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bedaquiline

Bedaquiline is an antimycobacterial drug of the diarylquinoline class used to treat multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). It is prescribed as part of combination regimens for adults and certain pediatric patients when the TB strain is resistant to first-line medicines or when standard therapy cannot be used.

Mechanism of action: Bedaquiline inhibits the mycobacterial ATP synthase (AtpE), an essential enzyme for energy production,

Development and approval: Developed by Janssen Pharmaceuticals as a new antituberculosis drug. It received regulatory approval

Dosing and administration: The recommended regimen typically starts with 400 mg once daily for 14 days, followed

Safety and adverse effects: Bedaquiline carries a boxed warning for QT interval prolongation and an increased

Pharmacokinetics: It is highly lipophilic with a long terminal half-life and extensive tissue distribution. It is

thereby
reducing
ATP
generation
and
killing
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis.
It
has
bactericidal
activity
and
is
active
against
replicating
and
nonreplicating
bacilli,
contributing
to
its
use
in
MDR-TB.
in
several
regions
starting
in
2012
for
MDR-TB
in
adults,
with
later
approvals
expanding
to
pediatric
use
and
other
indications.
It
is
reserved
for
use
in
combination
regimens
due
to
potential
safety
concerns.
by
200
mg
three
times
weekly
for
22
weeks,
in
combination
with
other
anti-TB
drugs.
Treatment
duration
is
usually
about
six
months,
integrated
into
a
broader
MDR-TB
regimen
and
adjusted
for
drug
interactions
and
tolerability.
risk
of
death
when
used
in
certain
populations.
Other
adverse
effects
include
nausea,
arthralgia,
headaches,
and
hepatotoxicity.
It
interacts
with
drugs
that
affect
the
cytochrome
P450
system,
particularly
CYP3A4
inhibitors
or
inducers,
and
requires
regular
ECG
monitoring
and
liver
function
tests.
predominantly
metabolized
by
CYP3A4
and
eliminated
mainly
in
feces.