Abstract:
Tuberculosis is the most serious infectious disease caused by a single organism,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). The standard of care is a protracted and complex
drug treatment regimen made more complicated and of longer duration by the incidence
of multiple- and extensively drug resistant disease. Pulmonary delivery of aerosols as a
supplement to the existing regimen offers the advantage of delivering high local drug
doses to the initial site of infection and most prominent organ system involved in
disease. Pyrazinamide is used in combination with other drugs to treat tuberculosis. It is
postulated that the action of pyrazinoic acid (POA), the active moiety of pyrazinamide,
may be enhanced by local pH adjustment, when presented as a salt form. POA was
prepared as leucine (POA-leu) and ammonium salts (POA-NH4), spray dried and characterized in terms of physico-chemical properties (melting point, crystallinity,
moisture content), aerodynamic performance (aerodynamic particle size distribution,
emitted dose) and in vitro inhibitory effect on two mycobacteria (Mtb and Mycobacterium
bovis) . Particles were prepared in sizes suitable for inhalation (3.3 and 5.4m mass
median aerodynamic diameter and 61 and 40% of the aerodynamic particle size
distribution less than 4.46m, as measured by inertial impaction, for POA-leu and POANH4,
respectively) and with properties (stoichiometric 1:1 ratio of salt to drug, melting
points at ~180C, with water content of <1%) that would support further development as
an inhaled dosage form. In addition, POA salts demonstrated greater potency in
inhibiting mycobacterial growth compared with POA alone which is promising for
therapy.