AUTHOR=Zentner Isaac , Back Hyun-moon , Kagan Leonid , Subbian Selvakumar , Nagajyothi Jyothi , Srivastava Shashikant , Pasipanodya Jotam , Gumbo Tawanda , Bisson Gregory P. , Vinnard Christopher TITLE=Redox Imbalance and Oxidative DNA Damage During Isoniazid Treatment of HIV-Associated Tuberculosis: A Clinical and Translational Pharmacokinetic Study JOURNAL=Frontiers in Pharmacology VOLUME=11 YEAR=2020 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pharmacology/articles/10.3389/fphar.2020.01103 DOI=10.3389/fphar.2020.01103 ISSN=1663-9812 ABSTRACT=Background

The potential for hepatotoxicity during isoniazid-based tuberculosis (TB) treatment presents a major challenge for TB control programs worldwide. We sought to determine whether pharmacokinetic exposures of isoniazid and its metabolites were related to cellular oxidation/reduction status and downstream markers of oxidative DNA damage.

Methods

We performed intensive pharmacokinetic sampling among isoniazid-treated patients to determine the relative plasma exposures of isoniazid, acetylisoniazid, hydrazine, and acetylhydrazine. Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling was used to estimate liver tissue exposures during a 24-h dosing interval for each compound. We experimentally treated HepG2 cells with isoniazid and metabolites at equimolar concentrations corresponding to these exposures for 7, 14, and 28-day periods, and performed assays related to redox imbalance and oxidative DNA damage at each timepoint. We related a urine marker of oxidative DNA damage to serum isoniazid pharmacokinetic exposures and pharmacogenetics in a clinical study.

Results

Among isoniazid-treated patients, serum concentrations of hydrazine and isoniazid concentrations were highly correlated. At equimolar concentrations that approximated hepatic tissue exposures during a 24-h dosing interval, hydrazine demonstrated the highest levels of redox imbalance, mitochondrial injury, and oxidative DNA damage over a 28-day treatment period. In a clinical validation study of isoniazid-treated TB patients, peak isoniazid serum concentrations were positively associated with a urine biomarker of oxidative DNA damage.

Conclusions

Isoniazid and its metabolites share the potential for oxidative cellular damage, with the greatest effects observed for hydrazine. Future studies should investigate the clinical consequences of oxidative stress with regards to clinical episodes of drug induced liver injury during isoniazid treatment.