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Analysis of Combination Drug Therapy to Develop Regimens with Shortened Duration of Treatment for Tuberculosis
Authors:George L. Drusano  Michael Neely  Michael Van Guilder  Alan Schumitzky  David Brown  Steven Fikes  Charles Peloquin  Arnold Louie
Affiliation:1. Institute for Therapeutic Innovation, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Lake Nona, Florida, United States of America.; 2. Laboratory of Applied Pharmacokinetics, School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.; 3. Infectious Diseases PK Laboratory, College of Pharmacy, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States of America.; Cambridge University, United Kingdom,
Abstract:

Rationale

Tuberculosis remains a worldwide problem, particularly with the advent of multi-drug resistance. Shortening therapy duration for Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a major goal, requiring generation of optimal kill rate and resistance-suppression. Combination therapy is required to attain the goal of shorter therapy.

Objectives

Our objective was to identify a method for identifying optimal combination chemotherapy. We developed a mathematical model for attaining this end. This is accomplished by identifying drug effect interaction (synergy, additivity, antagonism) for susceptible organisms and subpopulations resistant to each drug in the combination.

Methods

We studied the combination of linezolid plus rifampin in our hollow fiber infection model. We generated a fully parametric drug effect interaction mathematical model. The results were subjected to Monte Carlo simulation to extend the findings to a population of patients by accounting for between-patient variability in drug pharmacokinetics.

Results

All monotherapy allowed emergence of resistance over the first two weeks of the experiment. In combination, the interaction was additive for each population (susceptible and resistant). For a 600 mg/600 mg daily regimen of linezolid plus rifampin, we demonstrated that >50% of simulated subjects had eradicated the susceptible population by day 27 with the remaining organisms resistant to one or the other drug. Only 4% of patients had complete organism eradication by experiment end.

Discussion

These data strongly suggest that in order to achieve the goal of shortening therapy, the original regimen may need to be changed at one month to a regimen of two completely new agents with resistance mechanisms independent of the initial regimen. This hypothesis which arose from the analysis is immediately testable in a clinical trial.
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