Abstract

BackgroundThe cost and complexity of current approaches to therapeutic drug monitoring during tuberculosis (TB) therapy limits widespread use in areas of greatest need. We sought to determine whether urine colorimetry could have a novel application as a form of therapeutic drug monitoring during anti-TB therapy.MethodsAmong healthy volunteers, we evaluated 3 dose sizes of rifampin (150 mg, 300 mg, and 600 mg), performed intensive pharmacokinetic sampling, and collected a timed urine void at 4 h post-dosing. The absorbance peak at 475 nm was measured after rifamycin extraction. The optimal cutoff was evaluated in a study of 39 HIV/TB patients undergoing TB treatment in Botswana.ResultsIn the derivation study, a urine colorimetric assay value of 4.0 × 10−2 Abs, using a timed void 4 h after dosing, demonstrated a sensitivity of 92 % and specificity of 60 % to detect a peak rifampin concentration (Cmax) under 8 mg/L, with an area under the ROC curve of 0.92. In the validation study, this cutoff was specific (100 %) but insensitive (28 %). We observed similar test characteristics for a target Cmax target of 6.6 mg/L, and a target area under the drug concentration-versus-time curve (AUC0–8) target of 24.1 mg•hour/L.ConclusionsThe urine colorimetric assay was specific but insensitive to detect low rifampin serum concentrations among HIV/TB patients. In future work we will attempt to optimize sampling times and assay performance, with the goal of delivering a method that can translate into a point-of-care assessment of rifampin exposure during anti-TB therapy.

Highlights

  • The cost and complexity of current approaches to therapeutic drug monitoring during tuberculosis (TB) therapy limits widespread use in areas of greatest need

  • We evaluated the ROC curve for the urine colorimetric assay corresponding to a serum rifampin maximum concentration (Cmax) target of 8 mg/L, which is the standard-of-care target for therapeutic drug monitoring during anti-TB treatment [8]

  • Based on pre-clinical rifampin pharmacodynamic data, we evaluated a rifampin AUC0–8 target of 24.1 mghour/L [20]

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Summary

Methods

We evaluated 3 dose sizes of rifampin (150 mg, 300 mg, and 600 mg), performed intensive pharmacokinetic sampling, and collected a timed urine void at 4 h post-dosing. Results: In the derivation study, a urine colorimetric assay value of 4.0 × 10−2 Abs, using a timed void 4 h after dosing, demonstrated a sensitivity of 92 % and specificity of 60 % to detect a peak rifampin concentration (Cmax) under 8 mg/L, with an area under the ROC curve of 0.92. Conclusions: The urine colorimetric assay was specific but insensitive to detect low rifampin serum concentrations among HIV/TB patients. We sequentially evaluated 3 dose sizes in separate study visits, with rifampin dosed at 150 mg, 300 mg, and 600 mg. Urine was aliquoted into single-use 3 mL conical vials and stored at -70C until ready for analysis

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