132 research outputs found
Early or deferred initiation of efavirenz during rifampicinābased TB therapy has no significant effect on CYP3A induction in TBāHIV infected patients
Background and Purpose: In TBāHIV coāinfection, prompt initiation of TB therapy is recommended but antiāretroviral treatment (ART) is often delayed due to potential drugādrug interactions between rifampicin and efavirenz. In a longitudinal cohort study, we evaluated the effects of efavirenz/rifampicin coātreatment and time of ART initiation on CYP3A induction. /
Experimental Approach: TreatmentānaĆÆve TBāHIV coāinfected patients (n = 102) were randomized to efavirenzābasedāART after 4 (n = 69) or 8 weeks (n = 33) of commencing rifampicinābased antiāTB therapy. HIV patients without TB (n = 94) receiving efavirenzābasedāART only were enrolled as control. Plasma 4Ī²āhydroxycholesterol/cholesterol (4Ī²āOHC/Chol) ratio, an endogenous biomarker for CYP3A activity, was determined at baseline, at 4 and 16 weeks of ART. /
Key Results: In patients treated with efavirenz only, median 4Ī²āOHC/Chol ratios increased from baseline by 269% and 275% after 4 and 16 weeks of ART, respectively. In TBāHIV patients, rifampicin only therapy for 4 and 8 weeks increased median 4Ī²āOHC/Chol ratios from baseline by 378% and 576% respectively. After efavirenz/rifampicin coātreatment, 4Ī²āOHC/Chol ratios increased by 560% of baseline (4 weeks) and 456% of baseline (16 weeks). Neither time of ART initiation, sex, genotype nor efavirenz plasma concentration were significant predictors of 4Ī²āOHC/Chol ratios after 4 weeks of efavirenz/rifampicin coātreatment. /
Conclusion and Implications: Rifampicin induced CYP3A more potently than efavirenz, with maximum induction occurring within the first 4 weeks of rifampicin therapy. We provide pharmacological evidence that early (4 weeks) or deferred (8 weeks) ART initiation during antiāTB therapy has no significant effect on CYP3A induction
Personalized Drug Dosage ā Closing the Loop
A brief account is given of various approaches
to the individualization of drug dosage, including the use of
pharmacodynamic markers, therapeutic monitoring of plasma
drug concentrations, genotyping, computer-guided dosage
using ādashboardsā, and automatic closed-loop control of
pharmacological action. The potential for linking the real patient
to his or her āvirtual twinā through the application of
physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling is also
discussed
Reduced Plasma Levels of 25-Hydroxycholesterol and Increased Cerebrospinal Fluid Levels of Bile Acid Precursors in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune, inflammatory disease of the central nervous system (CNS). We have measured the levels of over 20 non-esterified sterols in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients suffering from MS, inflammatory CNS disease, neurodegenerative disease and control patients. Analysis was performed following enzyme-assisted derivatisation by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) exploiting multistage fragmentation (MS n ). We found increased concentrations of bile acid precursors in CSF from each of the disease states and that patients with inflammatory CNS disease classified as suspected autoimmune disease or of unknown aetiology also showed elevated concentrations of 25-hydroxycholestertol (25-HC, P < 0.05) in CSF. Cholesterol concentrations in CSF were not changed except for patients diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (P < 0.01) or pathogen-based infections of the CNS (P < 0.05) where they were elevated. In plasma, we found that 25-HC (P < 0.01), (25R)26-hydroxycholesterol ((25R)26-HC, P < 0.05) and 7Ī±-hydroxy-3-oxocholest-4-enoic acid (7Ī±H,3O-CA, P < 0.05) were reduced in relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) patients compared to controls. The pattern of reduced plasma levels of 25-HC, (25R)26-HC and 7Ī±H,3O-CA was unique to RRMS. In summary, in plasma, we find that the concentration of 25-HC in RRMS patients is significantly lower than in controls. This is consistent with the hypothesis that a lower propensity of macrophages to synthesise 25-HC will result in reduced negative feedback by 25-HC on IL-1 family cytokine production and exacerbated MS. In CSF, we find that the dominating metabolites reflect the acidic pathway of bile acid biosynthesis and the elevated levels of these in CNS disease is likely to reflect cholesterol release as a result of demyelination or neuronal death. 25-HC is elevated in patients with inflammatory CNS disease probably as a consequence of up-regulation of the type 1 interferon-stimulated gene cholesterol 25-hydroxylase in macrophage
First international descriptive and interventional survey for cholesterol and non-cholesterol sterol determination by gas- and liquid- chromatographyāUrgent need for harmonisation of analytical methods
Serum concentrations of lathosterol, the plant sterols campesterol and sitosterol and the cholesterol metabolite 5Ī±-cholestanol are widely used as surrogate markers of cholesterol synthesis and absorption, respectively. Increasing numbers of laboratories utilize a broad spectrum of well-established and recently developed methods for the determination of cholesterol and non-cholesterol sterols (NCS). In order to evaluate the quality of these measurements and to identify possible sources of analytical errors our group initiated the first international survey for cholesterol and NCS. The cholesterol and NCS survey was structured as a two-part survey which took place in the years 2013 and 2014. The first survey part was designed as descriptive, providing information about the variation of reported results from different laboratories. A set of two lyophilized pooled sera (A and B) was sent to twenty laboratories specialized in chromatographic lipid analysis. The different sterols were quantified either by gas chromatography-flame ionization detection, gas chromatography- or liquid chromatography-mass selective detection. The participants were requested to determine cholesterol and NCS concentrations in the provided samples as part of their normal laboratory routine. The second part was designed as interventional survey. Twenty-two laboratories agreed to participate and received again two different lyophilized pooled sera (C and D). In contrast to the first international survey, each participant received standard stock solutions with defined concentrations of cholesterol and NCS. The participants were requested to use diluted calibration solutions from the provided standard stock solutions for quantification of cholesterol and NCS. In both surveys, each laboratory used its own internal standard (5Ī±-cholestane, epicoprostanol or deuterium labelled sterols).
Main outcome of the survey was, that unacceptably high interlaboratory variations for cholesterol and NCS concentrations are reported, even when the individual laboratories used the same calibration material. We discuss different sources of errors and recommend all laboratories analysing cholesterol and NCS to participate in regular quality control programs
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