Background: Bedaquiline (BDQ) and clofazimine (CFZ) are both recommended for treating drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB). As CFZ is an inhibitor of the cytochrome P450 isoenzyme 3A4 (CYP3A4) in vitro, and BDQ a substrate of CYP3A4, there is a potential for pharmacokinetic (PK) drug-drug interaction that may result in increased BDQ exposure when co-administered with CFZ, which could increase the toxicity of BDQ.
Methods: We assessed the effect of co-administered CFZ on BDQ bioavailability, or on clearance of BDQ and its N-monodesmethyl metabolite (M2), in patients with DR-TB using a population PK model developed from data of patients with DR-TB. This was a secondary analysis of a study designed to explore drug-drug interactions between BDQ and antiretrovirals.
Results: Of 46 participants, 30 were on concomitant CFZ when intensive PK sampling of BDQ was done. CFZ did not have a statistically significant effect on BDQ bioavailability (-9.1%, 90%CI -22.8 to +7.1; P = 0.19) or on BDQ and M2 clearance (+12.2%, 90%CI -13.7 to +38; P = 0.32).
Conclusion: We did not find a statistically significant PK drug-drug interaction between BDQ and CFZ, but cannot exclude a potentially clinically relevant interaction due to the wide confidence intervals of the estimated interaction effects.