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Drug For Systemic Mycoses: Systemic Mycoses Can Be Subdivided Into Two Categories

This document discusses drugs used to treat systemic mycoses, which can be opportunistic or non-opportunistic infections. It describes several antifungal drugs including polyenes like amphotericin B and nystatin, azoles like ketoconazole and fluconazole, and other drugs like flucytosine and griseofulvin. It provides details on the mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, clinical uses, and adverse effects of these antifungal medications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
133 views39 pages

Drug For Systemic Mycoses: Systemic Mycoses Can Be Subdivided Into Two Categories

This document discusses drugs used to treat systemic mycoses, which can be opportunistic or non-opportunistic infections. It describes several antifungal drugs including polyenes like amphotericin B and nystatin, azoles like ketoconazole and fluconazole, and other drugs like flucytosine and griseofulvin. It provides details on the mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, clinical uses, and adverse effects of these antifungal medications.

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Curex QA
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Drug for systemic mycoses

 Systemic mycoses can be subdivided into


two categories
 Opportunistic infection: candidiasis,
aspergillosis, cryptococcosis,mucormycosis—
it occur in immunocompromised host
 Non-opportunistic infection:
 Histoplasmosis, blastomycosis-----it occur in any
host
Drugs for systemic Mycoses
 Amphotericin B
 Ketoconazole
 Itraconazole
 Fluconazole
 Miconazole
 Flucytosine
Classification According to Route of
Administration
 Systemic :
 Griseofulvin , Amphotericin- B , Ketoconazole ,
Fluconazole , Terbinafine.
 Topical
 In candidiasis :
 Imidazoles : Ketoconazole , Miconazole.
 Triazoles : Terconazole.
 Polyene macrolides : Nystatin , Amphotericin-B
 Gentian violet : Has antifungal & antibacterial.

In Dermatophytes :
 Dermatophytics referred to as ringworm
[ because of characteritic ring shaped lesion]
 Tinea pedis[ ringworm of foot or athlete’s foot]
 Tinea corporis[ ringworm of body]
 Tinea capitis[ ringorm of scalp]
Amphotericin B
 Amphotericin A & B are antifungal antibiotics.
 Amphotericin A is not used clinically.
 It is a natural polyene macrolide
 (polyene = many double bonds )
 (macrolide = containing a large lactone ring )
 Amphotericin B is active againt broad spectrum of
pathogenic fungi and is drug of choice for most systemic
mycoses
 Amphotericin B cause renal damage
Pharmacokinetics
 Poorly absorbed orally , is effective for fungal
infection of gastrointestinal tract.
 For systemic infections given as slow I.V.
 Intrathecal injection has been used for fungal
meningitis
 Highly bound to plasma protein, Poorly
crossing BBB,Metabolized in liver
 Excreted slowly in urine over a period of
several days.
Mechanism of action
 It is a selective fungicidal drug.
 Disrupt fungal cell membrane by binding to
ergosterol , so alters the permeability of the
cell membrane leading to leakage of
intracellular ions & macromolecules ( cell
death ).
Resistance to amphotericin B
 If ergosterol binding is impaired either by :
 Decreasing the membrane concentration of
ergosterol.
 Or by modyfing the sterol target molecule.
Adverse Effects
 1- Immediate reactions ( Infusion –related
toxicity ).
 Fever, muscle spasm, vomiting ,headache,
hypotension.
 Can be avoided by :
 A. Slowing the infusion
 B. Decreasing the daily dose
 C. Premedication with antipyretics, antihistamincs or
corticosteroids.
2- Slower toxicity
 Most serious is renal toxicity (nearly in all
patients )----dose >4gm
 Hypokalemia
 Hypomagnesaemia
 Impaired liver functions
 Thrombocytopenia
 Anemia
Clinical uses
 Has a broad spectrum of activity & fungicidal action.
 The drug of choice for life-threatening mycotic
infections and Also, for chronic therapy & preventive
therapy of relapse.
 In cancer patients with neutropenia who remain
febrile on broad –spectrum antibiotics.
Routes of Administration
 1- Slow I.V.I. For systemic fungal disease.
 2- Intrathecal for fungal C.N.S. infections.
 Topical drops & direct subconjunctival
injection for Mycotic corneal ulcers &
keratitis.
 3- Local injection into the joint in fungal
arthritis.
Liposomal preparations of
amphotericin B
 Amphotericin B is packaged in a lipid-
associated delivery system to reduce binding to
human cell membrane , so reducing :
 A. Nephrotoxicity
 B. Infusion toxicity
 More expensive
Drug interaction
 Nephrotoxic drugs: aminoglycosides,
cyclosporin,---risk for kidney damage
 Flucytosine : reduce amphotericin toxicity
Nystatin
 It is a polyene macrolide ,similar in structure
& mechanism to amphotericin B.
 Too toxic for systemic use.
 Used only topically.
 It is available as creams, ointment ,
suppositories & other preparations.
 Not significantly absorbed from skin, mucous
membrane, GIT .
Clinical uses
 Prevent or treat superficial candidiasis of
mouth, esophagus, intestinal tract.
 Vaginal candidiasis
 Can be used in combination with antibacterial
agents & corticosteroids.
Azoles
 A group of synthetic fungistatic agents with a
broad spectrum of activity .
 They have antibacterial , antiprotozoal
anthelminthic & antifungal activity .
Mechanism of Action
 1-Inhibit the fungal cytochrome P450 enzyme, (α-
demethylase) which is responsible for converting
lanosterol to ergosterol ( the main sterol in fungal cell
membrane ). This results in increased membrane
permeability and leakage of cellular components
 2- Inhibition of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase
leading to accumulation of peroxides that cause
autodigestion of the fungus.
 3- Imidazoles may alter RNA& DNA metabolism.
Imidazoles
 Ketoconazole
 Miconazole
 Clotrimazole
 They lack selectivity ,they inhibit human
gonadal and steroid synthesis leading to
decrease testosterone & cortisol production.
 Also, inhibit human P-450 hepatic enzyme.
Ketoconazole
 Well absorbed orally .
 Bioavailability is decreased with antacids, H2
blockers , proton pump inhibitors & food .
 Cola drinks improve absorption in patients
with achlorhydria.
 Half-life increases with the dose , it is (7-8 hrs).
Ketoconazole (cont.)
 Inactivated in liver & excreted in bile (feces )
& urine.
 Does not cross BBB.
Clinical uses
 Used topically or systematic (oral route only )
to treat :
 1- Oral & vaginal candidiasis.
 2- Dermatophytosis.
 3- Systemic mycoses & mucocutaneous
candidiasis.
Adverse Effects
 Nausea, vomiting ,anorexia
 Hepatotoxic
 Inhibits adrenal & gonadal steroids leading
to :
 Menstrual irregularities
 Loss of libido
 Impotence
 Gynaecomastia in males
Contraindications & Drug interactions
 Contraindicated in :
 Prgnancy, lactation ,hepatic dysfunction
 Interact with enzyme inhibitors , enzyme
inducers[ rifampici].
 H2 blockers & antacids decrease its absorption
Triazoles
 Fluconazole
 Itraconazole
 Voriconazole
 They are :
 Selective
 Resistant to degradation
 Causing less endocrine disturbance
Itraconazole
 Lacks endocrine side effects
 Has a broad spectrum activity
 Given orally & IV
 Food increases its absorption
 Metabolized in liver to active metabolite
 Highly lipid soluble ,well distributed to bone,
sputum ,adipose tissues.
 Can not cross BBB
Itraconazole (cont.)
 Half-life 30-40 hours
 Used orally in dermatophytosis & vulvo-
vaginal candidiasis.
 IV only in serious infections.
 Effective in AIDS-associated histoplasmosis
 Side effects :
 Nausea, vomiting, hypokalemia, hypertension,
edema, inhibits the metabolism of many drugs
as oral anticoagulants.
Fluconazole
 Water soluble
 Completely absorbed from GIT
 Excellent bioavailability after oral
administration
 Bioavailability is not affected by food or
gastric PH
 Conc. in plasma is same by oral or IV route
 Has the least effect on hepatic microsomal
enzymes
Fluconazole (cont.)
 Drug interactions are less common
 Penetrates well BBB so, it is the drug of choice
of cryptococcal meningitis
 Safely given in patients receiving bone marrow
transplants (reducing fungal infections)
 Excreted mainly through kidney
 Half-life 25-30 hours
 Resistance is not a problem
Clinical uses
 Candidiasis
 ( is effective in all forms of mucocutaneous
candidiasis)
 Cryptococcus meningitis
 Histoplasmosis, blastomycosis, , ring worm.
 Not effective in aspergillosis
Side effects
 Nausea, vomiting, headache, skin rash ,
diarrhea, abdominal pain , reversible alopecia.
 Hepatic failure may lead to death
 Highly teratogenic ( as other azoles)
 Inhibit P450 cytochrome
 No endocrine side effects
Flucytosine
 Synthetic pyrimidine antimetabolite (cytotoxic
drug ) often given in combination with
amphotericin B & itraconazole.
 Systemic fungistatic
Mechanism of action
 Converted within the fungal cell to 5-
fluorouracil( Not in human cell ), that inhibits
thymidylate synthetase enzyme that inhibits
DNA synthesis.

 ( Amphotericin B increases cell permeability ,


allowing more 5-FC to penetrate the cell, they
are synergistic).
Phrmacokinetics
 Rapidly & well absorbed orally
 Widely distributed including CSF.
 Mainly excreted unchanged through kidney
 Half-life 3-6 hours
Clinical uses
 Severe deep fungal infections as in meningitis
 Generally given with amphotericin B
 For cryptococcal meningitis in AIDS patients
Adverse Effects
 Nausea, vomiting , diarrhea, severe
enterocolitis
 Reversible neutropenia, thrombocytopenia,
bone marrow depression
 Alopecia
 Elevation in hepatic enzymes
 (some adverse effects related to 5-Fu formed
by intestinal organisms from5-FC)
Griseofulvin
 Fungistatic, has a narrow spectrum
 Given orally (Absorption increases with fatty
meal )
 Half-life 24 hours
 Taken selectively by newly formed skin &
concentrated in the keratin.
 Induces cytochrome P450 enzymes
 Should be given for 2-6weeks for skin & hair
infections to allow replacement of infected keratin
by the resistant structure
Griseofulvin(cont.)
 Inhibits fungal mitosis by interfering with microtubule
function
 Used to treat dermatophyte infections ( ring worm of
skin, hair, nails ).
 Highly effective in athlete,s foot.
 Ineffective topically.
 Not effective in subcutaneous or deep mycosis.
 Adverse effects ;
 Peripheral neuritis, mental confusion, fatigue,
vertigo,GIT upset,enzyme inducer, blurred vision.
 Increases alcohol intoxication.
CLOTRIMAZOLE
 Absorption is less than 0.5% from intact skin,
3-10% from vagina (its activity remains for 3
days ).
 Used in dermatophytes , cutaneous candidiasis
& vulvovaginal candidiasis.
 Causes : Erythema, edema, , urticaria & mild
vaginal burning sensation.

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