Published ahead of print on October 24, 2003, doi:10.1164/rccm.200310-1380OC
© 2004 American Thoracic Society Moxifloxacin-containing Regimen Greatly Reduces Time to Culture Conversion in Murine TuberculosisCenter for Tuberculosis Research, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; and Division of Tuberculosis Elimination, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Jacques H. Grosset, M.D., 1503 E. Jefferson Street, Baltimore, MD 21231-1002. E-mail: jgrosse4{at}jhmi.edu
Tuberculosis continues to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the world. The expansion of tuberculosis control programs has been limited by the lengthy and cumbersome nature of current chemotherapeutic regimens. A new drug that improves the sterilizing activity of current regimens would reduce the duration of therapy without sacrificing efficacy, thereby enhancing treatment completion rates and preserving precious public health resources. The new 8-methoxyfluoroquinolone moxifloxacin has potent activity against both actively multiplying and nonactively multiplying tubercle bacilli. Using a murine model that is representative of chemotherapy for human tuberculosis, we show that the combination of moxifloxacin, rifampin, and pyrazinamide reduced the time needed to eradicate Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the lungs of infected mice by up to 2 months when compared with the standard regimen of isoniazid, rifampin, and pyrazinamide. The findings suggest that this regimen has the potential to substantially shorten the duration of therapy needed to cure human tuberculosis.
Key Words: fluoroquinolone mouse moxifloxacin treatment tuberculosis The global burden of tuberculosis (TB) is staggering. An estimated 8.3 million people developed active TB and nearly 2 million people died of TB in 2000 alone (1). The World Health Organization's directly observed therapy, short-course (DOTS) strategy is an effective tool for TB control, but the implementation of DOTS has been slower than expected in developing countries, where the burden of TB is greatest (2). This is due, in part, to the inherent difficulties of administering the lengthy and labor-intensive treatment regimen in the field. In this respect, the standard short-course regimen of isoniazid (INH, H), rifampin (RIF, R), pyrazinamide (PZA, Z), and ethambutol is far from ideal. Despite its efficacy, the regimen must be administered for at least 6 months to be fully effective in humans (35). A similar duration of therapy is required to prevent relapse in the murine model (6, 7). The implementation of TB chemotherapy in the field would be much easier if the duration of therapy could be shortened without sacrificing efficacy, a feat that will require at least one new antituberculous drug (8, 9). The 8-methoxyfluoroquinolone moxifloxacin (MXF) is a new drug with promising antituberculous activity. Its MIC90 is 0.5 µg/ml for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (10). Maximum serum concentrations (Cmax) in humans are 3.24.5 µg/ml after a daily dose of 400 mg by the oral route and the serum half-life is 912 hours (1114). MXF has bactericidal activity similar to that of INH against multiplying M. tuberculosis both in vitro and in the murine model of TB (10, 1517). It has also demonstrated early bactericidal activity approaching that of INH in patients with pulmonary TB (18, 19). However, to shorten the duration of therapy necessary to cure TB, a new drug must increase the activity of the standard regimen against persisting M. tuberculosis organisms that, by virtue of slow or intermittent multiplication, are less susceptible to killing by most antimicrobials. It is this capacity for persistence on the part of M. tuberculosis that forces therapy to be extended for many months to eradicate a small number of organisms and prevent relapse after treatment ends. The activity of MXF against "persisters" is greater than that of INH and other fluoroquinolones in an in vitro model (20); and both MXF and sparfloxacin, another fluoroquinolone with similar potency, have also demonstrated activity against persisters in the murine model of TB (6, 21, 22). Moreover, data from a clinical trial suggest that the addition of a less potent fluoroquinolone, ofloxacin, to the combination of INH, RIF, and PZA was able to shorten the duration of therapy by up to 2 months (23). We therefore hypothesized that the use of MXF would permit an even greater reduction in the duration of therapy. Under appropriate experimental conditions, the duration of therapy required to cure tuberculosis in the murine model has been closely correlated with the duration needed to cure human tuberculosis, using the same regimen (6, 7). To address our hypothesis, we conducted an experiment in the murine model to measure the benefit of (1) adding MXF to the standard 6-month daily regimen (2 months of RIF, INH, and PZA followed with 4 months of RIF and INH [2RHZ/4RH]), or (2) substituting MXF for each first-line drug individually (Table 1) . The efficacy of each regimen was assessed by (1) the time to culture-negative conversion of lung and spleen cultures, and (2) the ability to prevent culture-positive relapse after 3 months of follow-up without therapy.
Portions of the results of these studies have been previously reported in abstract form (24, 25).
Antimicrobials MXF was provided by Bayer (Rolling Meadows, IL). INH and RIF were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) and PZA was purchased from Fisher Scientific International (Suwanee, GA). Stock solutions were prepared as previously described (15).
Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strain
Aerosol Infection
Treatment Treatment began 19 days postinfection (Day 0), and continued for 6 months. Drugs were administered by gavage five times per week in the following doses (mg/kg): RIF, 10; INH, 25; PZA, 150; MXF, 100. The MXF dose was chosen by analogy with bioequipotent doses of other fluoroquinolones (21, 26). RIF was administered at least 45 minutes before other drugs to avoid drug interactions (27, 28).
Assessment of Treatment Efficacy Efficacy was assessed by survival rate, spleen weights, gross lung lesions (scored from + to +++, where + signified fewer than 10 tubercles per lung and +++ signified extensive tubercles), and lung and spleen colony-forming unit (CFU) counts. CFU counts were performed as previously described (15), except that plates for lung homogenates were supplemented with cycloheximide (10 µg/ml), polymyxin B (200,000 U/ml), carbenicillin (50 µg/ml), and trimethoprim (20 µg/ml) to prevent contamination (adapted from Mitchison and coworkers [29]).
Statistical Analysis
Rifampin and Pyrazinamide Pharmacokinetics
Survival Rate No mortality related to infection with M. tuberculosis occurred in untreated control mice until the third month of infection. Excluding mice killed monthly for CFU counts, one, three, one, and four control mice died in the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth months of tuberculosis infection, respectively. Therefore, 3 of 12 mice kept for mortality were still alive, although severely ill, at the end of the experiment. A total of 14 of 210 treated mice died from injuries during gavage (13) or other handling (1). Eleven of these deaths occurred within 2 weeks of the start of treatment. The group in which MXF was substituted for RIF suffered no mortality, in part because they received only one daily gavage instead of two, because RIF was administered separately from the other drugs in all other groups of mice.
Body Weight
Spleen Weight
Gross Lung Lesions
Enumeration of CFU in Organs during Treatment
After 2 months of treatment, lungs from mice of all treatment groups remained culture positive, but the mean CFU counts were significantly lower than pretreatment values (p < 0.01). However, the CFU counts in mice treated with the combination RMZ were dramatically lower than in mice of the reference group treated with RHZ. The mean log10 CFU counts were 0.90 ± 0.58 for the former group versus 3.36 ± 0.32 for the latter group, a difference of 2.5 log10 (p < 0.001). Figure 1 and Table 2 show that the addition of MXF to RHZ (RHZM) resulted in a more modest, although significant, increase in bactericidal activity. The lung log10 CFU counts were 2.74 ± 0.48 in this group (p < 0.05 compared with positive controls). The substitution of MXF for PZA (RHM) had a small, but insignificant, impact on the CFU counts after 2 months of treatment, whereas the substitution of MXF for RIF (MHZ) had a negative impact, for the lung CFU counts were higher in mice receiving MHZ than in mice receiving RHZ (p < 0.01). The results of spleen cultures were consistent with the results in the lung, although the spleen CFU counts were only 4.24 ± 0.21 log10 at initiation of treatment. Figure 2 and Table 3 show that all spleen cultures were negative for mice receiving RMZ, and yielded fewer than 10 colonies for all other groups of treated mice.
After 3 months of treatment, lung cultures from mice receiving RMZ/RM were almost entirely negative: two of the five lungs (the sixth lung culture was contaminated) yielded a single CFU whereas the other three were negative. Lung cultures from mice of other groups were all positive, and the better bactericidal activity of RHZM/RHM over RHZ/RH that was observed at 2 months persisted (p < 0.01). At the following monthly sacrifices, lung cultures from mice receiving RMZ/RM became entirely negative in the fourth month, and lung cultures from mice receiving RHZ/RH and RHZM/RHM became entirely negative in the fifth month. All mice receiving RHM/RH had culture-negative lungs at 6 months, with the exception of one mouse with 1 CFU isolated. The lung cultures from all mice receiving MHZ/MH remained positive at the end of 6 months of therapy (Table 2). The spleen cultures of mice receiving RHZM/RHM and RHM/RH became negative in the third month and remained negative in the following months, as did those of mice receiving RMZ/RM (Table 3). Among the six mice receiving RHZ/RH, only one spleen yielded a single CFU at 3 months and all spleens were culture negative thereafter. One of six mice receiving MHZ/MH had a single CFU isolated from the spleen at both the 5- and 6-month time points, meaning complete conversion to negative cultures was not obtained in this group, a finding consistent with the results of culture from the lungs of the same mice.
Enumeration of CFU in Organs after 3 Months of Follow-up: Relapse Rate
Serum Levels of Rifampin and Pyrazinamide
The present experiment was designed to determine the potential benefit of using MXF as a first-line agent in combination therapy for human TB. The findings are patently clear. The addition of MXF to the standard regimen resulted in a modest, but significant, improvement in the bactericidal activity at 2 and 3 months but did not shorten the time to culture conversion by even 1 month. These experimental results support the rationale for ongoing randomized clinical trials designed to test whether the addition of MXF to the standard regimen will increase the proportion of patients with negative sputum cultures after 2 months of therapy. However, it is unclear that the addition of MXF will permit shortening of the duration of therapy. Rather, it was the substitution of MXF for INH in the standard regimen that resulted in a dramatic increase in potency. In just 2 months, the combination RMZ produced a 7-log kill in the lungs, compared with reductions of 4.5 and 5 logs with the combinations of RHZ and RHZM, respectively (p < 0.001 for both comparisons). Moreover, the lungs of mice receiving the RMZ/RM regimen had nearly complete culture conversion by 3 months of treatment, almost 2 months earlier than in mice receiving the standard regimen. Thus, it is the substitution of MXF for INH that appears to have the greatest potential to shorten the course of TB therapy. On the other hand, the substitution of MXF for RIF in the standard regimen had a negative impact. All mice treated without RIF were lung culture positive after 6 months of therapy. The substitution of MXF for PZA had little impact on the bactericidal activity of the regimen, but resulted in a more modest reduction in sterilizing activity, as culture conversion in the lungs occurred more than 1 month later in mice not receiving PZA and relapse occurred in one of eight mice, but did not occur in mice receiving the standard regimen. The dramatic increase in potency resulting from the substitution of MXF for INH in the standard regimen is the most significant finding of the present experiment and calls for some analysis. First of all, it is not an entirely new finding. Ten years ago, Lalande and coworkers (21) demonstrated that the replacement of INH with sparfloxacin in the standard combination regimen also resulted in a more than 2 log10 reduction in CFU count after 2 months of therapy in a similar murine model. But because sparfloxacin was withdrawn from the market, further investigation was not performed. Several explanations could be offered for the superior potency of the combination RMZ over that of RHZ, including (1) greater bactericidal activity of MXF versus INH, (2) an inappropriately high MXF dose, (3) pharmacologic interactions resulting in reduced serum concentrations of RIF and/or PZA during coadministration with INH, and (4) unanticipated synergy in the antituberculous activity of the combination of RMZ and/or unexpected antagonism with the combination of RHZ. We will consider each of these possibilities in turn. It is unlikely that the difference in the potency of RMZ versus RHZ is a result of better individual bactericidal activity of MXF over INH. In several murine studies using the same MXF dose as in the present study, the bactericidal activity of MXF alone was not superior to that of INH (10, 15, 16). Similarly, the results of two studies comparing the early bactericidal activities of INH and MXF in patients with pulmonary TB show INH to have activity that is as good as or better than that of MXF (18, 19). Furthermore, comparison of results from groups receiving RHZ, RHZM, and RMZ clearly demonstrates that the addition of MXF to RHZ confers only modest benefit, whereas it is the removal of INH from the regimen RHZM that confers a remarkable increase in potency. It is also unlikely that the 100-mg/kg dose of MXF was inappropriately high or otherwise nonequipotent compared with the usual human dose of 400 mg. The dose of MXF in the present study was chosen by analogy to the bioequipotent doses previously established for other fluoroquinolones (21, 26). In fact, a 100-mg/kg oral dose in mice results in an area under the serum concentrationtime curve (AUC) of only 9.5 µg · hour/ml (16), whereas the 400-mg oral dose in humans results in an AUC of 30 to 40 µg · hour/ml (12, 31). Because the magnitude of the AUC-to-MIC ratio correlates with the bactericidal activity of the fluoroquinolones against other bacterial pathogens (32), the 100-mg/kg dose is more likely to underestimate rather than overestimate the activity to be expected in humans. This assumption is corroborated by pharmacodynamic data demonstrating that administration of MXF in the mouse diet at a concentration of 0.25%, which achieves both a peak serum concentration and AUC similar to that obtained with standard dosing in humans, results in greater activity than the 100-mg/kg dose by gavage (24). A third possible explanation for the greater potency of RMZ over RHZ is a pharmacokinetic interaction resulting in different serum concentrations of RIF and/or PZA between the two treatment groups. Simultaneous administration of INH, RIF, and PZA in mice results in a 40% reduction of the Cmax of RIF, most likely because of the negative influence of INH on the absorption of RIF (27). To avoid this interaction in the present experiment, RIF was given at least 45 minutes before the simultaneous administration of the other drugs (28). We subsequently assayed serum concentrations of RIF and PZA in uninfected mice receiving RHZ or RMZ under these conditions and demonstrated that RIF and PZA concentrations were not higher in mice receiving RMZ than in mice receiving RHZ (Tables 4 and 5). Two prior studies by Grosset and colleagues demonstrated that, when the drugs are administered to mice simultaneously, the combination RZ has significantly greater activity than the combination HRZ (27, 33). The extent to which the substantial differences in activity reflect the aforementioned pharmacokinetic interaction or reflect true differences in the antibacterial activity of the drug combinations has not been elucidated. Therefore, one could reasonably question whether the addition of MXF adds to the activity of the combination RZ at all. Previous experience with sparfloxacin suggests that a potent fluoroquinolone does add to the activity of RZ. In mice infected with M. tuberculosis by the intravenous route, the addition of sparfloxacin to a regimen of RZ resulted in an incremental reduction of more than 1 log in the lung CFU counts after 2 months of therapy (21). In all likelihood, the dramatic increase in potency resulting from the substitution of MXF for INH in the standard regimen is the consequence of synergism in the antituberculosis activity of the three drugs RIF, MXF, and PZA and/or antagonism in that of the three drugs RIF, INH, and PZA. The mechanisms involved in the synergism and antagonism are currently unknown and deserve extensive investigation. The final and most important point to consider is the relevance of the present findings to the clinical situation. Up to now, results obtained in the murine model have always been predictive of what was achievable in humans, provided that the relative sizes of the bacillary populations in mice and in humans are similar and the drug doses are equipotent (7). In the present experiment, as in preceding experiments (6, 34), mice responded to the standard regimen (2RHZ/4RH) much like humans taking the same drug combination. As MXF was in fact underdosed in the present experiment, there is little reason to believe that the findings observed in mice will not be observed in humans. A previous randomized human clinical trial suggested that the use of ofloxacin could shorten the duration of TB therapy by up to 2 months, although no patients were treated with a standard regimen for comparison (23). MXF has a much better pharmacodynamic profile against M. tuberculosis than ofloxacin and our results suggest that the new regimen of RIF, MXF, and PZA has the potential to shorten the duration of treatment necessary to cure human TB to 4 months or less. Further murine experiments are in progress to define more precisely the extent to which therapy can be shortened without sacrificing efficacy. These experiments will assess the relapse rate over a range of treatment durations between 3 and 6 months. Last, although a preliminary report suggests MXF will be well tolerated in humans when given for up to 6 months (35), further investigation is needed to determine the safety of MXF given in combination with RIF and PZA. Because the combination of RIF and PZA appears to have inordinate hepatotoxicity when not administered together with INH (36), one may speculate that the combination of MXF, RIF, and PZA will carry a similar risk. However, in the absence of any insights into the mechanism of PZA-induced hepatotoxicity, it is difficult to speculate further. Clearly, careful clinical investigation is warranted before considering the combination of rifampin, moxifloxacin, and pyrazinamide as a definite breakthrough in the shortening of therapy for TB.
Supported by a grant from the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development and by grant AI43846 and supplement from the National Institutes of Health; a drug (moxifloxacin) was provided by Bayer. Conflict of Interest Statement: E.L.N. has no declared conflict of interest; T.Y. has no declared conflict of interest; S.T. has no declared conflict of interest; R.J.O'B. has no declared conflict of interest; A.N.V. has no declared conflict of interest; R.E.C. has no declared conflict of interest; W.R.B. has served on advisory boards for Abbott, Aventis, Ortho-McNeil and Pfizer, receiving less than $10,000 per company per year, and has received lecture fees in excess of $10,000 per year from Abbott and Roche and lecture fees less than $10,000 per year from Aventis, Ortho-McNeil and Pfizer, and received research grants from Abbott ($66,969 from 6/03 to 5/04) and Merck ($37,556 from 5/01 to 1/03); J.H.G. has no declared conflict of interest. Received in original form October 8, 2003; accepted in final form October 24, 2003
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||