High-Dose Isoniazid Lacks EARLY Bactericidal Activity Against Isoniazid-resistant Tuberculosis Mediated by katG Mutations: A Randomized, Phase 2 Clinical Trial

Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2024 Apr 2. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202311-2004OC. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Rationale: Observational studies suggest that high-dose isoniazid may be efficacious in treating multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). However, its activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) with katG mutations (which typically confer high-level resistance) is not established.

Objective: To characterize early bactericidal activity (EBA) of high-dose isoniazid in patients with tuberculosis caused by katG-mutated M.tb.

Methods: A5312 was a Phase 2A randomized, open-label trial. Participants with tuberculosis caused by katG-mutated M.tb were randomized to receive 15 or 20 mg/kg isoniazid daily for 7 days. Daily sputum samples were collected for quantitative culture. Intensive PK sampling was performed on day 6. Data were pooled across all A5312 participants for analysis (drug-sensitive, inhA-mutated, and katG-mutated M.tb). EBA was determined using nonlinear mixed-effects modelling.

Results: Of 80 treated participants, 21 had katG-mutated M.tb. Isoniazid PK was best described by a two-compartment model with an effect of NAT2 acetylator phenotype on clearance. Model-derived Cmax and AUC in the 15 and 20 mg/kg groups were 15.0 and 22.1 mg/L and 57.6 and 76.8 mg∙h/L, respectively. Isoniazid bacterial kill was described using an effect compartment and a sigmoidal Emax relationship. Isoniazid potency against katG-mutated M.tb was approximately 10-fold lower than against inhA-mutated M.tb. The highest dose (20 mg/kg) did not demonstrate measurable EBA, except in a subset of slow NAT2 acetylators (who experienced the highest concentrations). There were no grade 3 or higher drug-related adverse events.

Conclusions: This study found negligible bactericidal activity of high-dose isoniazid (15-20 mg/kg) in the majority of participants with tuberculosis caused by katG-mutated M.tb. Clinical trial registration available at www.

Clinicaltrials: gov, ID: NCT01936831.

Keywords: Tuberculosis; early bactericidal activity; isoniazid resistance; katG mutation; phase 2 clinical trial.

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01936831