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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2005, p. 1733-1738, Vol. 49, No. 5
0066-4804/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.49.5.1733-1738.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Institute for Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Research, Nürnberg-Heroldsberg, Germany,1 Department of Pharmacology, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany,2 Analytical Clinical Concepts, Leidersbach, Germany,3 Institute of Pharmacology, University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany4
Received 1 October 2004/ Returned for modification 22 November 2004/ Accepted 27 January 2005
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FIG. 1. Metabolism of isoniazid. NAT2, arylamine N-acetyltransferase type 2.
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Most existing studies indicate that not only isoniazid concentrations but also efficacy and toxicity of isoniazid are linked to the activity of the NAT2 enzyme. In an early study by Ellard et al., rapid acetylators responded to a lesser extent than slow acetylators (56% and 76% of patients, respectively) to once-weekly treatment and also in the case of initial daily treatment (85% and 100% of patients, respectively) (8). This has not been confirmed in studies using more modern multidrug treatment schemes, but these studies were differently designed and had insufficient numbers of patients. In general, rapid and slow acetylators have been reported to respond equally well to standard daily isoniazid treatment for tuberculosis (16, 27).
However, it is well established that slow acetylators are more likely to develop polyneuropathy during isoniazid therapy if no pyridoxal is coadministered. Hepatotoxicity, the most relevant adverse effect of isoniazid, occurs in approximately 10% of all patients receiving standard drug doses. Slow acetylators are at greater risk to develop hepatotoxicity compared to rapid acetylators (4, 7, 10, 17, 23, 27). The association between NAT2 genotypes and severe liver injury has been noted in Japanese tuberculosis patients treated with standard dose of isoniazid plus rifampin (23). Therefore, the authors suggested that NAT2 genotyping prior to therapy could be useful to predict adverse reactions in patients with tuberculosis (17, 23).
In spite of this supporting evidence that NAT2 genotype and the rate of acetylation may affect the metabolism of isoniazid, therapeutic response, and incidence of adverse reactions, NAT2 genotyping and/or phenotyping is not used in clinical practice. The analysis of individual variability in isoniazid exposure and isoniazid dose adjustment based on NAT2 genotype has not been elucidated in prospective clinical trials. The objective of the present study was to assess individual isoniazid exposure based on NAT2 genotype to predict a personalized therapeutic dose.
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NAT2 genotype with respect to common single nucleotide polymorphisms comprising 99.9% of central European genotypes was characterized by restriction fragment length polymorphism-PCR as previously described (2). Specifically, the subjects were screened for the presence of the following mutations: G191A, C282T, T341C, C481T, G590A, A803G, and G857A.
Quantification of isoniazid. Plasma isoniazid concentrations up to 24 h postdose were determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection (LLOQ: 0.050 µg/ml). Samples (0.5 ml) were mixed with internal standard (N-methyldopamin) solution and HCl. After addition of 350 µl 1 M perchloric acid, the mixture was shaken and centrifuged; 20 µl of the supernatant was chromatographed on a reversed phase column (Spherimage-80 ODS2 5-µm particle size, precolumn 5 by 4 mm, analytical column 120 by 4 mm; Knauer, Berlin, Germany), eluted with an isocratic solvent system consisting of 7.05 g NaH2PO4, 0.750 g 1-octansulfonic acid sodium salt hydrate, 0.245 g ethylenediamine tetraacetate, and methanol [840:170, vol/vol, pH 2.8 using phosphoric acid (85%)] and monitored by electrochemical detection. Isoniazid and internal standard were eluted after approximately 2.9 and 7.5 min, respectively. Calibration was performed by weighted (1/concentration2) linear regression. The interday precision of the calibration standards ranged from 7.2 to 7.4%, and the analytical recovery of the spiked quality control standards of isoniazid in plasma was 100.8% (8.00 µg/ml), 97.1% (2.00 µg/ml), and 100.5% (0.100 µg/ml), respectively.
Noncompartmental analysis.
Noncompartmental pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using WinNonlin Professional 4.0.1, Pharsight Corp., Mountain View, CA. The parameters were derived individually for each subject from the concentrations of isoniazid in plasma. Absolute bioavailability (F) was calculated as the AUC ratio for the oral preparations over that for the intravenous preparation, corrected for the individual dose: F = (AUC0-
[oral]/dose)/(AUC0-
[intravenous]/dose). Apparent clearance was calculated as dose/AUC0-
. All other statistical calculations were done with SPSS 11.0 for Windows (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL) and Excel 97 (Microsoft Corp., Redmond, WA). The Kruskal-Wallis test was used to examine the impact of NAT2 genotype on dose-normalized isoniazid pharmacokinetics. Subsequently, the quantitative influence of NAT2 genotype, drug formulation, body weight and sex on apparent clearance of isoniazid was assessed by analysis of variance and analysis of covariance.
Compartmental population pharmacokinetic analysis. The software NONMEM V version 1.1 was used (NONMEM Project Group, University of California at San Francisco, 1998). An exponential error model was chosen for the interindividual variability of the kinetic parameters whereas a combined additive and proportional error model was used for the residual variability. Fitting was performed with the "first-order conditional estimates" algorithm, taking interactions between the parameters into account. The most simple model, i.e., a one-compartment model with first-order absorption, a bioavailability of F = 1 for oral preparations and no intraindividual variation in any parameter, was stepwise expanded to more complex models if these were superior as assessed by the plausibility of the parameter estimates and their 95% confidence intervals (which were not allowed to include zero and/or unity), by goodness-of-fit plots, and by a significant (P < 0.05) reduction of the objective function provided by NONMEM. Covariates tested included sex, body weight and NAT2 genotype, with the effect of NAT2 genotype on clearance being modeled as a fractional contribution of each high and low activity NAT2 allele to overall clearance.
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TABLE 1. NAT2 genotypes observed in the study population
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FIG. 2. Concentration versus time profiles for each isoniazid preparation according to the number of low-activity (NAT2*X) and wild-type high-activity (NAT2*4) alleles for NAT2. Thin lines represent individual data, and thick lines are the population estimates for the NAT2 genotype. The 300-mg isoniazid dose was administered in combination with 60 mg vitamin B6.
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TABLE 2. Pharmacokinetic parameters for each isoniazid preparation according to the number of "wild-type" high-activity (NAT2*4) and low-activity (NAT2*X) allelesa
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FIG. 3. Individual clearance of isoniazid in relationship to the number of high-activity NAT2*4 alleles. Clearance was calculated as dose/AUC from the noncompartmental analysis and corresponds to apparent clearance for the oral administrations and to true clearance for the intravenous administration. Values are slightly shifted along the x axis to improve clarity.
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TABLE 3. Compartmental population pharmacokinetic parameters derived from the complete data set using the NONMEM softwarea
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Different mutations in the NAT2 gene associated with slow acetylation phenotype that had been identified in the trial group had been shown to account for the majority of the slow acetylator genotype in human population (NAT2*5A, NAT2*5B, and NAT2*6A) (3). Previous investigations of the functional characteristics of NAT2 single nucleotide polymorphisms have revealed different molecular mechanisms for slow acetylator phenotype (i.e., the reduction of mRNA and NAT2 protein expression in the presence of NAT2*5B and NAT2*5D alleles and protein instability in the cases of NAT2*6D and NAT2*14G) and various activity of NAT2 enzyme between different alleles (12, 20). The question arises whether the multiple slow acetylator phenotypes may lead to pharmacokinetic variability of isoniazid within the group of slow acetylators and to overlapping of slow and rapid acetylator groups. However, the current studies including the present investigation show that most of the overall variability can indeed be explained by grouping rapid and slow acetylation alleles.
The most important question is how differences of isoniazid exposure in genetically different individuals may alter the effectiveness and toxicity of isoniazid, especially in the case of dose-dependent toxicity such as neurological effects and liver disorders. Limited information exists regarding validated therapeutic ranges for isoniazid or the concentrations that cause toxic reactions. Mitchinson suggested that isoniazid maximal concentration to the MIC ratio could predict the clinical outcome of infections with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (22). The MIC of isoniazid (MIC90) for Mycobacterium tuberculosis is about 0.1 µg/ml, so a dose of 18.7 mg (16 times less than the usual therapeutic daily dose of 300 mg), which produced a mean 3-h concentration of 0.12 µg/ml, was reported to have a detectable early bactericidal activity (5). Nevertheless, the cumulative antibacterial effect of isoniazid seems to be related to the area under the concentration versus time curve and to maximal plasma concentration of the drug, as demonstrated in in vitro and laboratory animal studies (18). There is also evidence that the mean early bactericidal activity of isoniazid is lower in rapid acetylators than in slow acetylators and is influenced by plasma concentration of isoniazid (6). Accordingly, low plasma isoniazid levels in rapid acetylators are expected to be one of the reasons for occasional therapeutic failure or relapse (28).
On the other hand, isoniazid concentrations after a standard therapeutic dosing may be more toxic for slow acetylators because of relative overdosing, and dose adjusting may be useful to minimize relative overdosing. A significant association has been observed between NAT2 genotypes and severe hepatotoxicity in 77 Japanese tuberculosis patients undergoing treatment with isoniazid plus rifampin. Compared with rapid type, the relative risk of drug-induced hepatotoxicity was 4.0 (95% confidence interval, 1.9 to 6.1) for intermediate type and 28.0 (95% confidence interval, 26.0 to 30.0) for slow acetylator type (23). The authors suggested that NAT2 genotyping prior to therapy could be useful. According to the results of another study, patients with no high-activity NAT2 alleles had a higher risk of hepatotoxicity than those with at least one high-activity NAT2 allele, i.e., 26% versus 11% (17), so that NAT2 genotype was considered an important risk factor for antituberculosis drug-induced liver injury.
According to the results of a retrospective study in 102 Japanese tuberculosis patients, the incidence of adverse drug reactions upon standard treatment was high in slow acetylator-genotype patients (83.3%) and was low in the rapid acetylator genotype (0%) and intermediate acetylator genotype (2.4%) groups (15). In this study, there was a good association between a low value of N-acetylisoniazid over isoniazid ratio and the occurrence of adverse events, but there was no significant relationship between adverse reactions and plasma concentration of isoniazid at 3 h postdose. Possible reasons for this conflicting finding may be that (i) the 3-h plasma concentration does not necessarily reflect isoniazid exposure for the entire concentration versus time profile and (ii) the final chemical structure(s) causing hepatotoxicity is not isoniazid (alone). These data suggest that NAT2 genotyping may be superior to isoniazid therapeutic drug monitoring for an eventual dose individualization.
If one marketed preparation is to be replaced by another, extensive studies are required to show that there is no substantial pharmacokinetic difference, i.e., to prove bioequivalence defined as a ratio of mean bioavailability in the 0.80 to 1.25 range. Amazingly, for drugs such as isoniazid undergoing metabolism by a genetically polymorphic enzyme, this factor, which often is much more important than the preparation of the drug, usually is not taken into account. The data of the present study and published reports clearly suggest that determination of NAT2 genotype prior to isoniazid administration is clinically useful for the prediction of pharmacokinetic variability, and possible adjustment of isoniazid dosing regimen.
Conclusion. The recommended standard daily dose of isoniazid in adults is 5.0 mg/kg (9, 21). This dose is probably balanced for the best risk/benefit ratio for all NAT2 genotypes and may be most appropriate for patients with a single rapid allele. Based on the concentration data presented, the standard dose could be roughly adjusted to 2.5 mg, 5.0 mg, and 7.5 mg/kg for subjects with none, one, or two rapid NAT2 alleles, respectively, to achieve similar isoniazid exposure. Probably a 50% increment of the recommended doses for all genotypes would be possible in order to achieve improved efficacy and safety, because relative overdosing of poor acetylators would be avoided. Prospective clinical trials are required to assess the merits of NAT2 genotyping and dose adjustment in isoniazid treatment.
The study was supported by a grant by Fatol Arzneimittel GmbH, Schiffweiler, Germany.
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