| Literature DB >> 19468470 |
Tamilarasu Kadhiravan1, Surendra K Sharma.
Abstract
Antimycobacterial chemotherapy is the mainstay of treatment for the majority of patients with genitourinary tuberculosis (GUTB). A large body of evidence from clinical trials suggests that short-course chemotherapy regimens, employing four drugs including rifampicin and pyrazinamide, achieve cure in most of the patients with tuberculosis (TB) and are associated with the lowest rates of relapse. Standard six-month regimens are adequate for the treatment of GUTB. Directly observed treatment, short-course (DOTS) is the internationally recommended comprehensive strategy to control TB, and directly observed treatment is just one of its five elements. DOTS cures not only the individual with TB but also reduces the incidence of TB as well as the prevalence of primary drug-resistance in the community. Corticosteroids have no proven role in the management of patients with GUTB. Errors in prescribing anti-TB drugs are common in clinical practice. Standardized treatment regimens at correct doses and assured completion of treatment have made DOTS the present-day standard of care for the management of all forms of TB including GUTB.Entities:
Keywords: Directly observed treatment; drug therapy; glucocorticoids; urogenital tuberculosis
Year: 2008 PMID: 19468470 PMCID: PMC2684341 DOI: 10.4103/0970-1591.42619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Urol ISSN: 0970-1591
Figure 1Bacillary Subpopulations in Active Tuberculosis - Mitchison's Hypothesis. Circles represent the subpopulations of M. tuberculosis that vary in metabolic activity and multiplication; size of the circles is not proportional to the actual size of the subpopulation. Drugs active against the respective subpopulation appear in italics. INH = isoniazid; PZA = pyrazinamide; RMP = rifampicin; SM = streptomycin[14]
Elements of DOTS and components of the Stop TB strategy
| Political commitment with increased and sustained financing |
| Case detection through quality-assured bacteriology |
| Standardized treatment with supervision and patient support |
| An effective drug supply and management system |
| Monitoring and evaluation system, and impact measurement |
| - Implement collaborative TB/HIV activities |
| - Prevent and control MDR-TB |
| - Address prisoners, refugees, other high-risk groups and special situations |
| - Actively participate in efforts to improve system-wide policy, human resources, financing, management, service delivery, and information systems |
| - Share innovations that strengthen health systems, including the Practical Approach to Lung Health (PAL) |
| - Adapt innovations from other fields |
| - Public-Public and Public-Private Mix (PPM) approaches |
| - Implement International Standards for TB Care |
| - Advocacy, communication and social mobilization |
| - Community participation in TB care |
| - Patients’ charter for TB care |
| - Program-based operational research |
| - Research to develop new diagnostics drugs, and vaccines |
Adapted from Reference[20]; TB = tuberculosis; MDR-TB = multidrug-resistant TB
Treatment regimens used in the revised national tuberculosis control programme (RNTCP)
| Treatment category/definition | Treatment regimen |
|---|---|
| Category I | 2H3R3Z3E3 |
| New sputum-smear positive | |
| Seriously-ill sputum-smear negative | |
| Seriously-ill extrapulonary | |
| Category II | 2H3R3Z3E3S3 + 1H3R3Z3E3§ + 5H3R3E3 |
| Sputum-smear positive relapse | |
| Sputum-smear positive failure | |
| Sputum-smear positive treatment after default | |
| Others | |
| Category III | 2H3R3Z3 + 4H3R3 |
| New sputum-smear negative, not seriously ill | |
| New extrapulmonary, not seriously ill |
Adapted from Reference[21]; E = ethambutol, 1200 mg/dose; H = isoniazid, 600 mg/dose; R = rifampicin, 450 mg/dose (patients weighing 60 kg or more receive an additional dose of 150 mg); S = streptomycin, 750 mg/dose (500 mg/dose for those aged more than 50 years); Z = pyrazinamide, 1,500 mg/dose; dosage in patients weighing less than 30 kg and children is calculated according to body weight
Numbers preceding the letters represent the duration of treatment in months; numbers in subscript represent the number of doses per week
Includes all HIV co-infected patients irrespective of sputum-smear status, type of disease, and severity of HIV-related immunosuppression
Includes all patients with meningeal, pericardical, genitourinary, spinal, or disseminated involvement, bilateral pleural effusions, or massive unilateral pleural effusion
If the patient remains sputum-smear positive at the end of intensive phase, then intensive phase has to be extended by one month
Includes sputum-smear negative or extrapulmonary relapse or failure; should be supported by culture or histopathological evidence of disease activity
Important side-effects of first-line anti-tuberculosis drugs
| Drug | Side-effects |
|---|---|
| Isoniazid | Hepatitis, peripheral neuropathy, systemic hypersensitivity with rash and fever, psychosis, convulsions, disulfiram-like reaction with alcohol |
| Rifampicin | Flu-like symptoms, nausea, anorexia, diarrhea, red-orange discoloration of secretions and contact lenses, hepatitis, cholestasis, thrombocytopenia, renal failure |
| Pyrazinamide | Nausea, anorexia, asymptomatic hyperuricemia, joint pains, |
| Ethambutol | Retrobulbar optic neuritis, asymptomatic hyperuricemia, peripheral neuropathy |
| Streptomycin | Vestibular dysfunction, hearing loss, non-oliguric renal failure |
Based on Reference[33]
Polyarthralgias are common in patients receiving pyrazinamide; this is unrelated to hyperuricemia. Clinically manifest gout is rare