. Classification: • • • • • • • Oral absorbable agents Short-acting agents Medium-acting agents Long-acting agents Oral nonabsorbable agents Topical agents Combination agents Oral absorbable agents • Short-acting agents Sulfafurazole (SIZ,菌得清) • Medium-acting agents Sulfadiazine (SD,磺胺嘧啶) Sulfamethoxazole (SMZ,新诺明) • Long-acting agents Sulfadoxine (SDM,周效磺胺) Oral nonabsorbable agents Sulfasalazine (柳氮磺吡啶 ) Topical agents. Mafenide (SML, 甲磺灭脓) Sulfadiazine sliver (磺胺嘧啶银) Sulfacetamide (SA,磺胺醋酰) Combination agents Co-trimoxazole (复方新诺明) 1) Features • Trimethoprim(甲氧苄啶) in combination with Sulfamethoxazole(1:5) exerts a synergistic effects. • The ADME of the two agents is similar. • Co-block essential enzymes of folate metabolism. Pteridine+PABA Dihydropteroate synthase Blocked by sulfonamides Dihydropteroic acid glutamate Dihydrofolic acid Dihydrofolate reductasease NADPH Blocked by trimethoprim NADPH Tetrahydrofolic acid 2)Clinical Uses • Chronic and recurrent infections in the urinary tract • Bacterial respiratory infections • GI infections (e.g. induced by Salmonella) • pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (肺囊虫性 肺炎) 3)Adverse reactions • There is no evidence that co-trimoxazole, when given in recommended dose, induced folate deficiency in normal persons. • Hypersensitive reactions • GI effects • The effects of HIV patients • Drug interactions: warfarin, phenytoin Other Synthetic antimicrobial • Trimethoprim (甲氧苄啶) • Nitrofurans (硝基呋喃类) Nitrofurantoin(呋喃妥因) Section 7 Antifungal agents Antifungal agents Onychomycosis Antifungal agents Onychomycosis (甲癣) Fungal infections traditionally have been divided to two distinct classes: systemic and superficial. So, the major antifungal agents are described with “systemic” and “topical”. Invasive fungal disease Ubiquitous pathogens act as opportunists Candida species (念珠菌属) Aspergillus species (曲霉菌属) Cryptococcus (隐球菌属) Endemic mycoses Histoplasmosis (组织胞浆菌病) Coccidioidomycosis (球孢子菌病) Blastomycosis (芽生菌病) Oral infection with Candida (Thrush 鹅口疮) http://vasculitis.med.jhu.edu/treatments/cytoxan.html www.thachers.org/ internal_medicine.htm Invasive Aspergillosis AA= aortic arch, a = aneurysm SC = subclavian artery Silva ME, Malogolowkin MH, Hall TR, Sadeghi AM, Krogstad P.Mycotic aneurysm of the thoracic aorta due to Aspergillus terreus: case report and review. Clin Infect Dis. 2000 Nov;31(5):1144-8. Classification of antifungal agents • Polyenes: Amphotercin B(两性霉素B) • Azoles Ketoconazole(酮康唑) Fluconazol(氟康唑) • Allylamine Terbinafine(特比萘芬) • Pyrimidine analogues Flucytosine(氟胞嘧啶) Antifungal Medications Polyenes Amphotercin B(两性霉素B) broad-spectrum Amphotercin B 1. Mechanism of action Amphotercin B 2. Clinical Uses: • Amphotericin B remains the drug of choice for all life-threatening mycotic infections (It is often as the initial regimen). • E.g. Cryptococcal meningitis Amphotercin B 3. Adverse reactions: (1) fever, chill, hyperpnea(喘息), myalgia(肌痛) and hypotension, etc. (~75%) (2) nephrotoxic (3) renal tubular acidosis(肾小管酸化) and renal wasting K+ and Mg 2+ (4) hematological Toxicity: hypochromic (低血红蛋白性)and normocytic(正 常色素性) anemia, etc. Amphotercin B 3. Adverse reactions: (5) hepatotoxicity (6) cardiac toxicity (7) CNS side effects (8) hypersensitive reaction Amphotercin B 4. Prevention of adverse reaction: (1) Pretreatment with oral acetaminophen or use of intravenous hydrocortisone hemisuccinate. (2) Supplemental K+ is required. (3) Do physical examination termly. (4) drug interactions Amphotercin B 5. New formulations of Amphotercin B : (脂质复合体) (胶质分散体) (脂质体) Topical antifungal agents Polyenes : nystatin(制霉菌素) griseofulvin(灰黄霉素) - Nucleoside analogue Allylamines: terbinafine(特比萘芬) - squalene epoxidase inhibitor (角鲨烯环氧化酶抑制剂) Azoles antifungal agents Imidazoles (咪唑类) • ketoconazle (酮康唑) • miconazole(咪康唑) • clotrimazole(克霉唑) Triazoles(三唑类) • fluconazole (氟康唑) • itraconazole(伊曲康唑) Azoles antifungal agents Mechanism of action: • reduce ergosterol synthesis by interfering with lanosterol (14a)- demethylase • inhibition of fungal cytochrome P450 enzyme Antifungal activity : • Systemically (ketoconazle, itraconazole) or topically clotrimazole). fluconazole, (miconazole, Azoles antifungal agents Ketoconazle (酮康唑) : • the first oral azoles introduced into clinical use (systemically or topically). • less selective for fungal P450 • clinical use has been limited by endocrine side effects, liver toxicity and the drug interactions. • itraconazole (伊曲康唑)or fluconazole (氟康唑) has replaced ketoconazle for patients who can afford the more expensive, newer product. Azoles antifungal agents Itraconazole (伊曲康唑) • Its antifungal spectrum is broader than kotoconazole, and its side effects is less than kotoconazole. Azoles antifungal agents Fluconazole (氟康唑) • good water solubility and good CSF penetration • drug interactions and side effects are also less because of its least effect on hepatic enzyme of all the azoles. • Be used in: (1) Candidiasis(念珠菌病), (2) Cryptococcosis(隐球菌病), (3) others. Flucytosine(氟胞嘧啶) Flucytosine: Mechanism of action 5-FC Cytosine permease 5-FC Cytosine deaminase 5-FC 5-FU Phosphorylation Conversion to deoxynucleosides FdUMP dUMP FdUMP FUTP dTMP Substitution for uracil Inhibition of Protein Synthesis Ihibition of thymidylate synthase Inhibition of DNA synthesis 5-FC, 5-fluorocytosine; 5-FU, 5-fluorouracil; FdUMP, 5-fluorodeoxyuridine; FUMP, 5-fluorouridine monophosphate; FUDP, 5-fluorouridine diphosphate; FUTP, 5-fluorouridine triphosphate; dUMP, deoxyuridine monophosphate; dTMP, deoxythymidine monophosphate Flucytosine • a norrow-spectrum antifungal drug. • drug resistance occurs rapidly when flucytosine is used alone. • flucytosine is used predominantly in combination with amphotericin B for therapy of crypotococcal meningitis in AIDS patient, etc. Flucytosine Adverse reactions: • depressing the function of bone marrow (leading to leukopenia and thrombocytopenia, etc.). • Plasma levels of hepatic enzymes are elevated (reversible). • rash, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea. Section 8 Antiviral agents Essential Characteristics of Viruses • Genome (RNA or DNA) packaged in a protein core • Intracellular parasitism – No ribosomes or mitochondria – Utilize cellular machinery for synthesis of macromolecules • Antiviral therapies target – Entry into cells – Virus utilization of cellular machinery – Or stimulate immune clearance Specific Antiviral Therapy for • Respiratory Viruses – Influenza, Respiratory Syncitial Virus • Herpesviruses – HSV 1 & 2, VZV, CMV, EBV • Retroviruses – HIV-1, HIV-2, HTLV-1 • Chronic Hepatitis – Hepatitis B and C • Papillomaviruses (乳头瘤病毒) General schema of virus replication Virus particle Adsorption Penetration Uncoating Target cell Protein and nucleic acid synthesis Assembly Release Docosonal (H) Chemokine receptor blocking agents-(HIV) Sites of Antiviral Drug Action Amantidine Rimantidine (A) Adsorption Penetration Nucleoside analogues Uncoating (H, HBV, HIV) Nucleotide analogues (CMV, HBV, HIV) Protein, nucleic acid synthesis, Non-nucleoside Reverse transcriptase inhibitors (HIV) Antisense oligonucleotides (CMV) Assembly HIV Protease inhibitors Release Oseltamivir Zanamivir (I) A E I H CMV HBV HIV Influenza A Enteroviruses Influenza A or B Herpes viruses Cytomegalovirus Hepatitis B virus HIV Amantadine (金刚烷胺) • Inhibitors of Viral Uncoating (Adamantane derivatives) • Active against Influenza A only • Prophylaxis and Treatment of Influenza A • CNS excitation (Dizziness, insomnia, anxiety); mild GI side effects Idoxuridine (碘苷,IDUR) • Nucleotide analogues (thymidine) • Topical use for Ophthalmological infections caused by Herpes Simplex viruses (HSV, 单纯疱疹病毒) or Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV,水痘病毒) • Severe toxic effects caused by systemic use Vidarabine (阿糖腺苷,Ara-A) • Nucleotide analogues (purine nucleoside) • HSV neonatal infection, CNS infection in adults and VZV infection in AIDS • Acyclovir has replaced Ara-A in treatment of HSV and VZV infection. Structure of acyclovir and related nucleoside analogues For comparison only; not related to acyclovir Source: Balfour, HH Jr. Antiviral Drugs NEJM 340 (16):1255 Mechanism of Action of Acyclovir in Cells Infected by Herpes Simplex Virus Source: Balfour, HH Jr. Antiviral Drugs NEJM 340 (16):1255 Acyclovir • Used in high dose IV formulation in HSV neonatal infection, CNS infection in adults • Used in lower dose for HSV or VZV mucocutaneous disease treatment and prophylaxis • Frequent oral dosing necessary • Toxicities more likely with high dose – Nausea, headache, crystal formation in renal tubules Ganciclovir • Approved for treatment, prevention of CMV disease • Toxicities mostly related to bone marrow suppression – Anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia – CNS effects Ribavirin • Synthetic guanosine analog • Once phosphorylated, interferes with transcription of viral mRNA and synthesis of viral ribonucleoprotein complexes • Available as aerosol for treatment of respiratory syncitial virus (RSV), oral tablet for Hepatitis A • Toxicity – Bronchospasm (when used in inhaled formulation) – Anemia – Teratogenicity Foscarnet •Organic analogue of pyrophosphosphate (Trisodium phosphonoformate ) •Interferes with viral DNA synthesis: Blocks cleavage of pyrophosphates •Use for treatment of CMV disease •Active against acyclovir-resistant HSV and ganciclovir-resistant CMV •Toxicity Renal toxicity (dose-dependent) Electrolyte abnormalities (drug chelates divalent cations): e.g. hypocalcemia Antiretroviral therapy for HIV Infection: principles •In the absence of treatment, HIV replication is a continuous process •Plasma HIV RNA concentrations are prognostic and represent a useful marker of clinical efficacy of a treatment regimen •Multidrug therapy is essential for maximal suppression •Stabilization and improvement of immune function is possible •Is HIV Infection Curable? Today: No General Schema of HIV replication Binding to CD4 and chemokine receptors Target cell Fusion and entry Reverse transcription Integration Nucleus Viral RNA and Protein synthesis Assembly and Release Nucleoside Analogue Reverse transcriptase inhibitors (核苷反转录酶抑制剂, NRTI) Mechanism of Action Chain Termination of DNA by triphosphorylated forms Toxicities: Numerous Zidovudine (AZT) 齐多夫定 Anemia(贫血) Neutropenia(中性粒细胞减少) Thrombocytopenia(血小板减少) Asthenia (无力) Headache(头痛) GI upset(胃肠道反应) Abacavir Azidothymidine (AZT) = Zidovudine (ZDV) Stavudine (D4T) 司他夫定 Peripheral neuropathy(外周神经炎) Lipodystrophy (脂肪代谢障碍) Pancreatitis (胰腺炎) Lactic acidosis (乳酸性酸中毒) with hepatic steatosis (肝脂肪变) Hyperlipidemia (高脂血症) Non-Nucleoside Reverse transcriptase inhibitors (非核苷反转录酶抑制剂 NNRTI) Nevirapine 奈韦拉平 Efavirenz 依法韦恩茨 Delavridine 地拉韦定 Mechanism of action Bind in a pocket approximately 10 Å away from the catalytic site where nucleotides bind. Non-competitive inhibitors of template and substrate binding. Adverse effects Rash and hypersensitivity reactions (NVP>EFV) Liver dysfunction (NVP>EFV) HIV Protease Inhibitors Polypeptide chain Nelfinavir 奈非那韦 Ritonavir 利多那韦 Saquinavir 沙奎那韦 Indinavir 英地那韦 Adverse effects: Nelfinavir - diarrhea Ritonavir - GI intolerance, hepatitis Indinavir - nephrolithiasis, GI intolerance Current Antiretroviral Medications NRTI(核苷反转录酶抑制剂) • Abacavir ABC • Didanosine DDI • Emtricitabine FTC • Lamivudine 3TC • Stavudine D4T • Zidovudine ZDV • Tenofovir TDF NNRTI (非核苷反转录酶抑 制剂) • Delavirdine DLV • Efavirenz EFV • Nevirapine NVP PI(蛋白酶抑制剂) • Amprenavir • Atazanavir • Darunavir • Fosamprenavir • Indinavir • Lopinavir • Nelfinavir • Ritonavir • Saquinavir – hard gel – tablet • Tipranavir APV ATV DRV FPV IDV LPV NFV RTV SQV HGC INV TPV Fusion Inhibitor • Enfuvirtide T-20 Initial Treatment: Preferred Components NNRTI Option NRTI Options •Efavirenz*依法韦恩茨 OR PI Options + •Atazanavir + ritonavir •Fosamprenavir + ritonavir (BID) •Lopinavir/ritonavir (BID) *Avoid in pregnant women and women with significant Tenofovir + emtricitabine** Zidovudine + lamivudine** pregnancy potential. **Emtricitabine can be used in place of lamivudine and vice versa. 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