Abstract

The potent antituberculosis activity and long half-life of bedaquiline make it an attractive candidate for use in long-acting/extended-release formulations for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI). Our objective was to evaluate a long-acting injectable (LAI) bedaquiline formulation in a validated paucibacillary mouse model of LTBI. Following immunization with Mycobacterium bovis rBCG30, BALB/c mice were challenged by aerosol infection with M. tuberculosis H37Rv. Treatment began 13 weeks after challenge infection with one of the following regimens: an untreated negative-control regimen; positive-control regimens of daily rifampin (10 mg/kg of body weight), once-weekly rifapentine (15 mg/kg) and isoniazid (50 mg/kg), or daily bedaquiline (25 mg/kg); test regimens of one, two, or three monthly doses of LAI bedaquiline at 160 mg/dose (BLAI-160); and test regimens of daily bedaquiline at 2.67 mg/kg (B2.67), 5.33 mg/kg (B5.33), or 8 mg/kg (B8) to deliver the same total amount of bedaquiline as one, two, or three doses of BLAI-160, respectively. All drugs were administered orally, except for BLAI-160 (intramuscular injection). The primary outcome was the decline in M. tuberculosis lung CFU counts during 12 weeks of treatment. The negative- and positive-control regimens performed as expected. One, two, and three doses of BLAI-160 resulted in decreases of 2.9, 3.2, and 3.5 log10 CFU/lung, respectively, by week 12. Daily oral dosing with B2.67, B5.33, and B8 decreased lung CFU counts by 1.6, 2.8, and 4.1 log10, respectively. One dose of BLAI-160 exhibited activity for at least 12 weeks. The sustained activity of BLAI-160 indicates that it shows promise as a short-course LTBI treatment requiring few patient encounters to ensure treatment completion.

Highlights

  • The potent antituberculosis activity and long half-life of bedaquiline make it an attractive candidate for use in long-acting/extended-release formulations for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI)

  • Another modification with the potential to significantly reduce the burden on health care delivery systems and improve LTBI treatment completion rates is the use of long-acting injectable (LAI) formulations for drug administration [9]

  • Significant advances have been made in the development of LAI formulations of antiretroviral drugs administered monthly or bimonthly for both the prevention and treatment of HIV infection [12,13,14,15], with LAI formulations of cabotegravir and rilpivirine currently being evaluated in a phase 3 randomized clinical trial in adults with HIV-1 infection (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02951052)

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Summary

Introduction

The potent antituberculosis activity and long half-life of bedaquiline make it an attractive candidate for use in long-acting/extended-release formulations for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI). An example is the 1-month daily rifapentine-plus-isoniazid regimen recently evaluated in a phase 3 clinical trial for the treatment of LTBI in individuals infected with HIV [8]; the efficacy of this regimen was not inferior to that of the 9-month control regimen of daily isoniazid and was associated with statistically significantly higher rates of treatment completion. Another modification with the potential to significantly reduce the burden on health care delivery systems and improve LTBI treatment completion rates is the use of long-acting injectable (LAI) formulations for drug administration [9]. An LAI formulation of bedaquiline has the potential to significantly shorten and simplify LTBI treatment, including MDR-LTBI treatment

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