Title: Current Drug Therapy Issues in Patients with Cystic Fibrosis
1Current Drug Therapy Issues in Patients with
Cystic Fibrosis
- Robert J. Kuhn, Pharm.D.
- Professor and Vice Chair for Ambulatory Care
- Division of Pharmacy Practice and Science
- Colleges of Pharmacy and Medicine
- University of Kentucky
2Cumulative Therapies for CF Lung Disease
Volume Replenishment INS 37217 Moli 1901 Na
Channel Blockers Reduce Mucus Burden Mucolytics L
OMUCIN EGF-R Antagonists Anaerobic Ps. a.
Drugs Macrolides Protegrins (?) Novel Reduce
Inflammation Pulmozyme Macrolides LTB4
Antagonists Anti-Inflammatories
3rhDNase I- Pulmozyme
- Breaks down extracellular DNA in mucus secondary
to chronic inflammation and tissue destruction - Aerosolized Dosage form 2.5mg inhalation daily
for chronic therapy - Acts as a mucolytic
- Side Effect Profile Very benign
- Treatment Cost 1000.00/month
4Gastrointestinal Involvement
- Fat malabsorption- lipase deficiency
- Vitamin replacement therapy- Vitamins ADEK oral
and liquid preparations - ADEK vitamin supplementation
- Steatorrhea and dosing of enzymes- Watch
escalation of enzyme dosing - 2500 units/kg/meal of lipase- risk of DIOS
- Distal Intestinal Obstruction Syndrome
5Gastrointestinal Involvement
- CF Colonopathy
- Distal Intestinal Obstruction Syndrome
- Treatment 60-100ml/kg GoLytely or balanced
electrolyte solution - May require surgical intervention- may be a
problem of enzyme non-compliance - Dosing of enzymes with meals and snacks
6Gastrointestinal Involvement
- Acid blockers, PPI and other drugs
- Hypersecretory pH in portion of CF patients
- Push enzyme dose to 2500 units, then add pH
altering drug- H-2 or PPI preferred - Check for fecal fat component to assess dosing
- Weight gain is the most important outcome
7Reports of Treatment Failures
- Among products- although labeled standard to
lipase , many patients respond differently to
products marketed before 1995 - Pancreatic enzyme therapy substitution has lead
to treatment failures- NEJM 19973361283-89.
8Todays Situation- Generic Substitution of
Pancreatic Enzymes
- Generic Substitution despite
- Different amount of protease, lipase and amylase
- Different microencapsulated and microtablet
technology used - Know intrapatient variability
- Data supporting new productsIllegal Action- as
viewed by FDA - Growing List of Treatment Failures
9Resistance to gastric juice referred to of
actual activity
10Cholestasis and Liver Disease in CF- A Emerging
Problems
- Longer life expectancy- more clinically apparent
liver disease - 3-4X in Liver Panel
- Start ursodiol (UDCA) 20mg/kg/dose bid- maximum
dose 600mg BID - Watch LFTs for improvement
- Recheck in 2-3 months
11CF Pathogens
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa - mucoid and non-mucoid
strains - Burkholderia cepacia
- Stenotrophomonas multophilia
- Alcaligenes xylosoxidans
- Haemophilus influenzae
12The Presence of Mucoid P. aeruginosa in Cystic
Fibrosis A Well Characterized Predictor of Poor
Survival
No P. aeruginosa (n12)
Non-mucoid P. aeruginosa in sputum (n19)
Mucoid P. aeruginosa in sputum (n50)
Henry RL, et al. Pediatric Pulmonology.
199212158-161
13Treatment of Acute Exacerbation
- 10-14 Days of therapy with dual AP therapy is
gold standard - Aggressive management with aminoglycosides - peak
10-14mcg/ml - trough concentration lt 1mcg.ml - Once a day aminoglycosides/Twice a day
- Beta-lactam continuous dosing
14Aminoglycosides- 2003 revisited
- Worked for years- synergy and q8H
- Increased dosing requirements
- Most CF patients clear the majority of the drug
with each dose - Once a day therapy- twice a day
- Post antibiotic Effect- Is there one in CF?
- Toxicity and monitoring-issues of testing and
cumulative dose
15Drugs and Doses for Acute Exacerbations
- Tobramycin 2.5-3mg/kg/dose q8h
- Amikacin 7.5-10mg/kg/dose q8h
- Ciprofloxacin IV 10mg/kg/dose q8h
- Ciprofloxacin (oral) 40-50mg/kg/day Q8-12h
- Ceftazidime 50-70mg/kg/dose q8h
- Cefepime 50mg/kg/dose q8h
- Aztreonam 50-70mg/kg/dose q8h
- Piperacillin 300-500mg/kg/day q4-6h
16Drugs and Doses for Acute Exacerbations-II
- Meropenem 50-70mg/kg/dose q8h
- Imipenem 50-70mg/kg/dose q6h
- Chloramphenicol 50-100mg/kg/day q6h
17Once a day / Twice a day
- Higher concentration in serum higher
concentration in sputum - Decreased toxicity
- 2-6 hour post antibiotic effect
- Not true in CF
- My experience - more data needed
- Once a day is indeed safe but long term efficacy
MAY be a problem
18Once a day principle
- For patients with rapid clearance- 2hours or
less, less than 21 years of age and with no
underlying CFRD or renal disease (with
progressive symptoms) - Take conventional Dose of once a day tobramycin-
7mg/kg and administer two times a day. Draw
levels after second dose- 3 hours post and 10
hours post. May have to increase levels - Goal of Therapy- 10 hour post level below the
MIC--1mcg/ml and redose 2 hours later
19Remember
- No clinical trial results available to this as
yet - Based on principles of drug use
- Older patients or those with longer half lives
should not be on this therapy unless it is
modified based on pharmacokinetics - Hearing test- follow up
20Colistin and Ciprofloxacin
- Treated patient when PA first appears in sputum
regardless of clinical symptoms - Dose Inhaled Colistin 75mg (1MU BID) with
ciprofloxacin 20mg/kg/day - Delayed time to first exacerbation or
hospitalization - No resistance or fungal overgrowth noted
21Aerosol Delivery
- Advantages
- Less systemic toxicity
- Delivery to site of action
- Higher concentrations available in the lung
- Disadvantages
- Time and Effort
- Delivery Device constraints
22Important Concepts
- Particle Size-Mass Median Aerodynamic
Diameter-0.5-5microns - Respiratory Fraction- Amount of Drug Delivered by
Device - Types of Nebulizer- Jet vs. Ultrasonic
- Various Models of Jet Nebulizers--it does make a
difference.
23Aerosol Properties
- Isotonic
- Sterile and Pyrogen Free
- Unit of Use
- Tasteless or Pleasant Tasting
- No preservatives or toxic materials
- Solutions which can be easily nebulized
- Good Chemical Stability
24Antimicrobials that have been Aerosolized
- Ticarcillin- hypertonic and irritating to BSM
- Tobramycin- Bad taste and hypotonic, contains
phenol - Amphotercin B- NC with NS and Suspension (dose
5-10mg BID in Sterile Water) - Gentamicin- preservatives with phenol
- Colistimethane- foams badly
- Ceftazidime- hypertonic and irritating to BSM
25Aerosolized Antibiotics in CFFeature Comparison
Cost/g ()
Solution Sterility
Solution Stability
Excipients
Antibiotic
Colistimethate Powder Unknown Unknown Formaldehyd
e, 272.17 bisulfites Gentamicin 40 mg/mL
solution 2 y Yes Methylparabens,
37.36 propylparabens, EDTA Tobramycin 40
mg/mL Nebcin 2 y Yes Phenol, bisulfites, 101.10
solution EDTA Preservative-free Unknown Unknow
n None 247.50 Nebcin powder Preservative-free
2 y Yes None 149.28 TOBI solution
Average wholesale price, 2000 Red Book Annual.
26Aminoglycosides - Binding
- Primary binding in patients with CF
- Glycoproteins----90
- Divalent ions 5
- DNA 2
- Principle- competitive binding- so total drug
concentration must be many times the MIC to allow
free drug to work
27In Vitro Inhibition of Tobramycin Activity by
Sputum
Sputum
8
7
6
Log10 CFU/mL
Sputum Tobramycin (10X MIC)
5
4
Sputum Tobramycin (25X MIC)
3
0
1
2
3
4
Time (hours)
Mendelman PM, et al. Am Rev Respir Dis
1985132761-765
28Differential Effects of TOBI on FEV1 By Age
Group
Age Group 13 - lt 18
Age Group 6 - lt 13
On Drug
On Drug
On Drug
On Drug
On Drug
On Drug
28
24
20
TOBI
16
12
Relative Change in ( SEM) FEV1 Predicted
8
4
0
Placebo
-4
-8
-12
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
Week
29New Devices and Technology
- Trials underway with new nebulizer- handheld with
delivery time of 4-5 minutes - Extremely compact and lightweight
- No electrical source needed
- Improved compliance and perhaps outcomes
- Dedicated Disposable cassettes or units
30Changes in Drug Susceptibility with Standard CF
Antibiotic Therapies
100
³ 16 µg/mLIV TobramycinThomassen et al., 1987
³ 16 µg/mLIV TobramycinMcLaughlin et al., 1983
³ 2 µg/mLOral CiprofloxacinShalit et al., 1987
³ 16 µg/mL Inhaled Tobramycin This study
90
80
70
14 days
of Patients with Resistant Isolates
60
14 days
24 months
50
Baseline
18 months
12 months
Baseline
40
6 months
10 days
30
Baseline
Baseline
20
10
Highest MIC Isolate used to Represent each
Patient
0
31Safety of Fluoroquinolones
- The real question in pediatric patients with
Cystic Fibrosis is dose and prudent use - Dosing issues critical
- Toxicity does not appear to be a major problem
- Resistance can be!
32 Inflammation in CF
- Exuberant but ineffective response by
neutrophils, IgG, macrophages and complement - Massive influx of neutrophils into the airway
which release - Elastase, proteinase, collagenase
- Oxidants and IL-8
- Cytokine imbalance
33Inflammation in CF
- Neutrophil predominates (BAL fluid)
- IL-8 principal inflammatory cytokine, IL-10
levels reduced in BECs
Bonfield TL, et al. J All Clin Immunol
199910472-8.
Henig NR et al. Thorax 200156306-11
34Ibuprofen
- Double-blind trial in 85 patients over 4 years
demonstrated a slower annual rate of decline in
lung function in patients treated with high dose
ibuprofen. - Ibuprofen
- FEV1 decline -2.17 (S.E0.57) / year
- Placebo
- FEV1 decline -3.60 (S.E0.55) / year
35Macrolides
- Anti-inflammatory Effects
- Decrease neutrophil oxidant production
- Decrease macrophage production of the
pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-8, IL-6, TNF-alpha,
and IL-1 (alpha and beta) BAD CYTOKINES - Increase macrophage production of IL-10, a
cytoprotective cytokine GOOD CYTOKINE
36Macrolides
- Anti-Pseudomonal Effects
- Decrease pili formation (the hooks that allow
Pseudomonas to stick to the lining of the lung) - Decrease exotoxin production (elastase, protease,
lecthinase, DNase, coagulase) - substances that
irritate and damage the lung - Inhibit formation of flagella
- Inhibit production of alginate, its protective
coating
37Study Design Macrolide Trial
-14
28
0
84
168
196
Day
Treatment Phase
F/U
Visit
3
1
2
4
5
6
Treatment Phase gt 40 kg 500 mg or Placebo on
MWF lt 40 kg 250 mg or Placebo on MWF
Provisions for step-down regimen
38Number of Participants in the Trial
39Relative Change in FEV1 Predicted
Day 168 Treatment Effect 6.21 (p0.001)
Day 168 ? 4.44
Azithromycin
Placebo
Day 168 ? -1.77
Study Day
40Proportion of Participants Exacerbation Free
40 Reduction in Exacerbations (p0.01)
Study Day
41Treatment Emergent Changes in Microbiology
p0.06 p0.01
42Paradigm Shift- First Acquistion
- When to treat
- What to use
- How long to use it
- How it this therapy affect the rate of decline
and other clinical measures - Treatment Burden Issues
43First PA Culture
- Window of Opportunity
- No detectable antibody production
- Non- mucoid strains
- Intermittent detection
- Eradication versus plateau effect
44Previous Work on Eradication
- 1985- Littlewood- 7 patient OL Coly 2MU BID for
3-13 months of therapy - Decrease PC from 42 to 6
- Valerius -1991-Randomized OL COLY plus oral
Cipro-20mg/kg/day-3 weeks up to 3 months-duration
27months - Chronic PA 14 vs 58 -Control
- Fewer PA isolates 23 vs 41
45Aerosol Initiation Therapy Studies
- Ratjen-2001-80mg BID x 12 months-OL
- 14/15 patients- PA and AB negative
- At 2 years, 9 pts AB negative, NO decrease in
PFTs - Treatment burden issues- my opinion
- Dosing of the 1980s
46Combo Therapy-Tune Up and Maintainence
- Munck et al-2001- 2 Drug AP IV therapy for three
weeks then 2 months of Coly - OL-Non controlled-19patients-pts with fewer than
2 precipitin AB - 100 eradication at one month post Txt
- Recolonized 3-25 months- Median PA free 8 /- 5.7
months - 14/19 patient developed NS by genotyping
47Combo Therapy-Tune Up and Maintainence
- Wainwright-2002- IV tob and timentin or CTZ x 2
weeks, then TOBI 300mg BID plus CIPRO 20mg/kg/day - Multicenter, Randomized (infants less than 6
months old) to test PA detection by BAL or
clinical presentation - 13 subjects negative after treatment15
48Paradigm Shift- First Acquistion
- When to treat? First PA culture
- What to use? Inhaled x 1month to 1 year /-
CIPRO /- IV antibiotics x 2-3 weeks - How long to use it? See above
- How it this therapy affect the rate of decline
and other clinical measures? Decreased rate of
PA isolation maybe effect on preserving lung
function - Treatment Burden Issues. 3 weeks inhaled to 1
year
49Resistance with Macrolides and Fluroquinolones
- National Trial showed no evidence of increase in
MRSA and SA infections in treated group - 2 Year follow up trial in 104 patients with pilot
data confirms this observations- Rizzo S, Anstead
M et al. Pediatric Pulm 2002 Suppl 192002
Abstract 321 - 2 Year Follow up with Fluroquinolones
demonstrated a 2.6 fold increase in MRSA with
fluroquinolone exposure. Whitby, D, Rizzo S et
al 11th Annual PPAG Meeting Platform
Presentation St. Petersburg. Fl Oct 2002 - Careful use of FQ still warranted with high dose
short term strategy - Macrolide Data promising for continued use at
this time
50Conclusions
- Infection and inflammation are severe and
continuous in CF. - Aggressive antibiotic and anti-inflammatory
therapy improve survival in cystic fibrosis and
must start early. - Establishing safer, more effective
anti-inflammatory agents is a key step in
improving quality of life and survival for CF
patients.