Oseltamivir
Oseltamivir
Generic Name
Oseltamivir
Mechanism
Oseltamivir is a *neuraminidase inhibitor* that blocks the enzyme neuraminidase on the surface of influenza A and B viruses. This inhibition:
• Prevents cleavage of sialic acid residues,
• Reduces release of newly formed virions from infected cells,
• Limits spread of the virus within the respiratory tract.
The agent thus shortens disease duration and mitigates symptom severity when initiated early.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption – Rapid oral absorption; peak plasma concentration occurs 0.7–1 h post‑dose.
- Bioavailability – 15 % of the administered drug is converted into the active metabolite, oseltamivir carboxylate.
- Distribution – Volume of distribution ≈ 3 L/kg; low protein binding (< 10 %).
- Metabolism – Minimal hepatic metabolism; primarily hydrolyzed to the active carboxylate form.
- Elimination – Renal excretion unchanged (≈ 70 %) and as carboxylate (≈ 30 %).
- Half‑life – ~ 10–17 h for the active metabolite; 2–3 h for the parent compound.
- Special Populations
- Renal impairment – Requires dose reduction in CrCl < 30 mL/min.
- Hepatic impairment – No dose adjustment needed.
- Pregnancy – Category C; used when benefits outweigh risks.
Indications
- Treatment of confirmed or suspected influenza A or B in adults and children, with initiation ideally within 48 h of symptom onset.
- Prevention of influenza in individuals exposed to infected persons, including household contacts and healthcare workers.
Contraindications
- Known hypersensitivity to oseltamivir or any excipients.
- Severe renal dysfunction (CrCl < 10 mL/min) – contraindicated.
- Pregnancy – Use only if clearly needed; fetal monitoring advised.
- Seizure disorders – Elevated seizure risk, particularly at high doses.
- Children < 2 weeks – Not recommended due to limited data.
Dosing
| Population | Indication | Dose | Frequency |
| Adults (≥ 18 yrs) | Treatment | 75 mg | BID × 5 days |
| Adults | Prophylaxis | 75 mg | BID (1 day) followed by 75 mg QD × 6 days |
| Children (1 – 12 yrs) | Treatment | 0.75 mg/kg | BID × 5 days (max 75 mg) |
| Children (0 – 1 yr) | Treatment | 0.3 mg/kg | BID × 5 days (max 30 mg) |
| Immunocompromised | Treatment | 75 mg | QD × 10 days or longer if clinically indicated |
| Renal impairment | Dose‑adjusted | 30 mg | QD (CrCl 30–50 mL/min) |
| Severely impaired renal | Contraindicated | — | — |
• Administer orally with water; can be taken with or without food.
• For patients unable to swallow, the liquid formulation can be used.
Adverse Effects
- Common
- Nausea, vomiting, and abdominal discomfort (≈ 10‑15 %)
- Dizziness, headache, and fatigue (≈ 5‑10 %)
- Serious
- Seizures – ~ 1 per 10 000, more likely at high doses or in renal disease.
- Neuropsychiatric events – agitation, confusion, hallucinations (rare).
- Allergic reactions – rash, urticaria, anaphylaxis (rare).
Monitoring
- Renal function – Serum creatinine and eGFR before initiation and at trough if compromised.
- Neurologic status – Watch for new or worsening seizures or altered mental status.
- Signs of hypersensitivity – Monitor for rash, pruritus, angioedema.
- Influenza resolution – Document symptom improvement and fever clearance.
Clinical Pearls
- Start early – Administration within 48 h of symptom onset maximizes benefit; delaying beyond 48 h yields minimal advantage.
- Dose adjust renal – In patients with CrCl 30‑50 mL/min, halve the dose to 30 mg QD to avoid drug accumulation.
- High‑dose for immunocompromised – 75 mg QD for up to 10 days can prevent viral resistance and prolonged shedding in transplant recipients.
- Use in pregnancy safely – Data support its safety; counsel patients on the low teratogenic risk versus substantial benefit during influenza outbreaks.
- Overdose management – No specific antidote; supportive care and repeat dosing according to guidelines reduce systemic exposure.
- Drug interactions – Minimal; avoid concurrent use with theophylline or cholinergic agents in patients prone to seizures.
- Patient education – Emphasize the importance of completing the full course even if symptoms improve, to prevent resistance.
*Keywords: Oseltamivir, antiviral, neuraminidase inhibitor, influenza treatment, pharmacokinetics, renal dosing, neonatal prophylaxis, seizure risk.*