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氟康唑在浅表和全身性真菌病中的临床药代动力学

Clinical pharmacokinetics of fluconazole in superficial and systemic mycoses.

作者信息

Debruyne D

机构信息

Laboratory of Pharmacology, University Hospital Center, Caen, France.

出版信息

Clin Pharmacokinet. 1997 Jul;33(1):52-77. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199733010-00005.

Abstract

The bis triazole agent fluconazole is used widely in the treatment of superficial and deep mycoses. A single oral dose of fluconazole 150 mg gives a mean long term clinical cure rate of 84 +/- 5% and is considered a valuable alternative to other topical antifungal drugs for vaginal candidiasis. A clinical cure rate of 90.4% for oropharyngeal candidiasis was obtained with 100mg daily for a minimum of 14 days; however, as for the other azoles the rate of relapse was large (40%) in immunocompromised patients. A daily dose of 100mg for at last 3 weeks gave satisfying outcomes for oesophageal candidiasis. Most patients (71 to 86%) with signs and symptoms of urinary tract candidiasis show beneficial clinical results when given oral fluconazole 50mg for several weeks. Fluconazole 50 to 150 mg given for weeks or months results in over 90% clinical cure or improvement for cutaneous mycosis including tinea, pityriasis, cryptococcosis and candidiasis. Prolonged (6 to 12 months) fluconazole 150 mg once a week is needed to treat onychomycosis successfully. Higher oral doses (200 to 400 mg daily) for long periods are generally used to treat deep mycoses such as meningitis, ophthalmitis, pneumonia, hepatosplenic mycosis and endocarditis. Fluconazole is effective for treating the fungal peritonitis which can complicate continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). A regimen of 50 mg intraperitoneally or 100 mg orally was used in these patients with impaired renal function. The dosage schedules used to treat disseminated fungal infections due to systemic mycoses with different or multiple foci of infections vary widely, with doses of 50 to 400 mg given orally or intravenously for between 1 week and several months. The most recent clinical reports have investigated the use of prophylaxis with fluconazole 100 to 400 mg daily, in immunocompromised patients. Fluconazole is found in body fluids such as vaginal secretions, breast milk, saliva, sputum and cerebrospinal fluid at concentrations comparable with those determined in blood after single or multiple doses. There is an excellent linear plasma concentration-dose relationship, but the mycological and clinical responses do not appear to be well correlated with the dose. A total maximum daily dose of 1600 mg is recommended to avoid neurological toxicity. Data from pharmacokinetic studies conducted in patients, mainly those with AIDS, and using a 1-compartment model give very constant parameters similar to those obtained in healthy individuals. Bioavailability, measured in HIV-positive patients and those with AIDS, exceeded 93% for tablets, suspension and suppositories. The time to reach peak plasma concentrations (tmax) was 2.4 to 3.7 hours. The peak plasma drug concentration (Cmax) obtained after a 100 mg oral dose was 2 mg/L. Areas under the concentration-time curve (AUC) obtained in different studies all correlate well with the dose (r = 0.926). The AUC determined after 200 and 25 mg suppositories were similarly well correlated. Hypochlorhydria does not affect the absorption of fluconazole, neither does food intake, race (Japanese or Caucasian) or gastrointestinal resection. Binding to plasma protein is low (11.14%) and is increased to 23% in cancer patients. Fluconazole is rapidly distributed to the tissue, where it accumulates. Tissues fall into 1 of 4 groups of increasing drug concentration: blood, bone and brain have the lowest concentrations, and spleen has the highest. The volume of distribution (Vd) remains stable at 46.3 +/- 7.9L and is considered to be an 'invariant' parameter across species. Fluconazole is poorly metabolised and is mainly eliminated unchanged in the urine. The percentage of the dose recovered in the urine in 48 hours is close to 60%. Concentrations in the urine are high and the half-life (t1/2) is long (37.2 +/- 5.5h) in patients, mainly those with AIDS, which is not significantly different from the t1/2 (31.4 +/- 4.7 hours) in healthy individuals. (ABSTRACT TRUN

摘要

双三唑类药物氟康唑广泛用于治疗浅表和深部真菌病。口服150mg氟康唑单次剂量的长期平均临床治愈率为84±5%,被认为是治疗阴道念珠菌病的其他局部抗真菌药物的有价值替代品。对于口咽念珠菌病,每日100mg至少服用14天,临床治愈率为90.4%;然而,与其他唑类药物一样,免疫功能低下患者的复发率较高(40%)。每日100mg至少服用3周对食管念珠菌病有满意的疗效。大多数有尿路念珠菌病体征和症状的患者(71%至86%)口服50mg氟康唑数周后显示出有益的临床效果。给予50至150mg氟康唑数周或数月,对包括癣、花斑癣、隐球菌病和念珠菌病在内的皮肤真菌病的临床治愈率或改善率超过90%。成功治疗甲癣需要每周一次口服150mg氟康唑,持续较长时间(6至12个月)。通常使用较高的口服剂量(每日200至400mg)长期治疗深部真菌病,如脑膜炎、眼炎、肺炎、肝脾真菌病和心内膜炎。氟康唑对治疗可并发持续性非卧床腹膜透析(CAPD)的真菌性腹膜炎有效。肾功能受损的患者采用50mg腹腔内注射或100mg口服的治疗方案。用于治疗因系统性真菌病导致的播散性真菌感染且感染部位不同或有多个病灶的给药方案差异很大,口服或静脉注射剂量为50至400mg,持续1周至数月。最近的临床报告研究了在免疫功能低下患者中每日预防性使用100至400mg氟康唑的情况。在阴道分泌物、母乳、唾液、痰液和脑脊液等体液中发现的氟康唑浓度与单次或多次给药后血液中的浓度相当。血浆浓度与剂量呈良好的线性关系,但真菌学和临床反应似乎与剂量没有很好的相关性。建议每日最大总剂量为1600mg以避免神经毒性。在患者(主要是艾滋病患者)中进行药代动力学研究并使用单室模型得到的数据给出的参数非常稳定,与健康个体获得的参数相似。在HIV阳性患者和艾滋病患者中测量的生物利用度,片剂、混悬液和栓剂均超过93%。达到血浆峰浓度(tmax)的时间为2.4至3.7小时。口服100mg剂量后获得的血浆药物峰浓度(Cmax)为2mg/L。不同研究中获得的浓度-时间曲线下面积(AUC)均与剂量有良好的相关性(r = 0.926)。200mg和25mg栓剂后测定的AUC相关性同样良好。胃酸缺乏不影响氟康唑的吸收,食物摄入、种族(日本人或白种人)或胃肠道切除术也不影响。与血浆蛋白的结合率较低(11.14%),在癌症患者中增加到23%。氟康唑迅速分布到组织中并在其中蓄积。组织分为药物浓度递增的4组中的1组:血液、骨骼和脑的浓度最低,脾脏的浓度最高。分布容积(Vd)保持稳定,为46.3±7.9L,被认为是跨物种的“不变”参数。氟康唑代谢不良,主要以原形经尿液排出。48小时内尿液中回收的剂量百分比接近60%。在患者(主要是艾滋病患者)中尿液浓度高且半衰期(t1/2)长(37.2±5.5小时),与健康个体的t1/2(31.4±4.7小时)无显著差异。(摘要截断)

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