Antivirals & Antifungals Flashcards

1
Q

What is an NRTI and what kind of molecules are they

A

Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors

Pyrimidine analogues (Thymidine and Cytosine)

Purine analogues (Adenine and Guanidine)

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2
Q

What are the NRTI Pyrimidine analogues?

A

Thymidine analogues- Zidovudine

Cytosine analogues- Lamivudine

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3
Q

What are the NRTI Purine anologues?

A

Adenine analogues - Tenofovir

Guanidine analogues - Abacavir

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4
Q

What are NNRTIs?

A

Non-nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors

eg. Efavirenz, Nevirapine

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5
Q

What are PIs

A

Protease inhibitors

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6
Q

What is HAART?

A

Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy

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7
Q

What is Aciclovir used to treat and what is its mechanism of action?

A

Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV)
Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV)

Phosphorylated by thymidine kinase to make a nucleoside analogue

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8
Q

What is Ganciclovir used to treat?

A

Cytomegalovirus

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9
Q

What are Oseltamivir and Zanamavir used to treat?

A

Influenza

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10
Q

What is Ribavirin used to treat ?

A

Hepatitis C

Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)

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11
Q

What are Interferons used to treat?

A

Hepatitis C virus

Hepatitis B virus

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12
Q

Where is ergosterol found and what is its function?

A

Found in fungal cell membranes

Required for normal growth and function of the fungal cell wall

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13
Q

What is the pathway for ergosterol synthesis and what two enzymes are involved?

A

Squalene –1–> Lanosterol –2–> Ergosterol

1 = Squalene epoxidase
2 = Lanosterol 14alpha demethylase
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14
Q

What makes up fungal cell walls?

A

Mannan
β-1,3-glucans
Chitin

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15
Q

What are the 4 main antifungal classes?

A

Polyenes
Allylamines
Azoles
Echinocandins

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16
Q

What is the mechanism of action of the Polyenes? with examples

A

They associate with ergosterol to form pore-like molecular aggregates in the cell membrane.
Leads to loss of membrane integrity and leakage of K+

eg. Amphotericin B, Nystatin

17
Q

What is the spectrum of Amphotericin B and its potential adverse effects?

A

Most fungi of medical importance. Used systemically for severe infections.
eg. Aspergillus spp., Candida spp., Cryptococcus spp.

Allergic reactions
Nephrotoxicity - Pores are formed in ergosterol-free membranes

18
Q

How is the nephrotoxicity of amphotericin B reduced?

A

Lipid associated Amphotericin B (AmB)

eg. Liposomal AmB (L-AmB)

19
Q

What is the clinical use for Nystatin?

A

It is not absorbed orally and is too toxic for systemic use

Superficial infections
eg. oral/vaginal candidiasis

20
Q

What is the mode of action of Allylamines? with example

A

Prevent ergosterol synthesis by
Inhibiting Squalene epoxidase

eg. Terbinafine

21
Q

What is the clinical use for Allyamines and what are their adverse effects?

A

Dermatophyte infections (superficial fungal infections)

Topical use: Athletes foot (tinea pedis), tinea corporis, tinea cruris

Systemic (oral) use: Scalp ringworm (tinea capitis), onychomycosis

Liver toxicity

22
Q

What do the Azoles have in common?

A

Azoles contain a 5-membered azole ring

Imidazoles = Two nitrogen atoms
eg. Clotrimazole

Triazoles = Three nitrogen atoms
eg. Fluconazole, Itraconazole, Voriconazole

23
Q

What is the Azoles mode of action?

A

Prevent ergosterol synthesis
Inhibit Lanosterol 14α-demethylase

Build up of non-ergosterol 14α-sterols in cell membrane

24
Q

What are the adverse effects of Azoles?

A

Hepatotoxicity
Imidazoles more toxic than triazoles

Drug interactions
Inhibition of cytochrome P-450 enzymes
Increases concentration of all drugs metabolised by Cy P-450

25
Q

What are Imidazoles used for clinically?

A

Superficial infections (topical administration)

Candidiasis - Clotrimazole

26
Q

What are Triazoles used for clinically?

A

Systemic infections (oral/parenteral administration)

Aspergillosis - Itraconazole, if ineffective then Voriconazole

Candidiasis - fluconazole

27
Q

What is the antifungal spectrum of Fluconazole?

A

Limited to yeasts

eg. Candidiasis

28
Q

What is the antifungal spectrum of Itraconazole and Voriconazole?

A

Yeasts and Aspergillus spp.

29
Q

What is the antifungal spectrum of Posaconazole and Isavuconazole?

A

Yeasts, Aspergillus spp. and Mucoraceous moulds

30
Q

What is the mode of action of Echinocandins? with examples

A

Inhibition of β-1,3-glucan synthase
Causes construction of severely abnormal cell wall

eg. Anidulafungin, Caspofungin, Micafungin

31
Q

What is the spectrum of activity of Echinocandins, their adverse effects and clinical use?

A

Echinocandins sypectrum:
Aspergillus and Candida spp.
Misses certain moulds and Cryptococcus spp.

It has minimal adverse effect eg. rash, vomiting

For systemic infections, parenteral only

32
Q

What is 5-flurocytosine and why does it have selective antifungal toxicity?

A

5-flurocytosine is a synthetic analogue of cytosine

Entry into cell requires fungal cytosine permease

Converted to 5-fluorouracil and 5-fluorodeoxyuridine monophosphate
Inhibits RNA/protein synthesis and DNA synthesis

33
Q

What is the spectrum of activity for 5-flurocytosine and what are its adverse effects?

A

Yeasts only
Candida and Cryptococcus spp.

Bone marrow suppression
Selective toxicity is incomplete

34
Q

What is the clinical use for 5-flurocytosine?

A

Cryptococcal meningitis

in combination with AmB

35
Q

Which antifungals require therapeutic drug monitoring?

A

Itraconazole - to make sure at threshold dosage

5-fluorocytosine - to make sure not at bone marrow toxic levels

Voriconarozle - to make sure at threshold dosage and not toxic to liver