Keutzer L, Akhondipour Salehabad Y, Davies Forsman L, Simonsson USH
CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol 11 (5) 628-639 [2022-05-00; online 2022-02-16]
Bedaquiline (BDQ) is recommended for treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) for the majority of patients. Given its long terminal half-life and safety concerns, such as QTc-prolongation, re-introducing BDQ after multiple dose interruption is not intuitive and there are currently no existing guidelines. In this simulation-based study, we investigated different loading dose strategies for BDQ re-introduction, taking safety and efficacy into account. Multiple scenarios of time and length of interruption as well as BDQ re-introduction, including no loading dose, 1- and 2-week loading doses (200 mg and 400 mg once daily), were simulated from a previously published population pharmacokinetic (PK) model describing BDQ and its main metabolite M2 PK in patients with MDR-TB. The efficacy target was defined as 95.0% of the average BDQ concentration without dose interruption during standard treatment. Because M2 is the main driver for QTc-prolongation, the safety limit was set to be below the maximal average M2 metabolite concentration in a standard treatment. Simulations suggest that dose interruptions between treatment weeks 3 and 72 (interruption length: 1 to 6 weeks) require a 2-week loading dose of 200 mg once daily in the typical patient. If treatment was interrupted for longer than 8 weeks, a 2-week loading dose (400 mg once daily) was needed to reach the proposed efficacy target, slightly exceeding the safety limit. In conclusion, we here propose a strategy for BDQ re-introduction providing guidance to clinicians for safe and efficacious BDQ dosing.
Bioinformatics Support for Computational Resources [Service]
PubMed 35102712
DOI 10.1002/psp4.12768
Crossref 10.1002/psp4.12768