Antifungals Flashcards

1
Q

What is Mycosis?

A
  • mycosis is an infection caused by microscopic fungi
  • can infect the body superficially, subcutaneously or systemically
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2
Q

What are the 3 different forms of fungi?

A
  1. unicellular yeast-like form (candida)
  2. filamentous mold (apergillus and dermatophytes)
  3. Yeast-like in the body, filamentous outside the body
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3
Q

What are fungal infections and what are the key differences between bacteria and fungi?

A
  • unlike bacteria, fungi are eukaryotic organisms
  • this makes fungal infections much harder to attack without affecting the host
    FUNGI DIFFERENCES:
  • Cell wall: B-glucan, glycoproteins, chitin; B-glucan varieties can evade the immune system
  • Plasma membrane: Ergosterol instead of cholesterol
  • DNA synthesis: Cytosine deaminase expression
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4
Q

What are the 4 main antifungal drug classes?

A
  1. Polyenes
    Ex: Amphotericin B
    - Broad spectrum fungicidal
    - High systemic toxicity
  2. Azoles
    Ex: Itraconazole
    - Broad spectrum, fungistatic
    - Very low toxicity
  3. Pneumocandins and echinocandins
    Ex: caspofungin
    - Newest AF drugs
    - fungicidal
    - low toxicity
    - replacing polyenes for systemic therapy
  4. drugs used to treat dermatophytosis
    - terbinafine
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5
Q

What are the main targets of the AF drugs Terbinafine, Echinocandins and Polyenes (amphotericin B)

A

Terbinafine = endoplasmic reticulum - inhibit ergosterol synthesis
Echinocandins = cell wall
Polyenes (amphotericin B) = plasma membrane

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6
Q

What is Polyenes (Amphotericin B) mechanism of action?

A

MOA: Plasma membrane disruption
Binds ergosterol in fungal membrane:
- enters membrane → several molecules come together and form a pore → pores cause fungal cell to lyse (FUNGICIDAL)
- unfortunately, also binds cholesterol to some extent → toxic to host cells

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7
Q

What is Polyenes (amphotericin B) spectrum of action?

A

Broad spectrum (greater than the azoles or pneumocandins)
- many serious, systemic mycotic infections, like Candida, Cryptococcus, Coccidioides, Histoplasma, Blastomyces, Aspergillus, etc.
- ineffective against dermatophytes → less serious causes athletes feet and ringworm

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8
Q

What is Polyenes (amphotericin B) pharmacokinetics?

A

long half-life >100h; drug continues to be excreted for weeks after discontinuation of therapy
- don’t need to administer often, but severe side effects - most toxic drug approved in the world

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9
Q

What are the adverse effects of Polyenes (amphotericin B)?

A
  • most toxic antimicrobial drug in clinical use
  • main problem is dose-dependent nephrotoxicity
  • IV administration may cause thrombosis (must be administered over ~4-6h start low and go slow)
  • Fungizone (conventional Amphotericin B formulation) causes serious side effects in 80% of patients
  • Lipid-complex formulations are safer, but Fungizone (cheaper) is still the treatment of choice for certain infections
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10
Q

Lipid-complex formulations for Polyenes: Amphotericin B

A

various lipid formulations now available:
- lipid complex
- colloidal
- liposomal
much less toxic and can be infused at higher dosages over 1-2h
usually given 3x/week or once prior to azole therapy

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11
Q

what are clinical applications of polyenes (amphotericin B)?

A
  • mainly administered IV to patients with life-threatening systemic mycoses (especially in immunocompromised patients, due to the fungicidal nature of the drug)
  • for immunocompromised patients → prefer safer azoles even though they are fungistatic
  • often given once prior to longer follow up therapy with an azalea (usually not combined → azole may reduce ergosterol binding sites for amphotericin B)
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12
Q

what are Azoles and their mechanism of action?

A
  • azoles are the 1st relatively safe class of antifungal drugs; now the most commonly used for systemic antifungal therapy
  • azoles inhibit fungal CYP450-mediated conversion of lanosterol to ergosterol
  • inhibit fungak membrane synthesis
  • fungistatic effect
  • fairly broad spectrum not as broad as Amphotericin B
  • would not use in severely immunocompromised patients
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13
Q

What are the two classes of Azoles?

A
  • Imidazoles and triazoles
  • although they are safer than polyenes, azoles are teratogenic (affect fetus)
  • for systemic use, older imidazoles (ketoconazole) → less effective and more toxic than newer triazoles (itraconazole→ can treat endocrine disorders)
  • for topical use, imidazoles and triazoles are often interchangable based on good efficacy and low toxicity
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14
Q

What is an example of a imidazoles (Azoles) and its administration and adverse effects

A
  • Ketoconazole
  • topical use for dermatophytosis (ringworm, athletes food, jock itch)
  • oral used not recommended due to side effects → use terbinafine instead for more serious dermatophyte infections
    adverse effects:
  • systemically, inhibit fungal and mammalian sterol synthesis (e.g. cortisol and testosterone) → endocrine adverse effects
  • no side effects if applied topically
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15
Q

What is an example of a Triazoles (Azoles) and its administration, use, and adverse effects

A
  • Itraconazole
  • good oral absorption (convenient for patient)
  • long half life (48h)
  • used to treat many non-life-threatening systemic fungal infections
  • fairly broad spectrum of activity (not as effective against Aspergillus or Candida as the polyenes or the newer triazole voriconazole)
  • sometimes used in place of (or following) amphotericin B for life-threatening infections
    adverse effects:
  • interfere with sterol synthesis enzymes of host less than imidazoles → systemic endocrine adverse effects are uncommon
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16
Q

adverse effects of all Azoles

A
  • teratogenic (contraindicated in pregnancy)
  • all azoles inhibit mammalian hepatic P450 enzymes → inhibit metabolism of many concurrently administered drugs
17
Q

what are Echinocandins mechanism of action

A
  • echinocandins are now the most common IV antifungal drug for the treatment of serious fungal infections worldwide (replaced amphotericin B in a lot of fungal treatments)
  • inhibit an enzyme (beta-(1,3)-D-glucan synthase) necessary for the synthesis fo the cell wall of several fungi
  • inhibit fungal cell wall synthesis
  • Fungicidal effect against Candida and fungistatic effect against Aspergillus
18
Q

what are Echinocandins pharmacokinetics

A
  • half-life of 8-13h (much less than ampho B)
  • only available parenterally; limited oral absorption
18
Q

Echinocandins spectrum of action

A

narrower spectrum than Amphotericin B and azoles; not effective against Cryptococcus (but effective against Candida and Aspergillus species, which itraconazole is not)
- ineffective against dermatophytes

19
Q

what are examples of echinocandins?

A

Capsofungin, micafungin, anidulafungin
- used for esophageal candidiasis, candidemia, and invasive candidiasis and aspergillosis
- significantly metabolized by the liver, so dose adjustments may be required for patients with moderate hepatic dysfunction
- overall, all agents are well-tolerated (pretty safe) with similar adverse effect profiles and few drug-drug interactions
- expensive

20
Q

What is terbinafine?

A
  • “Tinea” or “ringworm” is caused by dermatophytes that can infect the epidermis, including skin, hair, and nails
  • infection is known as “dematophytosis”
  • many different varieties
  • terbinafine inhibits ergosterol synthesis (different enzyme than azoles, though same result)
  • unlike azoles, terbinafine is fungicidal - in dermatophytes, toxic metabolites accumulate and cause cell death
  • more effective than itraconazole in treating dermatophytes despite itraconazole’s broad spectrum
  • given orally for serious infections (unlike imidazoles)
  • half-life is extremely long (>300hrs) bc it accumulates in skin, hair, nails and fat
  • generally safe, adverse effects are uncommon (may see GI upset, headache, rash)