PII-094 - UNRAVELING MOXIFLOXACIN'S BEHAVIOR IN NEXT-GENERATION TB REGIMENS.
Thursday, May 29, 2025
5:00 PM - 6:30 PM East Coast USA Time
A. Bustion1, E. Yang2, P. Van Brantegem2, M. Gouillou3, D. Vargas Vasquez4, E. SÌanchez Garavito5, F. Garcia6, K. Khazhidinov7,8, A. Magzumova9, H. Nguyen10, H. Phan11, S. Wasserman12, U. Khan13, A. Aftab14, S. Mpinda15, S. Mohale15, D. Holtzman15, M. Mazanhanga16, L. Wiesner17, F. Varaine18, R. Savic2,19, H. McIlleron17, G. Velásquez19,20; 1University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA, 2University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States, 3Epicentre, Paris, France, 4Pneumology Service, Hospital Nacional Hipólito Unanue, Lima, Peru, 5Pneumology Service, Hospital Nacional Sergio Bernales, Lima, Peru, 6Partners In Health/Socios En Salud Sucursal Peru, Lima, Peru, 7Partners In Health-Kazahkstan, Almaty, Kazakhstan, 8Site Management Organization Medical Education and Research Alliance, Almaty, Kazakhstan, 9Partners In Health-Kazahkstan, Almaty, Kazahkstan, 10National Lung Hospital, Hanoi, Vietnam, 11VNTP-UCSF Research Collaboration Unit; Center for Promotion of Advancement of Society, Hanoi, Vietnam, 12Institute for Infection and Immunity, City St George's, University of London, London, United Kingdom, 13Interactive Research and Development(IRD), Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 14Interactive Research and Development(IRD), Karachi, Pakistan, 15Partners In Health-Lesotho, Maseru, Lesotho, 16Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa, Cape Town, South Africa, 17Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa, 18MSF-France, Paris, France, 19UCSF Center for Tuberculosis, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States, 20Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases, and Global Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Postdoctoral Fellow University of California San Francisco San Francisco, California, United States
Background: Moxifloxacin (MXF) is critical for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) and rifampicin-resistant TB (RR-TB) regimens. MXF may prolong the QT interval, particularly when co-administered with other QT-prolonging drugs, and clofazimine co-administration may alter MXF bioavailability. Despite its broad use, therefore, MXF interactions with companion drugs are inadequately understood. This study aimed to characterize MXF in two novel regimens and explore the impact of drug-drug interactions and patient-specific factors on its pharmacokinetics (PK). Methods: We analyzed two MXF-containing regimens in the PandrTB (NCT03827811) observational sub-study of endTB (NCT02754765), a Phase 3 randomized controlled trial. N=38 participants with pulmonary TB received 400mg QD of oral MXF for nine months, with 288 plasma concentration observations. Data was analyzed using non-linear mixed effects modeling (NONMEM 7.5.0), guided by objective function value, goodness-of-fit, and visual predictive check plots. Clinical covariates were tested for effects on PK parameters using Stepwise Covariate Model-building (scmplus). Results: A one-compartment model with linear absorption and elimination best described the data. Allometric scaling was applied to clearance and volume of distribution. Inter-individual variability was implemented on clearance, and inter-occasion variability on bioavailability. The final model aligned with previous MXF PK models, and uniquely, estimated the unbound fraction. Two covariates were statistically significant and included in the final model: serum albumin (negatively correlated with clearance; p=0.002), and sex (lower volume of distribution in females; p=0.00002). Clofazimine co-administration had no significant effect. Conclusion: This population PK model for MXF in two novel anti-TB regimens revealed significant associations between MXF PK and participant-specific factors (sex, serum albumin). Contrary to previous reports, clofazimine co-administration did not significantly affect MXF PK. These findings have important implications for optimizing MXF dosing in MDR-TB and RR-TB regimens, potentially improving participant outcomes and reducing adverse effects.