leprosy and tb drugs Flashcards

1
Q

drugs for leprosy

A

Dapsone
Clofazimine (LampreneR)
Rifampin (Rifadin, RimactaneR)

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2
Q

Tuberculoid form

vs Lepromatous form

A

high CMI
low CMI: widespread, usually symmetrical distribution of skin lesions and is characterized by anergy. Skin lesions consist of massive numbers of macrophages containing large numbers of bacilli.

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3
Q

?? are three cardinal signs of infection with M. leprae.

A

Skin lesions, skin anesthesia and enlarged nerves

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4
Q

When the host’s CMI is poor, ?? develops
where the CMI response is adequate, bacillary replication is inhibited and a localized lesion develops that has a tendency to heal without treatment (??)

A

multi- bacillary (lepromatous) disease

indeterminate tuberculoid leprosy

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5
Q

tx for tuberculoid form: Paucibacillary Forms (I, TT, BT): Sulfone-sensitive strains

A

Dapsone: 100 mg daily for 6 months; for I and TT forms, drug is continued for 3yrs years after negative skin tests; for BT form, drug is continued for 5yrs after negative skin tests.
Rifampin: 600 mg daily for 6 months (I, TT, and BT)

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6
Q

tx for tuberculoid form: Paucibacillary Forms (I, TT, BT): Sulfone-resistant strains

A

Clofazimine: 50-100 mg daily is given in place of dapsone in the above regimen.

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7
Q

Multibacillary Forms (BB, BL, LL)3

A

?

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8
Q

Multibacillary Forms (BB, BL, LL)3

A

?

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9
Q

INH: MOA

resistance??

A
  • Interferes with cell wall mycolic acid biosynthesis of mycobac (unique feature)
  • mutations of inhA gene involved in mycolic acid biosynthesis renders bacresistant–>NH treatment results in selection of these resistant bac
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10
Q

Bacteriostatic for ??, but bactericidal for both ?? since INH penetrates cells easily.

A

“resting” bacilli

extracellular and intracellular bacteria which are rapidly dividing

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11
Q

INH SEs

A

(more for slow acetylators)
Peripheral neuropathy
Hepatitis: Major toxic effect.

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12
Q

INH uses

A

tb and nontb mycobac

more

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13
Q

rifampin MOA

A

Bactericidal, inhibits growth of most Gram-positive as well as Gram-negative bacteria.

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14
Q

rifampin SEs

A

GI disturbances, muscle aches
Hepatitis: less frequent than INH
Important: Reddish orange color to urine, saliva, sweat and tears; there may be discoloration of soft contact lenses

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15
Q

Rifampin Drug interactions: Potent inducer of hepatic cytochrome P-450 enzymes and
reduces half-lives of many drugs: ??

A

nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, protease inhibitors, anticoagulants, oral contraceptives, methadone, ketoconazole.

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16
Q

rifampin uses

A
  • tb
  • meningococcal disease and meningitis due to H. influenzae,
  • leprosy
17
Q

Ethambutol SEs

A

dose-related ocular toxicity (rare, reversible); optic neuritis (decreased visual acuity, loss of color discrimination-red from green, constriction of visual fields
-discontinue immediately

18
Q

Pyrazinamide SEs

A

Hepatotoxicity, Elevations of plasma alanine and aspartate aminotransferases

Nongouty polyarthralgia (40%)
hyperuricemia (give allopurinol or probenecid)
19
Q

Clofazimine [LampreneR] MOA

half-life??

A
  • binding of the agent to mycobacterial DNA and interference with bacterial growth, slowly bactericidal for M. leprae,
  • Half-life is very long: 70 days. It is excreted slowly, largely unmetabolized. Only 1% in the urine.
20
Q

Clofazimine SEs

A
  • Pigmentation of the skin: clofazimine accumulates in cells of leprosy granuloma: red–>brown, lesions: mauve, slate gray or black
  • GI tract: most serious adverse effect and develops in 50% of the patients
21
Q

Dapsone MOA

A

Inhibits the synthesis of folic acid (like sulfas) bacteriostatic, not bactericidal to M. leprae
-inhibit dihydropteroate synthetase (PABA–>DHPa–>DHF–>need for RNA synthesis?? see slide

Half-life: 10-50 hours, acetylated in the liver and excreted by the urine.

Drug of choice for all patients infected with sulfone-sensitive M. leprae

22
Q

Dapsone SEs

A

hemolytic anemia
Methemoglobinemia
Sulfone syndrome: exacerbation of lepromatous leprosy.

23
Q

now recommended that other antileprosy drugs (rifampin and clofazimine) be given with dapsone, why??

A

increasing incidence of sulfone-resistant organisms has precipitated a re-evaluation of dapsone monotherapy

24
Q

Dapsone, other use

A

acne