ETHIONAMIDE
(e-thye-on-am'ide)
Trecator
Classifications: antiinfective; antituberculosis agent; antileprosy (sulfone) agent
Prototype: Isoniazid
Pregnancy Category: D

Availability

250 mg tablets

Actions

Bacteriostatic or bactericidal depending on concentration used and susceptibility of organism. Emergence of resistant strains may be delayed or prevented when administered concurrently with other antituberculosis drugs.

Therapeutic Effects

Effective against human and bovine strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. kansasii and some strains of Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex. Also active against M. leprae.

Uses

Any form of active tuberculosis when treatment with primary antituberculosis drugs (e.g., isoniazid, streptomycin, ethambutol, rifampin) has failed. Must be given with at least one other effective antituberculosis agent.

Unlabeled Uses

Atypical mycobacterial infections and tuberculous meningitis.

Contraindications

Hypersensitivity to ethionamide and chemically related drugs [e.g., isoniazid, niacin (nicotinamide)]; severe liver damage. Safety during pregnancy (category D), lactation, or in children and women of childbearing potential is not established.

Cautious Use

Diabetes mellitus, liver dysfunction.

Route & Dosage

Tuberculosis
Adult: PO 0.5–1 g/d divided q8–12h
Child: PO 15–20 mg/kg/d in 2–3 equally divided doses (max: 1 g/d)

Administration

Oral

Adverse Effects (1%)

CNS: Headache, restlessness, mental depression, drowsiness, dizziness, ataxia, hallucinations, paresthesias, convulsions. GI: Dose related and frequent; symptoms may be due to CNS stimulation rather than to GI irritation: anorexia, epigastric distress, nausea, vomiting, metallic taste, diarrhea, stomatitis, sialorrhea. Metabolic: Elevated ALT, AST; hepatitis (with jaundice), hypothyroidism. Urogenital: Menorrhagia, impotence. Body as a Whole: Postural hypotension.

Interactions

Drug: Cycloserine, isoniazid may increase neurotoxic effects.

Pharmacokinetics

Absorption: 80% absorbed from GI tract. Peak: 3 h. Duration: 9 h. Distribution: Widely distributed including CSF; crosses placenta; distribution into breast milk unknown. Metabolism: Metabolized in liver. Elimination: Excreted in urine. Half-Life: 3 h.

Nursing Implications

Assessment & Drug Effects

Patient & Family Education


Common adverse effects in italic, life-threatening effects underlined; generic names in bold; classifications in SMALL CAPS; Canadian drug name; Prototype drug