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Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020

Tuberculosis treatment is challenging, especially among people with drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. The introduction of fully oral modified short treatment regimen has a great potential to shorten duration of treatment, improve safety and ultimately increase treatment success rate. In 2019 Geo...

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Autores principales: Avaliani, Teona, Sereda, Yuliia, Davtyan, Hayk, Tukvadze, Nestani, Togonidze, Tamar, Kiria, Nana, Denisiuk, Olga, Gozalov, Ogtay, Ahmedov, Sevim, Hovhannesyan, Arax
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9391985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33470088
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/monaldi.2021.1679
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author Avaliani, Teona
Sereda, Yuliia
Davtyan, Hayk
Tukvadze, Nestani
Togonidze, Tamar
Kiria, Nana
Denisiuk, Olga
Gozalov, Ogtay
Ahmedov, Sevim
Hovhannesyan, Arax
author_facet Avaliani, Teona
Sereda, Yuliia
Davtyan, Hayk
Tukvadze, Nestani
Togonidze, Tamar
Kiria, Nana
Denisiuk, Olga
Gozalov, Ogtay
Ahmedov, Sevim
Hovhannesyan, Arax
author_sort Avaliani, Teona
collection PubMed
description Tuberculosis treatment is challenging, especially among people with drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. The introduction of fully oral modified short treatment regimen has a great potential to shorten duration of treatment, improve safety and ultimately increase treatment success rate. In 2019 Georgia has piloted the modified fully oral shorter treatment regimen in a routine programmatic condition. Our study aimed to evaluate effectiveness and safety of the modified shorter treatment regimen in Georgia among the first 25 consecutively enrolled patients with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis with proven sensitivity to fluoroquinolone and without prior exposure to second-line tuberculosis drugs. Regimen consisted of 9-month daily administration of bedaquilline, linezolid, levofloxacin, clofazimine and cycloserine. Study patients were enrolled between March-August 2019. We used a national electronic surveillance system, medical records and active TB drug-safety monitoring and management database to extract study related data. The mean age of the study participants was 48 years, 68% were male, 8% were HIV positive, 16% had diabetes and 12% tested positive for hepatitis C infection. The median time to culture conversion among 16 patients who were culture positive at treatment initiation was 1.0 (95% CI: 1.0–2.0) month. Of those, by the end of treatment 15 patients converted to negative. Out of 25 patients in the study cohort 22 (88%) had successful treatment outcome, one patient (4%) died and two (8%) were lost to follow up. The regimen was largely well tolerated. Three patients (12%) experienced serious adverse events - two cases were possibly related to TB drugs in the regimen. Seven patients developed adverse events of interest in eight instances, including musculoskeletal (twice), psychiatric, gas-trointestinal disorders, hepatotoxicity, peripheral neuropathy, cardiotoxicity and myelosuppression (once each). In four patients (16%) the duration of the treatment was extended beyond nine months due to insufficient radiological improvements. Our findings demonstrate that good treatment outcomes are achievable in people with fluoroquinolone-sensitive tuberculosis within routine programmatic conditions using fully oral modified short treatment regimen. The extensive use of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen in Georgia and other high priority countries in the World Health Organization European Region is warranted.
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spelling pubmed-93919852022-08-20 Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020 Avaliani, Teona Sereda, Yuliia Davtyan, Hayk Tukvadze, Nestani Togonidze, Tamar Kiria, Nana Denisiuk, Olga Gozalov, Ogtay Ahmedov, Sevim Hovhannesyan, Arax Monaldi Arch Chest Dis Article Tuberculosis treatment is challenging, especially among people with drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. The introduction of fully oral modified short treatment regimen has a great potential to shorten duration of treatment, improve safety and ultimately increase treatment success rate. In 2019 Georgia has piloted the modified fully oral shorter treatment regimen in a routine programmatic condition. Our study aimed to evaluate effectiveness and safety of the modified shorter treatment regimen in Georgia among the first 25 consecutively enrolled patients with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis with proven sensitivity to fluoroquinolone and without prior exposure to second-line tuberculosis drugs. Regimen consisted of 9-month daily administration of bedaquilline, linezolid, levofloxacin, clofazimine and cycloserine. Study patients were enrolled between March-August 2019. We used a national electronic surveillance system, medical records and active TB drug-safety monitoring and management database to extract study related data. The mean age of the study participants was 48 years, 68% were male, 8% were HIV positive, 16% had diabetes and 12% tested positive for hepatitis C infection. The median time to culture conversion among 16 patients who were culture positive at treatment initiation was 1.0 (95% CI: 1.0–2.0) month. Of those, by the end of treatment 15 patients converted to negative. Out of 25 patients in the study cohort 22 (88%) had successful treatment outcome, one patient (4%) died and two (8%) were lost to follow up. The regimen was largely well tolerated. Three patients (12%) experienced serious adverse events - two cases were possibly related to TB drugs in the regimen. Seven patients developed adverse events of interest in eight instances, including musculoskeletal (twice), psychiatric, gas-trointestinal disorders, hepatotoxicity, peripheral neuropathy, cardiotoxicity and myelosuppression (once each). In four patients (16%) the duration of the treatment was extended beyond nine months due to insufficient radiological improvements. Our findings demonstrate that good treatment outcomes are achievable in people with fluoroquinolone-sensitive tuberculosis within routine programmatic conditions using fully oral modified short treatment regimen. The extensive use of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen in Georgia and other high priority countries in the World Health Organization European Region is warranted. 2021-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9391985/ /pubmed/33470088 http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/monaldi.2021.1679 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Open access statement: In accordance with WHO’s open-access publication policy for all work funded by WHO or authored/co-authored by WHO staff members, the WHO retains the copyright of this publication through a Creative Commons Attribution IGO licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/legalcode (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/) ) which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Avaliani, Teona
Sereda, Yuliia
Davtyan, Hayk
Tukvadze, Nestani
Togonidze, Tamar
Kiria, Nana
Denisiuk, Olga
Gozalov, Ogtay
Ahmedov, Sevim
Hovhannesyan, Arax
Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020
title Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020
title_full Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020
title_fullStr Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020
title_short Effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Georgia, 2019–2020
title_sort effectiveness and safety of fully oral modified shorter treatment regimen for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in georgia, 2019–2020
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9391985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33470088
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/monaldi.2021.1679
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