Outcome of standardized treatment for patients with MDR-TB from Tamil Nadu, India

被引:0
|
作者
Joseph, Pauline [1 ]
Desai, Vijaya Bhaskara Rao [1 ]
Mohan, Nalini Sunder [1 ]
Fredrick, Jemima Sheila [1 ]
Ramachandran, Rajeswari [1 ]
Raman, Balambal [1 ]
Wares, Fraser [2 ]
Ramachandran, Ranjani [1 ]
Thomas, Aleyamma [1 ]
机构
[1] TB Res Ctr ICMR, Chennai 600031, Tamil Nadu, India
[2] Off World Hlth Org Representat India, New Delhi, India
关键词
Ambulatory treatment; India; multidrug-resistant TB; standardized regimen; MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT TUBERCULOSIS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Background & objectives: Programmatic management of MDR-TB using a standardized treatment regimen (STR) is being implemented under the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP) in India. This study was undertaken to analyse the outcomes of MDR-TB patients treated at the Tuberculosis Research Centre, Chennai, with the RNTCP recommended 24 months STR, under programmatic conditions. Methods: Patients failed to the category II re-treatment regimen and confirmed to have MDR-TB, were treated with the RNTCP's STR in a prospective field trial on a predominantly ambulatory basis. Thirty eight patients were enrolled to the trial from June 2006 to September 2007. Results: Time to culture conversion was two months or less for 82 per cent of patients. Culture conversion rates at 3 and 6 months were 84 and 87 per cent respectively. At the end of treatment, 25 (66%) were cured, 5 defaulted, 3 died and 5 failed. At 24 months, 30 (79%) patients, including 5 defaulters, remained culture negative for more than 18 months. Twenty two (58%) patients reported adverse drug reactions (ADRs) which required dose reduction or termination of the offending drug. No patient had XDR-TB initially, but 2 failure cases emerged as XDR-TB during treatment. Interpretation & conclusions: Outcomes of this small group of MDR-TB patients treated with the RNTCP's STR is encouraging in this setting. Close attention needs to be paid to ensure adherence, and to the timely recognition and treatment of ADRs.
引用
收藏
页码:529 / 534
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Occurrence and predictors of adverse events associated with Linezolid in the treatment of patients with MDR-TB
    Oehadian, A.
    Bastos, M. L.
    Centis, R.
    D'Ambrosio, L.
    Migliorie, G. B.
    Santoso, P.
    Ruslami, R.
    Menzies, D.
    PULMONOLOGY, 2024, 30 (02): : 184 - 187
  • [22] Clinical and programmatic considerations in the treatment of MDR-TB in children: a series of 16 patients from Lima, Peru
    Mukherjee, JS
    Joseph, JK
    Rich, ML
    Shin, SS
    Furin, JJ
    Seung, KJ
    Sloutsky, A
    Socci, AR
    Vanderwarker, C
    Vasquez, L
    Palacios, E
    Guerra, D
    Viru, FA
    Farmer, P
    Del Castillo, HE
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE, 2003, 7 (07) : 637 - 644
  • [23] Building the evidence base for shortened MDR-TB treatment regimens
    Rusen, I. D.
    Chiang, Chen-Yuan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE, 2018, 22 (01) : 1 - 1
  • [24] Fluroquinolone drug resistance among MDR-TB patients increases the risk of unfavourable interim microbiological treatment outcome: An observational study
    Singh, Nishtha
    Singh, Pravin Kumar
    Singh, Urmila
    Garg, Rajiv
    Jain, Amita
    JOURNAL OF GLOBAL ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE, 2021, 24 : 40 - 44
  • [25] Drug resistance and associated genetic mutations among patients with suspected MDR-TB in Uttar Pradesh, India
    Jain, A.
    Singh, P. K.
    Chooramani, G.
    Dixit, P.
    Malhotra, H. S.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE, 2016, 20 (07) : 870 - 875
  • [26] Treatment outcomes in an integrated civilian and prison MDR-TB treatment program in Russia
    Shin, SS
    Pasechnikov, AD
    Gelmanova, IY
    Peremitin, GG
    Strelis, AK
    Andreev, YG
    Golubchikova, VT
    Tonkel, TP
    Yanova, GV
    Nikiforov, M
    Yedilbayev, A
    Mukherjee, JS
    Furin, JJ
    Barry, DJ
    Farmer, PE
    Rich, ML
    Keshavjee, S
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE, 2006, 10 (04) : 402 - 408
  • [27] 9-12 months short treatment for patients with MDR-TB increases treatment success in Kyrgyzstan
    Zhdanova, Elena
    Goncharova, Olga
    Davtyan, Hayk
    Alaverdyan, Sevak
    Sargsyan, Aelita
    Harries, Anthony D.
    Maykanaev, Bolot
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, 2021, 15 (09): : 66S - 74S
  • [28] Treatment outcomes of MDR-TB and HIV co-infection in Europe
    Magis-Escurra, Cecile
    Guenther, Gunar
    Lange, Christoph
    Alexandru, Sofia
    Altet, Neus
    Avsar, Korkut
    Bang, Didi
    Barbuta, Raisa
    Bothamley, Graham
    Ciobanu, Ana
    Crudu, Valeriu
    Davilovits, Manfred
    Dedicoat, Martin
    Duarte, Raquel
    Gualano, Gina
    Kunst, Heike
    de lange, Wiel
    Leimane, Vaira
    McLaughlin, Anne-Marie
    Muylle, Inge
    Polcova, Veronika
    Popa, Christina
    Rumetshofer, Rudolf
    Skrahina, Alena
    Solodovnikova, Varvara
    Spinu, Victor
    Tiberi, Simon
    Viiklepp, Piret
    van Leth, Frank
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2017, 49 (06)
  • [29] The Impact of Concurrent Antiretroviral Therapy and MDR-TB Treatment on Adverse Events
    Smith, Jonathan P.
    Gandhi, Neel R.
    Shah, N. Sarita
    Mlisana, Koleka
    Moodley, Pravi
    Johnson, Brent A.
    Allana, Salim
    Campbell, Angela
    Nelson, Kristin N.
    Master, Iqbal
    Brust, James C. M.
    JAIDS-JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 2020, 83 (01) : 47 - 55
  • [30] High pre-diagnosis attrition among patients with presumptive MDR-TB: an operational research from Bhopal district, India
    Hemant Deepak Shewade
    Arun M Kokane
    Akash Ranjan Singh
    Manoj Verma
    Malik Parmar
    Ashish Chauhan
    Sanjay Singh Chahar
    Manoj Tiwari
    Sheeba Naz Khan
    Vivek Gupta
    Jaya Prasad Tripathy
    Mukesh Nagar
    Sanjai Kumar Singh
    Pradeep Kumar Mehra
    Ajay MV Kumar
    BMC Health Services Research, 17