4.8 Article

Noninvasive 11C-rifampin positron emission tomography reveals drug biodistribution in tuberculous meningitis

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 470, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aau0965

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-EB020539, R01-HL131829, R01-HD069562]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NICHD Pediatric Critical Care and Trauma Scientist Development Program) [K12-HD047349]
  3. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine
  4. Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital Foundation Institutional Grant Program

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Tuberculous meningitis (TBM) is a devastating form of tuberculosis (TB), and key TB antimicrobials, including rifampin, have restricted brain penetration. A lack of reliable data on intralesional drug biodistribution in infected tissues has limited pharmacokinetic (PK) modeling efforts to optimize TBM treatments. Current methods to measure intralesional drug distribution rely on tissue resection, which is difficult in humans and generally limited to a single time point even in animals. In this study, we developed a multidrug treatment model in rabbits with experimentally induced TBM and performed serial noninvasive dynamic C-11-rifampin positron emission tomography (PET) over 6 weeks. Area under the curve brain/plasma ratios were calculated using PET and correlated with postmortem mass spectrometry. We demonstrate that rifampin penetration into infected brain lesions is limited, spatially heterogeneous, and decreases rapidly as early as 2 weeks into treatment. Moreover, rifampin concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid did not correlate well with those in the brain lesions. First-in-human C-11-rifampin PET performed in a patient with TBM confirmed these findings. PK modeling predicted that rifampin doses (>= 30 mg/kg) were required to achieve adequate intralesional concentrations in young children with TBM. These data demonstrate the proof of concept of PET as a clinically translatable tool to noninvasively measure intralesional antimicrobial distribution in infected tissues.

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