Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmacoepidemiology, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Ther Drug Monit. 2011 Feb;33(1):86-93. doi: 10.1097/FTD.0b013e31820530cd.
Very low voriconazole concentrations are commonly observed during therapeutic drug monitoring. Possible mechanisms include inappropriate dose selection, rapid metabolism (as a result of genetic polymorphisms or enzyme induction), and also nonadherence. We aimed to develop a method to distinguish between rapid metabolism of and nonadherence to voriconazole by quantification of voriconazole metabolites. In addition, the relevance of common genetic polymorphisms of CYP2C19 was assessed. In a retrospective study, samples with voriconazole concentrations 0.2 μg/mL or less in routine therapeutic drug monitoring (as quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography) were evaluated. Voriconazole and its N-oxide metabolite were quantified in residual blood using a highly sensitive liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy method (lower limit of quantitation = 0.03 μg/mL). Genetic polymorphisms of CYP2C19 were determined by real-time polymerase chain reaction using the hybridization probe format and the polymerase chain reaction-random fragment length polymorphism format. A total of 747 routine therapeutic drug monitoring plasma/blood samples of 335 patients treated with systemic voriconazole were analyzed and in 18.7% of all samples, voriconazole concentrations 0.2 μg/mL or less were found. In 32 samples (30 patients) with adequate dosage and timing of blood withdrawal, nonadherence was strongly suspected in seven patients because voriconazole-N-oxide concentrations were below 0.03 μg/mL, which was not observed in a reference group of 51 healthy volunteers with controlled drug intake. In 10 patients, of whom EDTA blood was available, the ultrarapid metabolizer genotype (CYP2C191*17, CYP2C1917*17) was found in 80% and its prevalence was significantly higher as compared to a reference group (P = 0.02). In conclusion, quantification of voriconazole-N-oxide allowed for detection of suspected nonadherence in one of four patients with very low voriconazole concentrations. In the remaining patients, ultrarapid metabolism resulting from the CYP2C19*17 polymorphism appears to play a major role. Thus, in the case of voriconazole therapy failure, both nonadherence and genetic factors have to be considered.
在治疗药物监测中,通常会观察到伏立康唑的浓度非常低。可能的机制包括剂量选择不当、快速代谢(由于遗传多态性或酶诱导)以及不遵医嘱。我们旨在通过定量伏立康唑代谢物来区分伏立康唑的快速代谢和不遵医嘱。此外,还评估了常见 CYP2C19 遗传多态性的相关性。在一项回顾性研究中,评估了常规治疗药物监测中伏立康唑浓度为 0.2μg/mL 或更低的样本(如高效液相色谱法所测)。使用高度敏感的液相色谱-串联质谱法(定量下限=0.03μg/mL)在残留血液中定量伏立康唑及其 N-氧化物代谢物。使用杂交探针格式和聚合酶链反应-随机片段长度多态性格式的实时聚合酶链反应确定 CYP2C19 的遗传多态性。分析了 335 例接受全身伏立康唑治疗的患者的 747 例常规治疗药物监测血浆/血液样本,在所有样本的 18.7%中,发现伏立康唑浓度为 0.2μg/mL 或更低。在 32 例(30 例患者)剂量和采血时间合适的样本中,由于伏立康唑-N-氧化物浓度低于 0.03μg/mL,强烈怀疑 7 例患者不遵医嘱,这在 51 例药物摄入得到控制的健康志愿者参考组中未观察到。在 10 例患者中,可用 EDTA 血液,发现其中 80%为超快代谢基因型(CYP2C191*17、CYP2C1917*17),与参考组相比其患病率显著更高(P=0.02)。总之,伏立康唑-N-氧化物的定量检测可在四分之一的伏立康唑浓度非常低的患者中检测到疑似不遵医嘱的情况。在其余患者中,CYP2C19*17 多态性导致的超快代谢似乎起主要作用。因此,在伏立康唑治疗失败的情况下,必须考虑不遵医嘱和遗传因素。