ANTIVIRALDRUGTHERAPY(EXCLUDINGANTI-HIV DRUGS) 347
ganciclovir, yielding a ganciclovirbioavailability of 60%.
Ganciclovirhas a mean elimination t1/2of between two and
five hours and is virtually totally excreted by the kidney. Dose
reduction is needed in renal failure.
Drug interactions
Probenecid reduces renal clearance of ganciclovir.
Antineoplastic drugs, co-trimoxazoleandamphotericin B
increase its toxic effects on rapidly dividing tissues including
bone marrow, skin and gut epithelium. Zidovudine(AZT)
should not be given concomitantly with ganciclovirbecause of
the potentiation of bone marrow suppression.
The pharmacology and therapeutics of other available
nucleoside analogue anti-herpes drugs are shown in Table 45.3.
RIBAVIRIN (TRIBAVIRIN)
Uses
Ribavirinis active against a number of RNA and DNA (HSV-1
and HSV-2, influenza) viruses. It is used to treat hepatitis C
(combined with interferon) or bronchiolitis secondary to
respiratory syncytial virus infection in infants and children.
Administration for bronchiolitis is via aerosol inhalation.
Mechanism of action
Ribavirinis taken up into cells and phosphorylated to trib-
avirin 5-monophosphate by adenosine kinase and is then
phosphorylated to its di- and triphosphates by other cellular
kinases. Ribavirin-triphosphate inhibits the guanylation reac-
tion in the formation of the 5cap of mRNA and inhibits viral
RNA methyltransferase. It has little or no effect on mam-
malian RNA methyltransferase.
Adverse effects
Systemic administration can cause:
- dose-related haemolytic anaemia and haematopoietic
suppression; - rigors (during infusion);
- rash, pruritus;
- teratogenesis.
No systemic adverse effects of ribavirinhave been reported
following administration by aerosol or nebulizer.
General adverse effects include: - worsening respiration and bacterial pneumonia
(super-infection); - pneumothorax;
- teratogenesis (a concern even with aerosol exposure of
healthcare workers).
Pharmacokinetics
Following nebulized administration, only small amounts of
ribavirinare absorbed systemically.
Table 45.3:Summary of available aciclovir-like antiviral agents
Druga Use Side effects Pharmacokinetics Other specific comments
Famciclovir Herpes simplex virus See aciclovir Prodrug of penciclovir. High bioavailability
(HSV) and recurrent Bioavailability of penciclovir is prodrug of penciclovir.
genital HSV varicella 77% from famciclovir. t1/2is 2.5 h. Aciclovir-resistant isolates
zoster (VZV) Renal excretion are cross-resistant
Penciclovir Systemic therapy, for See aciclovir. Bioavailability is very good. t1/2 High bioavailability. Viral
HSV and VZV and Same as placebo for is 2.5 h. Renal excretion (in renal DNA polymerase
hepatitis B. Topical topical use failure t1/218 h). Intracellular not as sensitive to
therapy for HSV triphosphate is longer lasting Pen-Triphosphate.
(7–20 h) than aciclovir Aciclovir-resistant isolates
are cross-resistant.
Valaciclovir HSV infection but L-Valyl ester of aciclovir. Rapid absorption bioavailability High bioavailability.
uncertainty about Haemolytic–uraemic / is 54%. Converted to aciclovir Aciclovir-resistant isolates
VZV and CMV TTP syndrome in before phosphorylation are cross-resistant
in future immunosuppressed
individuals
Cidofovir Intravenous therapy See ganciclovir, but has Plasma t1/2of cidofovir is 2.6 h CMV isolates resistant to
for HSV and CMV been noted to cause and of cidofovir diphosphate ganciclovir are sensitive.
renal failure (active) is 17–30 h. Cidofovir is Not to be used in patients
renally eliminated with renal failure
aOther drugs in the antiviral arena with recent availability or undergoing further clinical development include sorivudine (nucleoside analogue for VZV)
n-Docosanol (topical cream for recurrent herpes labialis) and Fomiversen (an antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotide complementary to human CMV
immediate–early mRNA, used in AIDS patients).