Pharmacogenetics, antiamebic, antifungal drugs Flashcards
1
Q
N-acetyltransferase-2 (Isoniazid)
A
- Isoniazid inactivated by N-acetylation
- Both slow and fast acetylators (autosomal recessive autosomal dominant, respectively)
- 50% or population is slow phenotype (same exact nz, but less of it)
- Elevation of plasma isoniazid increases excretion of vit. B6 and leads to artificial B6 deficiency and neuropathy
- B6 supplementation prevents neuropathy
2
Q
Thiopurine S-methyl-transferase (TMPT)
A
- 6-mercaptopurine (and 6-thioguanine and azathioprine, which are both converted into 6-mercaptopurine) is inactivated by TMPT
- Low, intermediate, and high phenotypes (high is by far most common). Autosomal dominant
- Measured by erythrocyte TMPT activity (except in blood transfusions, when the genotype is measured)
- Low TMPT leads to elevated levels of thiopurines and more bone marrow destruction (must decrease dose)
3
Q
Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)
A
- Atypical B2 subunit (85% of east asians) leads to rapid metabolization of EtOH to AcALD
- Outcome depends on ALDH2 expression
4
Q
Aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH)
A
- ALDH2 variant is an inactive nz (single base change) that occurs in 50% of east asians (autosomal dominant)
- Cannot oxidize acetylaldehyde, leads to flushing and disulfiram-like effects
- Alcoholism rare in these individuals
5
Q
CYP2D6 (P450 isonz)
A
- Converts tamoxifen into endoxifen (100x the affinity for estrogen receptor)
- Can be “poor metabolizer” phenotype or “extensive metabolizer”(autosomal recessive)
- Identify via molecular methods
- Poor metabolizers mostly caucasians (7%) and blacks/asians (3%)
- Tamoxifen not converted to most active form, leads to increased risk of recurrence of breast cancer
6
Q
CYP2C9*3 (P450 isonz)
A
- *3 variant does not inactivate warfarin (in <1% of population)
- Warfarin dose decreased to 10-25%
7
Q
Warfarin receptor
A
- Resistance to warfarin-induced anticoagulation (autosomal dominant)
- Rare frequency, due to mutation in receptor leading to lower warfarin affinity (vitamin K epoxide reductase)
- Dose is increased 10-30x
8
Q
Metronidazole
A
- Effective in killing amebae in bowel wall, liver, and tissues (not for intestinal lumen)
- Nitro group of drug reduced by ferridoxin in the amebae, product react w/ DNA and proteins
- It is readily absorbed after oral administration
- Metabolized by CYP (drug interaction)
- Adverse effects: metallic taste, dry mount, disulfiram-like effects (blocks ALDH: vomiting, fever, chills, chest pain), pancreatitis and peripheral neuropathy are rare
- Contraindicated in pregnant or nursing women/children (cat. C)
9
Q
Luminal amebicides
A
- Diloxanide Furoate, Iodoquinol, paromomycin
- Diloxanide: only 10% becomes active (90% conjugated, absorbed, and excreted) and the mechanism is not known. No serious side effects. Has cysticidal activity. Contraindicated for children <2 and pregnant women
- Iodoquinol: 90% not absorbed and active (10% absorbed and excreted), mechanism is not known. High doses produces optic nerve atrophy, interferes w/ thyroid test. Has cysticidal activity
- Paromomycin: aminoglycoside (inhibits 30S ribosome), is not absorbed by the GI tract (no systemic toxicity, ok for pregnant women). P for pregnant
10
Q
Treatment of intestinal amebiasis
A
- Asymptomatic infection: iodoquinol or paromomycin (diloxanide furoate as alternative)
- Mild-moderate: iodoquinol, or paromomycin, or diloxanide AND metronidazole (oral)
- Severe (dysentery): Same as above but IV metronidazole
- Hepatic abscess: same as above plus choloquine
11
Q
Amphotericin B
A
- Antifungal: binds to ergosterole and makes pores in fungal membrane (IV only, does not enter CSF)
- Adverse effects: infusion-related toxicity (amphoterrible: fever, chills), renal toxicity (most significant toxic run, minimize by IVNS prior to and using liposomal preparation
- Broad spectrum for life-threatening infections
- Only systemic drug for pregnant women (cat. B)
12
Q
Flucytosine
A
- Antifungal: enters fungus cell through permease on cell membrane
- In fungus it is converted to fluorouracil which inhibits thymidylate synthase and RNA synthesis
- low protein binding and does enter CSF
- Adverse effects: causes bone marrow depression (not used in AIDS patients or chemo patients)
- Uses restricted to cryptococcus and candida sp.
- Not used as a single agent (resistance easily developed)
- Used in combination w/ amphotericin B
13
Q
Systemic azoles
A
- They block the synthesis of ergosterol by inhibiting the fungal P450 (fungistatic)
- Ketoconazole and itraconazole: given orally, antacids decrease absorption, do not enter CSF (protein bound)
- Ketoconazole is less selective for fungal P450, leading to inhibition of gonadal steroid hormone synthesis (impotence/infertility). Used for mucocutaneous candidiasis and nonmeningeal coccidiodomyosis
- Itraconazole: broad spectrum antifungal
- Fluconazole: can be give orally or IV, does enter CSF (not protein bound), high therapeutic index
- Fluconazole used for meningeal, UTI, prohylaxis
14
Q
Synergistic interactions
A
- Amphotericin B + flucytosine: amphotericin makes pores, flucytosine enters them (overcomes resistance), flu cytosine enters CSF and amphotericin cannot
- Considerations: low dose of amphotericin or renal failure occurs (then lower flucytosine)
- Amphotericin B and azoles: antagonistic interaction since azoles block the synthesis of ergasterol and amphotericin needs it to work
- Azoles w/ other drugs: Azoles inhibit P450 and decrease drug metabolism (decrease dose of other drugs or do not combine)
- Rifampin/isoniazid (P450 inducers): increase metabolism of azoles, thus must increase the dose