Aminosalicylic acid (C7H7NO3) is also known as para-aminosalicylic acid, p-aminosalicylic acid or 4-aminosalicylic acid; abbreviated 4-ASA, PAS or P. It is sold in the US by Jacobus Pharmaceutical as Paser®.
5-aminosalicylic acid is a closely related compound that also has medical uses.
Aminosalicylic acid is an antibiotic used to treat tuberculosis. It has been use for over forty years in the treatment of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBDs), where it has shown greater potency in Crohn's Disease. It is thought to act via NF-kB (Nuclear Factor Kappa B) inhibition and free radical scavenging.
Its potency is less than that of the current five first-line drugs (isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, pyrazinamide and streptomycin) for treating tuberculosis. It still has a role to play in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Aminosalicylic acid is always used in combination with other anti-TB drugs and is never used on its own.
The dose when treating tuberculosis is 150mg/kg/day divided into two to four daily doses; the usual adult dose is therefore approximately 2 to 4g four times a day. It is sold in the US as Paser® which comes in the form of 4g packets of delayed-release granules that have to be measured out with a scoop. The drug should be taken with acid food or drink (orange, apple or tomato juice).
Aminosalicylic acid used to be available in a combination formula with isoniazid called Pasinah.
Aminosalicylic acid has also used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel diseases, but has been superseded by other drugs such as sulfasalazine and mesalazine.
Aminosalicylic acid is in the FDA pregnancy category C. This means that it is not known whether it will harm an unborn baby. Do not take this medication without first talking to your doctor if you are pregnant.
There are drug interactions (in particular, phenytoin levels are increased).
PAS was discovered by the Swedish chemist Jörgen Lehmann while he followed through on published information that the tuberculosis bacterium avidly metabolized salicylic acid. Lehmann first tried PAS as an oral TB therapy late in 1944. The first patient made a dramatic recovery. The drug proved better than streptomycin, which had nerve toxicity and to which TB could easily develop resistance. Late in the 1940s, researchers at Britain's Medical Research Council demonstrated that combined treatment with streptomycin and PAS was superior to either drug alone.
Medical treatments | Tuberculosis | Pharmacologic agents | Antibiotics
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