Azathioprine

Azathioprine

Generic Name

Azathioprine

Mechanism

Azathioprine is a pro‑drug that is converted to 6‑mercaptopurine (6-MP). 6‑MP interferes with purine synthesis, inhibiting DNA and RNA synthesis in rapidly dividing immune cells.
Conversion pathway: *Azathioprine → 6-MP* → *active metabolites* 6‑thioinosine monophosphate (6-TIMP) and 6‑thio-ATP.
Immunosuppression: Blocks T‑cell proliferation and attenuates B‑cell‑mediated antibody production.
Enzyme regulation: Thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) activity determines the balance between therapeutic efficacy and hepatotoxicity.

Pharmacokinetics

  • Absorption: ~85 % oral bioavailability; peak plasma concentration 2–3 h post‑dose.
  • Distribution: Widely distributed; protein binding ≤ 5 %.
  • Metabolism: Heterolytic conversion → 6‑MP → first‑pass hepatic metabolism:
  • *Xanthine oxidase* → inactive 6‑thiouric acid.
  • *TPMT* → 6‑MeMP (inactive, hepatotoxic).
  • *NUDT* → 6‑TIMP (active).
  • Elimination: Primarily renal excretion (~60 % unchanged drug).
  • Half‑life: 1–2 h for 6‑MP; overall drug effect lasts 4–54 days due to metabolite persistence.

Indications

  • Autoimmune disorders:
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
  • Rheumatoid arthritis (RA)
  • Organ transplantation:
  • Solid‑organ (kidney, heart, liver) & bone marrow transplant rejection prophylaxis.
  • Inflammatory bowel disease:
  • Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis (maintenance therapy).
  • Pediatric indications:
  • Severe aplastic anemia, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura.

Contraindications

  • Absolute contraindications:
  • Active, untreated infection.
  • Severe, uncontrolled myelosuppression.
  • Known hypersensitivity to thiopurines.
  • Severe hepatic impairment (ALT > 3× ULN).
  • Precautions:
  • Pregnancy: Category D; teratogenic → avoid.
  • TPMT deficiency: ↑ risk of hepatotoxicity & leukopenia.
  • Concurrent myelosuppressants: e.g., cyclosphamide; additive bone‑marrow toxicity.
  • Black‑box: rare risk of drug‑induced lymphomas and solid‑organ cancers with prolonged use.

Dosing

ConditionTypical Starting Dose
Transplant rejection prophylaxis1–2 mg/kg/day (split BID)
SLE / RA1–1.5 mg/kg/day (cap ≤ 3 mg/kg)
IBD maintenance1.5 mg/kg/day (max 150 mg)
Pediatric (<12 y)2–3 mg/kg/day

Titration: Increase by 0.5–1 mg/kg every 4–6 weeks based on response & labs.
Maintenance: Often lower dose (0.5–1 mg/kg) after remission.
Administration: Oral liquid or capsule; can be taken with or without food.

Monitoring

ParameterFrequencyGoal/Alert
CBC with diffAt baseline, 2–3 weeks post‑initiation, then monthly (or as clinically indicated).Neutrophils  3× ULN → hold.
TPMT activity (if available)Prior to initiation.Low/absent TPMT → dose 1/10 or consider alternative.
Total IgE (in IBD)Optional for monitoring response.Elevated IgE → disease activity.
Drug levels (6-TGN/6-MMP)At 3–6 months if refractory or toxicity suspected.6-TGN 230–430 pmol/8 × 10⁸ RBC.

Clinical Pearls

  • TPMT genotyping – the single most predictive tool for adverse events; a practical approach is dose reduction to 0.1–0.3 mg/kg/day in TPMT‑deficient patients.
  • Drug interactions:
  • Azathioprine + 6‑mercaptopurine (another thiopurine) = additive toxicity.
  • Azathioprine + 5‑ASA (mesalamine) may increase hepatotoxicity.
  • Azathioprine + ciprofloxacin → ↑ neutropenia risk.
  • Stopping rules: Stop if neutrophils ≤ 1 × 10⁹/L, platelets ≤ 50 × 10⁹/L, or hepatic enzymes > 3× ULN.
  • Patient education: Advise strict avoidance of live vaccines and discuss risk of fungal infections; use antifungal prophylaxis in high‑risk transplant recipients.
  • Drug compatibility: Azathioprine can be safely combined with mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) in transplant regimens, but monitor for overlapping myelosuppression.
  • Re‑treatment: If azathioprine is held for > 24 h, restart with *max 75 % of prior dose* and titrate cautiously.

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Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

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