Voriconazole
Voriconazole
Generic Name
Voriconazole
Mechanism
- Inhibits CYP14A (sterol‑14α‑demethylase) – a fungal cytochrome P450 enzyme that converts lanosterol to ergosterol.
- Disruption of ergosterol synthesis weakens fungal cell membrane integrity, leading to fungal cell death.
- Unlike first‑generation azoles, it exhibits broad activity against azole‑resistant strains and has a faster onset of action.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption – Oral bioavailability ~96 % (after a 200 mg maintenance dose). Oral bioavailability is reduced by ~10 % with high‑fat meals.
- Distribution – Volume of distribution ~42 L; penetrates well into tissues, cerebrospinal fluid, and lungs.
- Metabolism – Extensive hepatic metabolism via CYP2C19, CYP3A4, and CYP2C9.
- Elimination – Primarily renal (≈30 % unchanged).
- Half‑life – 12–20 h, depending on CYP2C19 phenotype.
- Drug interactions – Potentiates inhibition of CYP2C19 substrates; elevate serum concentrations of drugs like clopidogrel, phenytoin, and levothyroxine.
- Special populations – Dosage adjustments in severe hepatic impairment; caution in pregnancy (Category B).
Indications
- Invasive aspergillosis (including chronic pulmonary disease).
- Candidemia, esophageal candidiasis, and otomycosis when other azoles fail.
- Voriconazole prophylaxis in high‑risk neutropenic patients (e.g., AML induction).
- Empirical therapy for invasive fungal infections pending culture data.
Contraindications
- Absolute contraindication: Hypersensitivity to any component.
- Cautions:
- Severe hepatic dysfunction (ALT/AST > 5× ULN).
- Seizure disorders (may lower seizure threshold).
- Pregnancy: Consider fetal risk vs benefit.
- Concomitant CYP2C19 inhibitors (e.g., fluconazole) can precipitate toxicity.
Dosing
| Form | Children (≥12 y) | Adults |
| IV | 6 mg/kg q12h × 2 d, then 4 mg/kg q12h | 6 mg/kg q12h × 2 d, then 4 mg/kg q12h |
| Oral | 200 mg q12h × 2 d, then 200 mg q12h | 200 mg q12h × 2 d, then 200 mg q12h |
*Loading doses ensure therapeutic plasma levels > 1 µg/mL.
TDM is recommended to adjust for inter‑patient variability (see Monitoring).
Alternate dosing if renal/hepatic impairment or drug‑drug interactions are present.*
Adverse Effects
- Common
- Visual disturbances (blurred vision, photophobia).
- Rash, pruritus, or Stevens–Johnson syndrome.
- Elevated liver enzymes (ALT/AST, ↑ GGT).
- GI upset (nausea, vomiting).
- Serious
- Seizures (dose‑related).
- Hypersensitivity reactions (anaphylaxis).
- Hematologic toxicity (anemia, neutropenia).
- Visual hallucinations or vivid dreams.
Monitoring
- Baseline – CBC, CMP, LFTs, serum creatinine.
- During therapy –
- Liver function: ALT, AST, bilirubin (twice weekly first month, then monthly).
- Visual: Patient diary or formal ophthalmologic exam if symptoms arise.
- Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM): Target trough 1–5 µg/mL; check after dosing change or at steady‑state (~2 weeks).
- Drug interactions: Review concurrent CYP2C19 inhibitors or substrates.
Clinical Pearls
- TDM saves lives – Voriconazole shows a *wide therapeutic index*; sub‑apeutic levels lead to relapse, while supratherapeutic levels precipitate neurotoxicity.
- CYP2C19 phenotype matters – Poor metabolizers have prolonged exposure; consider a *lower maintenance dose* (e.g., 4 mg/kg q12h).
- Avoid high‑fat meals before oral dosing – Reduces absorption slightly; patients should take the drug *on an empty stomach* or one hour before/after food.
- Step‑down strategy – Switch to oral after 7–14 days of IV therapy once the patient is clinically stable and plasma levels are adequate.
- Prophylaxis caution – In neutropenic prophylaxis, risk‑benefit must be weighed against potential for resistance and visual toxicity.
- Pregnancy & lactation – No robust data on infant safety; most clinicians err on the side of caution and prefer alternative treatments when feasible.
Reference: WHO Model List of Essential Medicines 2022; Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy; CLSI M59 guidelines for intravenous antifungal therapy.