A Dose‐Finding Study to Guide Use of Verapamil as an Adjunctive Therapy in Tuberculosis

Author:

Padmapriyadarsini Chandrasekaran1ORCID,Szumowski John D.2ORCID,Akbar Nabila1,Shanmugasundaram Prema1,Jain Anilkumar3,Bathragiri Marasamy4,Pattnaik Manoranjan5ORCID,Turuk Jyotirmayee6ORCID,Karunaianantham Ramesh1ORCID,Balakrishnan Senthilkumar1ORCID,Pati Sanghamitra6,Kumar A. K. Hemanth1,Rathore Manoj Kumar7ORCID,Raja Jegadeesh7ORCID,Naidu K. Raghu7ORCID,Horn John8ORCID,Whitworth Laura910ORCID,Sewell Roger11ORCID,Ramakrishnan Lalita910ORCID,Swaminathan Soumya1ORCID,Edelstein Paul H.912ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Institute for Research in Tuberculosis Chennai India

2. Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine, Department of Medicine, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

3. National Institute of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases New Delhi India

4. Government Kilpauk Medical College and Hospital Chennai India

5. Department of Pulmonary Medicine SCB Medical College Cuttack India

6. Regional Medical Research Centre Bhubaneswar India

7. SITEC Labs Navi Mumbai India

8. Department of Pharmacy University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

9. Molecular Immunity Unit, Department of Medicine, Cambridge Institute of Therapeutic Immunology and Infectious Diseases University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

10. MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology Cambridge UK

11. Trinity College Cambridge UK

12. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

Induction of mycobacterial efflux pumps is a cause of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) drug tolerance, a barrier to shortening antitubercular treatment. Verapamil inhibits Mtb efflux pumps that mediate tolerance to rifampin, a cornerstone of tuberculosis (TB) treatment. Verapamil's mycobacterial efflux pump inhibition also limits Mtb growth in macrophages in the absence of antibiotic treatment. These findings suggest that verapamil could be used as an adjunctive therapy for TB treatment shortening. However, verapamil is rapidly and substantially metabolized when co‐administered with rifampin. We determined in a dose‐escalation clinical trial of persons with pulmonary TB that rifampin‐induced clearance of verapamil can be countered without toxicity by the administration of larger than usual doses of verapamil. An oral dosage of 360 mg sustained‐release (SR) verapamil given every 12 hours concomitantly with rifampin achieved median verapamil exposures of 903.1 ng.h/mL (area under the curve (AUC)0‐12 h) in the 18 participants receiving this highest studied verapamil dose; these AUC findings are similar to those in persons receiving daily doses of 240 mg verapamil SR but not rifampin. Moreover, norverapamil:verapamil, R:S verapamil, and R:S norverapamil AUC ratios were all significantly greater than those of historical controls receiving SR verapamil in the absence of rifampin. Thus, rifampin administration favors the less‐cardioactive verapamil metabolites and enantiomers that retain similar Mtb efflux inhibitory activity to verapamil, increasing overall benefit. Finally, rifampin exposures were 50% greater after verapamil administration, which may also be advantageous. Our findings suggest that a higher dosage of verapamil can be safely used as adjunctive treatment in rifampin‐containing treatment regimens.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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