4 Antifungals Flashcards

1
Q

What are the subclassifications of fungi?

A

Filamentous (form mycelium from hyphae).
Yeasts.
Dimorphic.
(and pneumocystis jiroveci)

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2
Q

What is the main component in the lipid membrane of fungi? What does it do?

A

Ergosterol. Forms clusters. Regulates membrane permeability.

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3
Q

How is ergosterol synthesised?

A

Squalene -> squalene epoxidase -> lanosterol -> lanosterol 14 alpha demethylase -> ergosterol

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4
Q

What forms the majority of a fungal cell wall and how is it made?

A

Beta-1,3-glucans. A polymer of UDP-glucose. Forms fibrous network. Synthesised by Beta-1,3-glucan synthase.

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5
Q

What are the five classes of antifungals?

A
Polyenes. 
Allylamines.
Azoles.
Echinocandins.
Others.
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6
Q

What is the mode of action of polyenes? 2 examples.

A

Associate with ergosterol. Form pores, membrane loses integrity and leaks K+.

Amphotericin B and Nystatin.

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7
Q

What are the adverse effects of Am B?

A

Allergic reactions.

Severe (but reversible) nephrotoxicity.

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8
Q

What are the formulations of ApB and why do they exist?

A

Liposomal AmB (L-AmB)
AmB lipid complex (ABLC)
AmB colloidal dispersion (ABCD)

Minimise delivery of AmB to kidney cells.

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9
Q

How is AmB used clinically?

A

AmB - parenterally for systemic infections (aspergillosis, cryptococcosis, candidiasis).

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10
Q

How is Nystatin clinically used?

A

Too toxic for systemic use.

Superficial infections - candidiasis.

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11
Q

How do Allylamines function? 1 example.

A

Inhibit ergosterol synthesis via squalene epoxidase.

Terbinafine.

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12
Q

Adverse effects of Allylamines?

A

Liver toxicity

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13
Q

Clinical use of Allylamines?

A

Dermatophyte infections.
Oral: scalp ringworm, onychomycosis
Topical: athletes foot, tine corporis/cruris

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14
Q

How are azoles structured?

A

Synthetic compounds containing 5-membered azole ring.

Imidazole’s: 2 N’s
Triazoles: 3N’s

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15
Q

How do azoles work?

A

Inhibit ergosterol synthesis via Lanosterol 14alpha demethylase.

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16
Q

1 imidazole example.

3 triazole examples.

A

Clotrimazole.

Fluconazole, Itraconazole, Voriconazole.

17
Q

Adverse effects of azole use.

A

Hepatotoxicity.
Life threatening hepatitis (1/10,000)
Inhibition of cytochrome P-450 enzymes.

18
Q

What are azoles clinically used for?

A

Imidazoles: superficial infections (candidiasis).
Triazoles: systemic infections (aspergillosis, candidiasis).

19
Q

Which azole only works against yeasts?

A

Fluconazole

20
Q

How do echinocandins work? 1 example.

A

Inhibit beta-1,3-glucan synthase. Severley abnormal cell wall constructed.

Anidulafungin.

21
Q

What are the adverse effects of echinocandins?

What do they work against?

A

Minimal.

Aspergillus and Candida.

22
Q

What is the structure of 5-fluorocytosine?

How is it selectively toxic?

A

Synthetic analogue of cytosine.

Requires fungal cytosine permease enzyme.

23
Q

How does 5-fluorocytosine work?

A

Converted to 5-florouracil and 5-fluorodeoxyuridine.

Inhibits RNA/protein synthesis.

24
Q

What are the adverse effects of 5-fluorocytosine?

A

Bone marrow suppression (developed as an anti-cancer drug).

25
Q

What is 5-fluorocytosine clinically used for?

A

Cryptococcal meningitis (with AmB).

26
Q

How does Griseofulvin work and what is it used for?

A

Inhibition of fungal mitosis.

Used for dermatophyte infections requiring systemic treatment.

27
Q

Which fungal drugs require therapeutic monitoring and why?

A

Itraconazole (needs to b above).
5-fluorocytosine (needs to be below).
Voriconazole (for both reasons).