Abstract

Cryptococcal meningitis is a lethal disease with few therapeutic options. Induction therapy with fluconazole has been consistently demonstrated to be associated with suboptimal microbiological and clinical outcomes. Exposure to fluconazole causes dynamic changes in antifungal susceptibility, which are associated with the development of aneuploidy. The implications of this phenomenon for pharmacodynamics of fluconazole for cryptococcal meningitis are poorly understood. The pharmacodynamics of fluconazole were studied using a hollow-fiber infection model (HFIM) and a well-characterized murine model of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis. The relationship between drug exposure and both antifungal killing and the emergence of resistance was quantified. The same relationships were further evaluated in a recently described group of patients with cryptococcal meningitis undergoing induction therapy with fluconazole at 800 to 1,200 mg/day. The pattern of emergence of fluconazole resistance followed an "inverted U." Resistance amplification was maximal and suppressed at ratios of the area under the concentration-time curve for the free, unbound fraction of the drug to the MIC (fAUC:MIC) of 34.5 to 138 and 305.6, respectively. Emergence of resistance was observed in vivo with an fAUC:MIC of 231.4. Aneuploidy with duplication of chromosome 1 was demonstrated to be the underlying mechanism in both experimental models. The pharmacokinetic (PK)-pharmacodynamic model accurately described the PK, antifungal killing, and emergence of resistance. Monte Carlo simulations from the clinical pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model showed that only 12.8% of simulated patients receiving fluconazole at 1,200 mg/day achieved sterilization of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) after 2 weeks and that 83.4% had a persistent subpopulation that was resistant to fluconazole. Fluconazole is primarily ineffective due to the emergence of resistance. Treatment with 1,200 mg/day leads to the killing of a susceptible subpopulation but is compromised by the emergence of resistance.IMPORTANCE Cryptococcal meningitis is a lethal disease with few treatment options. The incidence remains high and intricately linked with the HIV/AIDS epidemic. In many parts of the world, fluconazole is the only agent that is available for the initial treatment of cryptococcal meningitis despite considerable evidence that it is associated with suboptimal microbiological and clinical outcomes. Fluconazole has a fungistatic mode of action: it predominantly inhibits growth rather than causing fungal killing. Our work shows that the pattern of fluconazole activity is caused by the emergence of resistance in Cryptococcus not detected by standard susceptibility tests, with chromosomal duplication/aneuploidy as the main mechanism. Resistance emergence is related to drug exposure and occurs with the use of clinically relevant regimens. Hence, fluconazole (and potentially other agents that target 14-alpha-demethylase) is compromised by an intrinsic property that limits its effectiveness. However, this resistance may be potentially overcome by dosage escalation or the use of combination therapy.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Cryptococcal meningitis is a lethal disease with few treatment options

  • The simulations reflected the PK-PD data from the Tanzanian clinical study (9% sterilization) and were comparable with microbiological data from two prior clinical African cohorts receiving fluconazole monotherapy at 1,200 mg/day showing 2-week cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sterilization in 6% and 18% of patients, respectively [3, 4]. This pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic study demonstrates that fluconazole at clinically relevant exposures fails to sterilize the central nervous system (CNS) and is ineffective at preventing the rapid emergence of resistance

  • The relatively poor microbiological clearance and ultimate clinical outcome following induction with fluconazole as a single agent have traditionally been attributed to a fungistatic pattern of killing

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE Cryptococcal meningitis is a lethal disease with few treatment options. The incidence remains high and intricately linked with the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Fluconazole monotherapy is a suboptimal option for initial treatment of cryptococcal meningitis because of emergence of resistance. C. neoformans displays heteroresistance to fluconazole; i.e., there is a resistant subpopulation present even in the absence of the drug, which is so small (often Ͻ1%) that it may be missed by conventional antifungal susceptibility (MIC) testing. Following drug exposure, this subpopulation expands (or at least persists) during drug therapy, while the susceptible yeast subpopulation is killed [11]. A better understanding of the relationship between fluconazole exposure and the emergence of resistance is required to further optimize fluconazole-based regimens for the treatment of cryptococcal meningitis

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