| Literature DB >> 27855693 |
James M Trauer1,2, Jay Achar3, Nargiza Parpieva4, Atadjan Khamraev5, Justin T Denholm6, Dennis Falzon7, Ernesto Jaramillo7, Anita Mesic8, Philipp du Cros3, Emma S McBryde9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is a major threat to global TB control. MDR-TB treatment regimens typically have a high pill burden, last 20 months or more and often lead to unsatisfactory outcomes. A 9-11 month regimen with seven antibiotics has shown high success rates among selected MDR-TB patients in different settings and is conditionally recommended by the World Health Organization.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis; Modelling; Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; Public health; Treatment; Tuberculosis; Uzbekistan
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27855693 PMCID: PMC5114735 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-016-0723-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Model structure. Spontaneous recovery for patients in the detected compartments and all death flows are not depicted. Brown arrows represent case detection flows, the total of which are set equal for all strains. Hollow arrows represent treatment commencement flows, which are determined by the total number of persons awaiting treatment with that regimen and the availability of the regimen for each of the three regimens. Individual compartment names are explained in Additional file 1: Table S1 and summarised as follows: blue text and s subscript, drug-susceptible TB; red text and m subscript, multidrug-resistant TB; green text and x subscript, XDR-TB (including also MDR-TB strains with resistance to fluoroquinolones or second-line injectable agents). S, susceptible to TB (A and B subscripts refer to fully susceptible and partially immune, respectively); L, latent infection (A and B subscripts refer to early and late latent infection, respectively); I, active TB disease in the community not yet detected; D, detected (first subscript refers to the actual resistance pattern of the infecting strain, second subscript refers to the strain thought to be present at diagnosis); T, on treatment (subscripts are as for D compartments for those incorrectly diagnosed, while for those correctly diagnosed I subscript indicates still infectious on appropriate regimen, while N subscript indicates no longer infectious). For simplicity, the model assumes no Is patients are incorrectly detected as drug-resistant
Description of scenarios
| Scenario | Programmatic implementation and evidence | Model implementation |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Baseline programmatic conditions continued | All 2014 programmatic parameters remain unchanged (including 24 month duration of MDR-TB regimen and 400 treatment places available at any one time being the limiting factor for treatment commencement in 2014) | |
| 2A. Short-course MDR-TB regimen | Change from standard WHO regimen to short-course regimen [ | Total period of time on treatment for MDR-TB regimens decreases from a mean of 24 months to 10 months (with treatment places remaining capped at 400) |
| 2B. Short-course MDR-TB regimen with improved outcomes | As for short-course regimen, with improvement in treatment outcomes [ | Treatment outcomes improve to a treatment success rate of 87.9% (with ratio of deaths to defaults under treatment unchanged), in addition to changes modelled under short-course regimen scenario above |
| 3. Decreased delays to detection for all forms of TB (first comparator) | Active or intensified case finding halves the period of time to first presentation from baseline value [ | Time from disease onset to correct identification of patients as having active TB halves (with no change to the proportion correctly identified as to their infecting strain) |
| 4. Improved MDR-TB treatment outcomes (second comparator) | Social support for all patients on treatment halves the proportion of outcomes resulting in interruption/failure or death [ | Proportion of patients interrupting/failing or dying on treatment halves (with treatment success proportion increasing to 1 – [1 – previous treatment success proportion] ÷ 2) |
| 5. Improved MDR-TB identification (third comparator) | Halve the number of health facilities without access to drug-susceptibility testing (e.g. Xpert MTB/RIF), thereby halving the proportion of patients not recognised as MDR-TB at presentation [ | Proportion of patients with MDR-TB who are incorrectly diagnosed as having DS-TB halves (with correct diagnosis proportion increasing to 1 – [1 – previous correct identification proportion] ÷ 2) |
| 6. Increased MDR-TB treatment availability (fourth comparator) | Increased resources doubles the number of patients that can be simultaneously treated | Increase number of MDR-TB treatment places available to 800 (with DS-TB and XDR-TB treatment capacity unchanged) |
DS-TB Drug-susceptible tuberculosis, MDR-TB Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, TB Tuberculosis, WHO World Health Organization, XDR-TB Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis
Fig. 2Implementation of main intervention and comparators. Model of the implementation of short-course MDR-TB and of the four comparator programmatic interventions. Increased flows highlighted by thick purple arrows, with indirect effects indicated through dashed purple arrows. For Scenario 4, the flows that are decreased are illustrated with thin purple arrows. Reinfection omitted
Fig. 3Scenario outcomes. Strains are presented by columns of panels and disease burden outcomes are presented by rows. Legend for all plots is presented in the lower left panel
Scenario results and percentage differences from baseline scenario in 2025
| 1. Baseline | 2A. Short-course regimen | 2B. Short-course, improved outcomes | 3. Decreased delays to detection | 4. Improved MDR-TB treatment outcomes | 5. Improved MDR-TB identification | 6. Increased MDR-TB treatment availability | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total incidencea | 77.2 | 71.1 | 69.4 | 65.6 | 73.9 | 80.2 | 73.3 |
| % change | −8.0% | −10.2% | −15.0% | −4.4% | +3.8% | −5.1% | |
| Total prevalenceb | 105.7 | 83.6 | 79.0 | 89.6 | 97.7 | 111.8 | 99.5 |
| % change | −20.9% | −25.2% | −15.2% | −7.5% | +5.8% | −5.8% | |
| Total mortalitya | 10.4 | 8.7 | 7.7 | 8.7 | 9.1 | 11.1 | 9.3 |
| % change | −16.6% | −25.9% | −16.6% | −12.7% | +7.3% | −10.2% | |
| MDR-TB incidencea | 15.2 | 9.7 | 8.7 | 14.6 | 12.2 | 18.2 | 11.2 |
| % change | −36.0% | −42.8% | −4.3% | −19.6% | +19.8% | −26.4% | |
| MDR-TB prevalenceb | 63.0 | 40.8 | 36.1 | 61.6 | 55.0 | 69.2 | 56.7 |
| % change | −35.2% | −42.6% | −2.2% | −12.7% | +9.9% | −9.9% | |
| MDR-TB mortalitya | 3.0 | 1.7 | 1.0 | 2.8 | 1.9 | 3.8 | 1.9 |
| % change | −43.9% | −67.2% | −6.2% | −38.2% | +27.5% | −37.1% | |
| Proportion of incident cases MDR-TB | 34.8 | 28.9 | 27.1 | 40.1 | 31.7 | 37.3 | 31.2 |
| % change | −16.9% | −22.1% | +15.1% | −8.9% | +7.1% | −10.5% | |
| XDR-TB incidencea | 11.7 | 10.8 | 10.1 | 11.7 | 11.2 | 11.7 | 11.6 |
| % change | −7.2% | −13.3% | +0.5% | −4.2% | −0.1% | −0.4% | |
| XDR-TB prevalenceb | 29.8 | 26.6 | 24.5 | 30.0 | 28.5 | 29.3 | 30.2 |
| % change | −10.8% | −17.7% | +0.5% | −4.4% | −1.6% | +1.2% | |
| XDR-TB mortalitya | 4.0 | 3.6 | 3.3 | 4.1 | 3.9 | 4.0 | 4.1 |
| % change | −10.5% | 17.2% | +0.5% | −4.3% | −1.6% | +1.2% | |
| Proportion of incident cases XDR-TB | 15.1 | 15.2 | 14.6 | 17.9 | 15.1 | 14.6 | 15.9 |
| % change | +0.8% | −3.5% | +18.2% | +0.1% | −3.8% | +5.0% |
aPer 100,000 population per year
bPer 100,000 population
MDR-TB Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, XDR-TB Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis