Pharmacokinetics of Isoniazid in Low-Birth-Weight and Premature Infants

Author:

Bekker A.,Schaaf H. S.,Seifart H. I.,Draper H. R.,Werely C. J.,Cotton M. F.,Hesseling A. C.

Abstract

ABSTRACTIsoniazid (INH) is recommended for use as posttuberculosis exposure preventive therapy in children. However, no pharmacokinetic data are available for INH treatment in low-birth-weight (LBW) infants, who undergo substantial developmental and physiological changes. Our objectives in this study were to determine the pharmacokinetic parameters of INH at a dose of 10 mg/kg of body weight/day and to define its pharmacokinetics relative to the arylamineN-acetyltransferase-2 (NAT2) genotype. An intensive prospective pharmacokinetic sampling study was conducted at Tygerberg Children's Hospital, South Africa, in which we measured INH blood plasma concentrations at 2, 3, 4 and 5 h postdose. Twenty LBW infants (14 male, 16 exposed to HIV) were studied. The median birth weight was 1,575 g (interquartile range, 1,190 to 2,035 g) and the median gestational age was 35 weeks (interquartile range, 34 to 38 weeks). TheNAT2acetylation statuses of the infants were homozygous slow (SS) (5 infants), heterozygous intermediate (FS) (11 infants), and homozygous fast (FF) (4 infants). Using a noncompartmental analysis approach, the median maximum drug concentration in blood serum (Cmax) was 5.63 μg/ml, the time after drug administration to reachCmaxTmax) was 2 h, the area under the concentration-time curve from 2 to 5 h (AUC2–5) was 13.56 μg · h/ml, the half-life (t1/2) was 4.69 h, and the elimination constant rate (kel) was 0.15 h−1. The alanine aminotransferase levels were normal, apart from 2 isolated values at two and three times above the normal levels. Only the three-times-elevated value was repeated at 6 months and normalized. All LBW infants achieved target INH blood plasma concentrations comparable to the adult values. Reduced elimination was observed in smaller and younger infants and in slow acetylators, cautioning against higher doses. The safety data, although limited, were reassuring. More data, however, are required for newborn infants.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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