Macrobid
Macrobid
Generic Name
Macrobid
Mechanism
- Intracellular activation: Nitrofurantoin is reduced by bacterial nitroreductases to reactive intermediates.
- Multiple targets:
- Inhibit bacterial *DNA*, *RNA*, and *protein* synthesis.
- Interfere with cell wall and oxygen‑dependent enzymes.
- High urinary concentration: Achieves >80 % of the dose excreted unchanged, ensuring potent activity in urine while sparing systemic tissues.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: ~60 % oral bioavailability; absorption enhanced by food.
- Distribution: Widely distributed; concentrates in renal tubular cells and urine.
- Metabolism: Minimal; metabolized to a small volume of nitrofuran metabolites.
- Elimination: Primarily renal excretion; dose‑adjusted by creatinine clearance (CrCl).
- Half‑life: ~3–4 h (short, but adequate urinary exposure).
Indications
- Uncomplicated lower UTI (cystitis) in adults and children ≥6 months.
- As a first‑line agent when susceptibility data are unavailable or when local resistance patterns are low for nitrofurantoin.
- Not indicated for:
- Pyelonephritis, prostatitis, or urosepsis.
- Patients with significant renal impairment (CrCl < 30 mL/min).
Contraindications
- Contraindications:
- CrCl 7 days.
- Hematologic: Rare hemolysis in patients with G6PD deficiency.
- Neuropathy: Chronic therapy (>30 days) may cause peripheral neuropathy.
Dosing
| Renal Function (CrCl) | Dosage | Frequency | Duration (≥12 days usually)** | |
| ≥ 60 mL/min | 500 mg | q12h (every 12 h) or q24h (once daily) | 1–5 days (lower doses, shorter courses); 7–14 days if high risk | q24h is acceptable for uncomplicated cystitis if tolerated |
| 30–59 mL/min | 500 mg | q12h (every 12 h) | 7 days | |
| < 30 mL/min | Contraindicated | — | — |
• Administer with food to improve absorption and reduce GI upset.
• Switch to q24h once adequate urinary concentrations are achieved (≈4 h after dose).
• For prophylaxis (e.g., recurrent UTI), use 250 mg q12h for 7–12 months; monitor renal function.
Adverse Effects
- Common (≤5 %): Nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, abdominal pain, metallic taste.
- Serious (>2 %):
- Acute interstitial nephritis and pulmonary hypersensitivity reactions.
- Hepatic enzyme elevations (≈2 %).
- G6PD‑related hemolytic anemia (rare).
- Peripheral neuropathy with prolonged use (>30 days).
Monitoring
- Renal function: CrCl at baseline, then every 2–4 weeks during prolonged therapy.
- Liver enzymes: ALT/AST before therapy and periodically if >1 month of use.
- Pulmonary: Evaluate for dyspnea or cough; consider chest imaging if symptoms develop.
- Hematology: CBC if signs of hemolysis or anemia.
- Pregnancy & lactation: Avoid if contraindicated; counsel patients.
Clinical Pearls
- Rapid urinary clearance allows a once‑daily regimen for uncomplicated cystitis, improving adherence; however, q12h remains the standard for initial dosing until adequate urinary levels are confirmed.
- Avoid in pregnancy: Nitrofurantoin is a *contraindicated* drug after 34 weeks gestation and in lactation due to potential hemolysis in the infant if G6PD‑deficient.
- Combine with local antibiograms: In communities with >10 % resistance rates to nitrofurantoin, consider an alternative agent rather than empiric use.
- Use caution in elderly: Age correlates with decreased CrCl; re‑calculate dosing to prevent accumulation and adverse effects.
- If renal function improves during therapy, consider stepping down to q24h to reduce GI side effects and enhance compliance.
- Educate patients to take the medication with food and to finish the full course even if symptoms resolve; premature cessation can precipitate recurrence and resistance.
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• References: US FDA label, CDC UTI Treatment Guidelines (2024), KDIGO guidelines for drug monitoring, *Current Medical Therapy* 2025.