Drug Monograph

Moxifloxacin (Avelox)

moxifloxacin hydrochloride

Fluoroquinolone Antibacterial · Oral & Intravenous · FDA Boxed Warning
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
12 ± 1.3 h
Metabolism
Glucuronide & sulfate conjugation (non-CYP)
Protein Binding
30–50%
Bioavailability
~90% (oral)
Volume of Distribution
1.7–2.7 L/kg
Clinical Information
Drug Class
8-Methoxyfluoroquinolone
Available Doses
400 mg tablet; 400 mg/250 mL IV
Route
Oral, Intravenous
Renal Adjustment
None required
Hepatic Adjustment
None required (caution: QT risk)
Pregnancy
Avoid — animal data suggest fetal harm
Lactation
Caution — excreted in animal milk
Schedule
Prescription only (not scheduled)
Generic Available
Yes
Black Box Warning
Yes — tendinitis, neuropathy, CNS effects, myasthenia gravis
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Community-acquired pneumonia (including MDRSP)Adults ≥18 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Uncomplicated skin & skin structure infectionsAdults ≥18 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Complicated skin & skin structure infectionsAdults ≥18 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Complicated intra-abdominal infectionsAdults ≥18 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Plague (pneumonic & septicemic; prophylaxis)Adults ≥18 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Acute bacterial sinusitisAdults ≥18 yearsMonotherapy (reserve — no alternative)FDA Approved
Acute bacterial exacerbation of chronic bronchitisAdults ≥18 yearsMonotherapy (reserve — no alternative)FDA Approved

Moxifloxacin carries a broad spectrum encompassing gram-positive organisms (including multi-drug resistant S. pneumoniae), gram-negative bacteria, atypical pathogens (Mycoplasma, Chlamydophila), and anaerobes (Bacteroides fragilis). The FDA label explicitly reserves moxifloxacin for acute bacterial sinusitis and ABECB only when no alternative treatment options exist, owing to the risk of serious fluoroquinolone-class adverse reactions (FDA PI). For community-acquired pneumonia, moxifloxacin remains a first-line option in current IDSA/ATS guidelines for patients with comorbidities or risk factors for drug-resistant organisms.

Off-Label Uses

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB): Moxifloxacin is recommended as a core agent in MDR-TB regimens by ATS/IDSA/CDC/ERS guidelines. Dose 400 mg daily within a multi-drug regimen; higher doses (600–800 mg) have been explored in WHO-endorsed short-course regimens. Evidence quality: High.

Drug-susceptible TB — 4-month shortened regimen: CDC Study 31/A5349 demonstrated noninferiority of a 4-month rifapentine-moxifloxacin regimen vs standard 6-month therapy (CDC MMWR 2022). Evidence quality: High (phase III RCT).

Tuberculous meningitis: Used as a component of intensified regimens given excellent CNS penetration. Evidence quality: Moderate.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
CAP — outpatient, comorbidities present400 mg PO daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day7–14 days; covers MDRSP and atypicals
IV-to-PO switch is 1:1; no dose change needed
CAP — inpatient, step-down therapy400 mg IV daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day7–14 days total; infuse IV over 60 min
Switch to oral when clinically stable
Uncomplicated SSSI (abscess, cellulitis, impetigo)400 mg PO daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day7 days; MSSA and S. pyogenes coverage
Complicated SSSI (deep abscess, infected ulcer)400 mg IV daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day7–21 days; surgical source control essential
Sequential IV→PO at physician discretion
Complicated intra-abdominal infection400 mg IV daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day5–14 days; covers anaerobes including B. fragilis
No additional anaerobic cover needed
Plague — treatment and prophylaxis400 mg PO/IV daily400 mg PO/IV daily400 mg/day10–14 days; start ASAP after exposure
Approved based on animal efficacy study
Acute bacterial sinusitis (reserve use)400 mg PO daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day10 days; only when no alternative exists
FDA reserves due to fluoroquinolone class risks
ABECB (reserve use)400 mg PO daily400 mg PO daily400 mg/day5 days; only when no alternative exists
Clinical Pearl: Single-Dose Simplicity

Moxifloxacin uses a single 400 mg dose across all approved indications with no renal or hepatic dose adjustment required. The only variable is duration, which ranges from 5 days (ABECB) to 21 days (complicated SSSI). The IV formulation is bioequivalent to oral and can be switched 1:1 when the patient tolerates oral intake. Administer tablets at least 4 hours before or 8 hours after antacids, iron, or multivitamins containing divalent/trivalent cations (FDA PI).

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Moxifloxacin exerts bactericidal activity by simultaneously inhibiting two essential bacterial enzymes: DNA gyrase (topoisomerase II) and topoisomerase IV. These enzymes are critical for DNA replication, transcription, repair, and recombination. By trapping the enzyme-DNA complex and preventing strand re-ligation, moxifloxacin introduces lethal double-strand breaks in bacterial DNA. The 8-methoxy group on the quinolone ring enhances activity against gram-positive organisms and anaerobes compared with earlier fluoroquinolones, while also reducing the potential for phototoxicity. The dual-target mechanism raises the barrier to resistance development, as organisms typically require mutations in both targets simultaneously. Cross-resistance with other fluoroquinolones can occur through mutations in gyrA or gyrB genes, efflux pump upregulation, or decreased outer membrane permeability.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
Absorption~90% oral bioavailability; Tmax ~1–3 h; Cmax 3.1 mg/L (single dose)High oral bioavailability allows reliable PO dosing; food does not affect absorption; yogurt does not alter AUC
DistributionVd 1.7–2.7 L/kg; 30–50% protein bound; tissue:plasma ratios up to 21:1 in alveolar macrophagesExcellent tissue penetration into respiratory tract, sinuses, skin, and abdominal tissues; concentrations in alveolar macrophages far exceed plasma
MetabolismPhase II conjugation: sulfate (M1, ~38%) and glucuronide (M2, ~14%); CYP system not involvedNo CYP-mediated drug interactions; does not inhibit CYP3A4, 2D6, 2C9, 2C19, or 1A2; metabolites are microbiologically inactive
Eliminationt½ 12 ± 1.3 h; ~20% unchanged in urine, ~25% unchanged in feces; total body clearance 12 L/hrOnce-daily dosing; no dose adjustment for renal impairment (including HD/CAPD) or hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh A–C)
SE

Side Effects

≥3% Very Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Nausea7%Most frequent GI complaint; usually self-limiting; take with or without food
Diarrhea6%Distinguish from C. difficile-associated diarrhea, particularly if persistent or bloody
Headache4%Dose-independent; typically resolves without intervention
Dizziness3%Advise caution with driving or operating machinery until response is known
1–3% Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Vomiting2%May require antiemetic; assess for dehydration
Constipation2%Usually mild; encourage adequate hydration
Abdominal pain2%Non-specific; rule out surgical abdomen in cIAI patients
Insomnia2%CNS class effect; consider morning dosing
Pyrexia1%Distinguish drug fever from underlying infection
ALT elevation1%Usually transient; monitor if baseline LFTs are abnormal
Dyspepsia1%Consider timing relative to meals
Hypokalemia1%Important: hypokalemia increases QT prolongation risk; correct before starting therapy
Anemia1%Check baseline CBC in patients with risk factors
Serious Serious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Tendinitis / tendon ruptureRare (~0.1–0.4%)Hours to months post-treatmentDiscontinue immediately; rest affected limb; avoid all fluoroquinolones permanently
QT prolongation / torsade de pointes0.1–1% (QTc prolongation noted in trials)Within first days of therapyObtain baseline ECG in at-risk patients; discontinue if QTc >500 ms or increases >60 ms; correct electrolytes
Peripheral neuropathyRareDays to weeks; may be irreversibleDiscontinue at first sign of pain, burning, tingling, or numbness; may be permanent
CNS effects (psychosis, seizures, hallucinations)Rare (<0.1%)Often within first 1–2 dosesDiscontinue immediately; institute supportive care; avoid all fluoroquinolones
Clostridioides difficile-associated diarrheaUncommon (~0.5–2%)During or up to 2 months after therapyTest for C. difficile toxin; discontinue moxifloxacin; treat with vancomycin or fidaxomicin
Hepatitis / acute hepatic failureVery rare (postmarketing reports, including fatalities)Days to weeksDiscontinue at first sign of jaundice or hepatic dysfunction; supportive care
Anaphylaxis / severe hypersensitivityVery rareMinutes to hours; may follow first doseEmergency treatment; epinephrine; permanent discontinuation of all quinolones
Stevens-Johnson syndrome / TENVery rare1–3 weeksDiscontinue immediately; dermatology referral; supportive care
Aortic aneurysm / dissectionRare (epidemiologic association)Within 2 months of useReserve use in patients with known aortic aneurysm or high-risk features; urgent vascular evaluation if symptoms develop
Myasthenia gravis exacerbationRare (postmarketing, including deaths)VariableContraindicated in known myasthenia gravis; discontinue if worsening weakness occurs
Blood glucose disturbances (hypo- and hyperglycemia)Uncommon; severe cases rareVariable; predominantly in diabetic patients on concurrent hypoglycemicsClose glucose monitoring in diabetics; discontinue if severe hypoglycemia occurs
Discontinuation Discontinuation Rates
Oral Therapy (400 mg)
4%
Top reasons: Nausea, diarrhea, dizziness, vomiting
Sequential IV/Oral Therapy
8%
Top reasons: Diarrhea, pyrexia (reflects sicker patient population)
Reason for DiscontinuationIncidenceContext
Nausea>0.3%Most common cause with oral dosing
Diarrhea>0.3%Leading cause with sequential IV/PO
Dizziness>0.3%Oral therapy
Vomiting>0.3%Oral therapy
Rash>0.3%Leading cause with IV-only therapy; evaluate for hypersensitivity
Management: QT Prolongation Risk

The mean QTc increase with oral moxifloxacin is approximately 6 ms (± 26); with IV dosing, approximately 10 ms on day 1. While no excess cardiovascular mortality was observed in over 15,500 controlled-trial patients or in a postmarketing observational study of over 18,000 patients, clinicians should correct hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia before initiating therapy, avoid concurrent Class IA/III antiarrhythmics, and consider baseline ECG in patients with cardiac risk factors (FDA PI).

Int

Drug Interactions

Moxifloxacin is metabolized exclusively via phase II conjugation (glucuronidation and sulfation) without any involvement of the cytochrome P450 system. It does not inhibit CYP3A4, 2D6, 2C9, 2C19, or 1A2 in vitro, which substantially limits pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions. The primary interaction concerns are chelation with polyvalent cations (reducing absorption) and pharmacodynamic additive QT prolongation.

Major Class IA/III Antiarrhythmics (quinidine, procainamide, amiodarone, sotalol)
MechanismAdditive QT prolongation
EffectIncreased risk of torsade de pointes and ventricular arrhythmias
ManagementAvoid concomitant use; select an alternative antibiotic class if antiarrhythmic is essential
FDA PI
Major Other QT-Prolonging Agents (erythromycin, antipsychotics, tricyclics, cisapride)
MechanismPharmacodynamic: additive cardiac repolarization delay
EffectHeightened QTc prolongation and arrhythmia risk
ManagementAvoid if possible; if unavoidable, obtain baseline ECG, monitor QTc, and correct electrolytes
FDA PI
Moderate Antacids (Al/Mg), Sucralfate, Iron, Multivitamins with Zinc
MechanismChelation of moxifloxacin by polyvalent cations in the GI tract
EffectUp to 60% reduction in moxifloxacin AUC (concomitant antacid); iron reduces AUC by 39% and Cmax by 59%
ManagementAdminister moxifloxacin ≥4 hours before or ≥8 hours after these products
FDA PI
Moderate Warfarin
MechanismFluoroquinolone class effect — enhanced anticoagulant activity (not PK-mediated; no effect on R/S-warfarin levels)
EffectElevated INR and increased bleeding risk
ManagementMonitor PT/INR closely during co-administration; adjust warfarin dose as needed
FDA PI
Moderate Oral Hypoglycemics / Insulin
MechanismFluoroquinolone class effect on glucose homeostasis; mechanism not fully characterized
EffectBoth hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia reported; severe hypoglycemia including coma and death in postmarketing reports
ManagementCareful glucose monitoring throughout treatment; discontinue if severe hypoglycemia occurs
FDA PI
Moderate NSAIDs
MechanismAdditive CNS stimulation and lowered seizure threshold
EffectPossible increased risk of convulsions (class effect); no excess in animal data at recommended doses
ManagementUse with caution; monitor for CNS symptoms; use acetaminophen as an alternative analgesic when feasible
FDA PI
Minor Digoxin
MechanismTransient increase in digoxin Cmax (~50%) during distribution phase; no AUC change
EffectNot clinically significant; no change in overall digoxin exposure
ManagementNo dose adjustment required for either drug
FDA PI
Minor Calcium Supplements
MechanismMild chelation; delayed Tmax (0.9 → 2.5 h)
EffectNo significant change in AUC; slightly reduced Cmax
ManagementNo dose adjustment necessary; not clinically significant
FDA PI
No Significant Interaction

In formal PK interaction studies, moxifloxacin showed no clinically meaningful interaction with atenolol, theophylline, itraconazole, morphine, probenecid, ranitidine, cyclosporine, glyburide, or oral contraceptives (FDA PI). This favourable profile is directly attributable to moxifloxacin’s non-CYP metabolism.

Mon

Monitoring

  • ECG (QTc) Baseline
    Trigger-based
    Obtain baseline ECG in patients with cardiac risk factors, hepatic cirrhosis, known QT prolongation, or receiving concurrent QT-prolonging drugs. Repeat if symptoms of arrhythmia develop. Discontinue if QTc exceeds 500 ms or increases by more than 60 ms from baseline.
  • Electrolytes (K⁺, Mg²⁺) Baseline
    Routine
    Correct hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia before initiating moxifloxacin. Recheck if diarrhea, vomiting, or concurrent diuretic use occurs during therapy.
  • Hepatic Function Baseline; if symptoms arise
    Trigger-based
    Assess LFTs at baseline in patients with pre-existing liver disease. Discontinue immediately if jaundice, dark urine, or markedly elevated transaminases develop during therapy.
  • Tendon Assessment Throughout therapy
    Routine
    Ask about tendon pain, swelling, or inflammation at each visit. Risk is higher in patients >60 years, those on corticosteroids, and organ transplant recipients. Discontinue at the first sign of tendinitis.
  • Neurological Status Throughout therapy
    Routine
    Monitor for signs of peripheral neuropathy (tingling, numbness, weakness) and CNS effects (confusion, hallucinations, seizures). Discontinue immediately if these develop.
  • Blood Glucose Throughout therapy
    Trigger-based
    Closely monitor glucose in diabetic patients, particularly those on sulfonylureas or insulin. Severe hypoglycemia (including coma) has been reported.
  • Stool Assessment If diarrhea develops
    Trigger-based
    Test for C. difficile toxin if diarrhea is persistent, watery, or bloody, or if it develops during or up to 2 months after completing moxifloxacin therapy.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to moxifloxacin or any member of the quinolone class
  • Myasthenia gravis — fluoroquinolones may exacerbate muscle weakness; postmarketing deaths and ventilatory failure reported

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Known QT prolongation or congenital long QT syndrome — documented baseline QTc prolongation warrants use of an alternative agent
  • Concurrent Class IA or III antiarrhythmic therapy — additive risk of torsade de pointes
  • Known aortic aneurysm or high-risk features (Marfan syndrome, elderly with hypertension, peripheral vascular disease) — epidemiologic data suggest increased risk of aortic dissection within 2 months of fluoroquinolone use
  • History of fluoroquinolone-associated tendon disorder — prior tendinitis or rupture with any fluoroquinolone contraindicates rechallenge
  • Pregnancy — animal studies demonstrate fetal skeletal variations and reduced neonatal survival at maternally toxic doses; no human data

Use with Caution

  • Elderly patients (≥60 years) — increased risk of tendon rupture and QT prolongation
  • Concurrent corticosteroid therapy — independently increases tendon rupture risk
  • Organ transplant recipients — elevated tendon disorder risk
  • Hepatic cirrhosis (any Child-Pugh class) — metabolic disturbances may amplify QT prolongation; ECG monitoring advised
  • Uncorrected electrolyte abnormalities (hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia) — correct before initiating therapy
  • Known seizure disorder or CNS pathology — may lower seizure threshold
  • Diabetic patients on insulin or sulfonylureas — risk of severe hypoglycemia
  • Patients under 18 years — not approved; arthropathy observed in immature animals; limited safety data (pediatric cIAI trial showed 4.3% musculoskeletal adverse events)
FDA Boxed Warning Serious Adverse Reactions: Tendinitis, Tendon Rupture, Peripheral Neuropathy, CNS Effects, and Myasthenia Gravis Exacerbation

Fluoroquinolones, including moxifloxacin, carry a class-wide boxed warning for disabling and potentially irreversible adverse reactions affecting tendons, the peripheral nervous system, and the central nervous system. These reactions may occur together in the same patient and can appear within hours to weeks of starting treatment. Additionally, fluoroquinolones may exacerbate muscle weakness in patients with myasthenia gravis. The label mandates immediate discontinuation at the first signs of any of these reactions and states that moxifloxacin should be reserved for acute bacterial sinusitis and ABECB only when no alternative treatment is available (FDA PI, revised July 2025).

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Moxifloxacin is a prescription antibiotic used to treat certain bacterial infections, including pneumonia, skin infections, abdominal infections, and sinus infections. It works by killing bacteria that cause these infections. It should only be used for bacterial infections and will not work against viruses such as the common cold or influenza.

How to Take

Take one 400 mg tablet once daily, with or without food, along with plenty of fluids. If a dose is missed, take it as soon as remembered unless fewer than 8 hours remain before the next scheduled dose — in that case, skip the missed dose and continue with the usual schedule. Never take a double dose. Complete the full course of treatment even if symptoms improve, as stopping early may allow bacteria to become resistant.

Tendon Pain or Swelling
Tell patient Fluoroquinolones can cause tendon inflammation or rupture, most often affecting the Achilles tendon. Risk is higher in patients over 60, those taking steroids, or transplant recipients. Rest the affected area immediately if any tendon pain occurs.
Call prescriber Immediately if pain, swelling, or stiffness develops in any tendon area — do not continue the medication.
Nerve Damage (Peripheral Neuropathy)
Tell patient This medication can occasionally cause nerve damage that may present as tingling, numbness, burning, or weakness in the hands or feet. This may be permanent in some cases.
Call prescriber At the first sign of any unusual sensations in the extremities — prompt discontinuation may prevent irreversible nerve injury.
Dizziness, Confusion, and Mental Health Changes
Tell patient Dizziness is common and typically mild. However, more severe central nervous system effects — including confusion, hallucinations, anxiety, depression, insomnia, or seizures — can occur, sometimes after the very first dose. Avoid driving or operating heavy machinery until you know how the medication affects you.
Call prescriber Immediately for any hallucinations, severe confusion, thoughts of self-harm, seizures, or persistent severe insomnia.
Heart Rhythm (QT Prolongation)
Tell patient Moxifloxacin can cause minor changes in heart rhythm. This is usually not dangerous but can be amplified by low potassium or magnesium levels, or by other medications that affect heart rhythm. Inform your prescriber of all medications you take, including over-the-counter drugs.
Call prescriber If you experience fainting, palpitations, or an irregular heartbeat during treatment.
Diarrhea (Including C. difficile)
Tell patient Mild diarrhea is common with antibiotics. However, persistent watery or bloody diarrhea — even if it occurs weeks after completing the course — could indicate a serious bacterial infection of the colon (C. difficile). Do not take anti-diarrheal medication without consulting your prescriber.
Call prescriber If diarrhea is severe, bloody, or persists for more than 2 days, or develops after finishing the antibiotic course.
Antacids, Iron, and Vitamin Supplements
Tell patient Products containing aluminium, magnesium, iron, or zinc (antacids, multivitamins, iron supplements) dramatically reduce moxifloxacin absorption. Separate dosing is essential.
Call prescriber Not usually necessary, but inform prescriber if you have been taking these products together throughout your course, as your infection may not have been adequately treated.
Sun Exposure
Tell patient Although moxifloxacin has lower phototoxicity risk than some other fluoroquinolones, excessive sunlight or UV exposure should still be avoided during treatment. If sunburn-like reactions develop, discontinue and contact your prescriber.
Call prescriber If exaggerated sunburn, blistering, or skin rash occurs after sun or UV light exposure.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Avelox (moxifloxacin) tablets and injection prescribing information. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals. Revised July 2025. FDA Label Primary source for all approved indications, dosing, adverse reactions, pharmacokinetics, and contraindications cited in this monograph.
  2. FDA Safety Communication: FDA reinforces safety information about serious low blood sugar levels and mental health side effects with fluoroquinolone antibiotics. July 2018. FDA.gov Regulatory basis for glucose monitoring recommendations and mental health adverse effect warnings.
  3. FDA Drug Safety Communication: FDA warns about increased risk of ruptures or tears in the aorta blood vessel with fluoroquinolone antibiotics. December 2018. FDA.gov Source for the aortic aneurysm and dissection warning in the contraindications section.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Gillespie SH, Crook AM, McHugh TD, et al. Four-month moxifloxacin-based regimens for drug-sensitive tuberculosis. N Engl J Med. 2014;371(17):1577-1587. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1407426 REMoxTB phase III trial evaluating moxifloxacin substitution in TB regimens; supports off-label TB use discussion.
  2. Dorman SE, Nahid P, Kurbatova EV, et al. Four-month rifapentine regimens with or without moxifloxacin for tuberculosis. N Engl J Med. 2021;384(18):1705-1718. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2033400 Study 31/A5349 (CDC/ACTG) demonstrating noninferiority of 4-month rifapentine-moxifloxacin regimen for drug-susceptible TB.
  3. Jindani A, Harrison TS, Nunn AJ, et al. High-dose rifapentine with moxifloxacin for pulmonary tuberculosis. N Engl J Med. 2014;371(17):1599-1608. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1314210 RIFAQUIN trial testing moxifloxacin-containing shortened TB regimens.
Guidelines
  1. Metlay JP, Waterer GW, Long AC, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of adults with community-acquired pneumonia: an official clinical practice guideline of the ATS and IDSA. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2019;200(7):e45-e67. doi:10.1164/rccm.201908-1581ST Current ATS/IDSA guideline recommending respiratory fluoroquinolones (including moxifloxacin) for CAP with comorbidities.
  2. Carr W, Kurbatova E, Starks A, et al. Interim guidance: 4-month rifapentine-moxifloxacin regimen for the treatment of drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis — United States, 2022. MMWR. 2022;71(8):285-289. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm7108a1 CDC interim guidance for the 4-month TB regimen containing moxifloxacin; basis for off-label TB dosing discussion.
  3. Nahid P, Mase SR, Migliori GB, et al. Treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis: an official ATS/CDC/ERS/IDSA clinical practice guideline. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2019;200(10):e93-e142. doi:10.1164/rccm.201909-1874ST International guideline recommending moxifloxacin as a core agent for MDR-TB treatment regimens.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Drlica K, Zhao X. DNA gyrase, topoisomerase IV, and the 4-quinolones. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 1997;61(3):377-392. doi:10.1128/mmbr.61.3.377-392.1997 Foundational review of fluoroquinolone mechanism of action through dual topoisomerase inhibition.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Stass H, Dalhoff A, Kubitza D, Schuhly U. Pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability of ascending single doses of moxifloxacin, a new 8-methoxy quinolone, administered to healthy subjects. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1998;42(8):2060-2065. doi:10.1128/AAC.42.8.2060 Early PK characterization establishing dose-proportional kinetics and half-life parameters.
  2. Padayatchi N, Naidoo K, Grobler A, Friedland G. A review of moxifloxacin for the treatment of drug-susceptible tuberculosis. J Clin Pharmacol. 2017;57(11):1369-1386. doi:10.1002/jcph.968 Comprehensive review of moxifloxacin PK-PD in TB, including drug interaction with rifamycins reducing moxifloxacin AUC by up to 31%.