Treatment of paracoccidioidomycosis with itraconazole in a murine model.
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A new triazole, itraconazole, was studied as oral therapy of paracoccidioidomycosis in a murine model. The Paracoccidioides brasiliensis isolate, susceptible to itraconazole in vitro, was given by intranasal challenge, producing acute pulmonary and disseminated disease. Therapy was given twice daily over 4 weeks, and animals observed over 2 months. The infection was lethal for 70-80% of controls (untreated or polyethylene glycol diluent), whereas all treated animals, given 10-200 mg kg-1 day-1, survived. Itraconazole was ineffective in eradicating lung disease in survivors, though effective in treatment of disseminated sites. Since the highest doses did not give a better response than the lower doses, pharmacokinetic studies were performed. These showed irregular curves and small increases in peak serum concentrations and total area under the serum concentration-time curves, which were not proportional to the dose. This non-linearity appears to be best explained by poor absorption. Itraconazole, from these studies, appears to have promise for the therapy of human paracoccidioidomycosis but possibly with a different formulation.