| Literature DB >> 29340497 |
Marcelo Fouad Rabahi1,2, José Laerte Rodrigues da Silva Júnior2, Anna Carolina Galvão Ferreira1,3, Daniela Graner Schuwartz Tannus-Silva1, Marcus Barreto Conde4,5.
Abstract
Tuberculosis treatment remains a challenge due to the need to consider, when approaching it, the context of individual and collective health. In addition, social and economic issues have been shown to be variables that need to be considered when it comes to treatment effectiveness. We conducted a critical review of the national and international literature on the treatment of tuberculosis in recent years with the aims of presenting health care workers with recommendations based on the situation in Brazil and better informing decision-making regarding tuberculosis patients so as to minimize morbidity and interrupt disease transmission.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29340497 PMCID: PMC5792048 DOI: 10.1590/S1806-37562016000000388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bras Pneumol ISSN: 1806-3713 Impact factor: 2.624
Factors that influence the effectiveness of tuberculosis treatment.
| PATIENT-RELATED FACTORS |
|---|
| Age, comorbidities, immune status, nutritional status, abusive alcohol intake, adherence to treatment, and drug tolerance |
| Genetic characteristics affecting drug absorption and metabolism, and individual vulnerability to toxicities |
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| Virulence of the organism |
| Susceptibility of the strain |
| Radiological extent of the disease and presence of cavities |
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| Motivational capacity of the staff, access of patients to the health care system, and monitoring and supervision of patients regarding treatment |
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| Amount of each drug administered, plasma concentrations of administered drugs; relationship between administered drugs and proteins, clearance, metabolism, and absorption |
| Drug bioavailability of the presentations (single-drug tablets, fixed-dose combination tablets), and drug interactions with other drugs |
| Treatment regimen used (daily or intermittent), which influences duration and frequency of drug administration; bactericidal and sterilizing potency; and drug synergy or antagonism |
Treatment regimen for all new cases of all forms of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis (except meningoencephalitis), as well as for all cases of relapse and return after default.a
| Regimen | Drugs (mg/tablet) | Body weight, kg | Dose |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2RHZE Intensive phase | RHZE (150/75/400/275) | ≤ 20 | 10/10/35/25 mg/kg/day |
| 20- 35 | 2 tablets | ||
| 36-50 | 3 tablets | ||
| > 50 | 4 tablets | ||
| 4RH Maintenance phase | RH (150/75) | ≤ 20 | 10/10 mg/kg/day |
| 20-35 | 2 tablets | ||
| 36-50 | 3 tablets | ||
| > 50 | 4 tablets |
R: rifampin; H: isoniazid; Z: pyrazinamide; and E: ethambutol. aThe drugs are given as fixed-dose combination tablets. bThe number preceding the acronym indicates duration of treatment in months. cThe dose of each drug in mg in each tablet is listed below its corresponding letter in the acronym.
Treatment of multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis.
| Resistance | Phase | Druga,b | Body weight, kg | Dose | Treatment duration, months |
| R + H (± S) | Intensive | Cm3 | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | 8 |
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| E | 30 | 15-25 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 800 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| Z | 30 | 20-30 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,500 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 2,000 mg/day | ||||
| Lfx | 30 | 10-15 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Trd | 30 | 10-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Maintenance | E | 30 | 15-25 mg/kg/day | 10 | |
| 31-45 | 800 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| Lfx | 30 | 10-15 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Trd | 30 | 10-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| R + H + E (± S) or R + H + E + Z (± S) | Intensive | Cm3 | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | 8 |
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Et | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Z | 30 | 20-30 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,500 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 2,000 mg/day | ||||
| Lfx | 30 | 10-15 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Trd | 30 | 10-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Maintenance | Et | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | 10 | |
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Lfx | 30 | 10-15 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Trd | 30 | 10-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| R + H + Z (± S) | Intensive | Cm3 | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | 8 |
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| E | 30 | 15-25 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 800 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| Z | 30 | 20-30 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,500 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 2,000 mg/day | ||||
| Lfx | 30 | 10-15 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Et | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Trd | 30 | 10-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Maintenance | E | 30 | 15-25 mg/kg/day | 10 | |
| 31-45 | 800 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,200 mg/day | ||||
| Lfx | 30 | 10-15 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 1,000 mg/day | ||||
| Et | 30 | 15-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| Trd | 30 | 10-20 mg/kg/day | |||
| 31-45 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 46-55 | 500 mg/day | ||||
| 56-70 | 750 mg/day | ||||
| > 70 | 750 mg/day |
R: rifampin; H: isoniazid; S: streptomycin; Cm: capreomycin; E: ethambutol; Z: pyrazinamide; Lfx: levofloxacin; Trd: terizidone; and Et: ethionamide. aThe subscript number after a drug abbreviation indicates the number of days per week that the drug will be used; if there is no subscript number, treatment with that drug is daily. bIn patients who have already used capreomycin, use amikacin as an alternative. In patients who do not have resistance to streptomycin as determined by drug susceptibility testing and who have not used amikacin, amikacin can also be considered for use. Doses of amikacin and streptomycin: up to 30 kg, 15-20 mg/kg/day; from 31 to 45 kg, 500 mg/day; from 46 to 55 kg, 750 mg/day; ≥ 56 kg, 1,000 mg/day.
Management of treatment interruptions.
| Interruption time point | Details of interruption | Approach |
| During the intensive phase | Lapse is < 14 days in duration | Continue treatment to complete the planned total number of doses (60 doses), as long as the intensive phase lasts 3 months at most |
| Lapse is ≥ 14 days in duration | Restart treatment from the beginning | |
| During the maintenance phase | Received ≥ 80% of the doses and was smear-negativeb | Continue treatment. The patient may not need to take all doses |
| Received ≥ 80% of the doses and was smear-positive at the start of treatment | Continue treatment until all 120 doses are completed | |
| Received < 80% of the doses, and accumulative lapse is < 3 months in duration | Continue treatment until all 120 doses are completed, unless consecutive lapse is > 2 months in duration. In such cases, restart treatment. If treatment cannot be completed within 9 months (with the intensive phase lasting 3 months at most and the maintenance phase lasting 6 months at most), restart treatment from the beginning of the intensive phase. | |
| Received < 80% of the doses, and accumulative lapse is ≥ 3 months in duration | Restart treatment from the beginning (new intensive and maintenance phases) |
aSmear microscopy, culture, and susceptibility testing should always be performed when patients resume treatment. bSmear-negative patient: a patient with at least two AFB-negative sputum samples (including one sample collected in the morning); X-ray findings consistent with tuberculosis and/or no clinical response to treatment with broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents (Note: fluoroquinolones should not be used because they have activity against the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and can produce transient improvement in patients with tuberculosis); satisfactory response to antituberculosis treatment.
Treatment of monodrug-resistant and polydrug-resistant tuberculosis.
| Resistance to | Regimen | |
|---|---|---|
| Intensive phase | Maintenance phase | |
| H | 2RZES | 4RE(
|
| R | 6S3HZELfx | 6HELfx(
|
| R (identified by rapid molecular testing)b | 8Cm3EZLfxTrd | 10ELfxTrd |
| H + Zc | 2RESO | 7REO |
| H + Ec | 2RZSO | 7RO |
| R + Z | 8HCm3EZLfxTrd | 10HELfxTrd(
|
| R + E | 8Cm3EtZLfxTrd | 10HEtLfxTrd(
|
| H + Z + E | 3RSOTd | 12ROT(
|
H: isoniazid; R: rifampin; Z: pyrazinamide; E: ethambutol; S: streptomycin; Lfx: levofloxacin; Cm: capreomycin; Trd: terizidone; O: ofloxacin; and Et: ethionamide. aThe number preceding the acronym indicates duration of treatment in weeks. The subscript number after a drug abbreviation indicates the number of days per week that the drug should be used; if there is no subscript number, treatment with that drug is daily. bIf there is monoresistance to R and the patient has been on the 8Cm3EZLfxTrd/10ELfxTrd regimen for more than 1 month, continue the regimen until completion; if the patient has been on that regimen for less than 1 month, discontinue it and start the 6S3HZELfx/6HELfx regimen. If susceptibility testing shows multidrug resistance (R + H or R + H + resistance to any other first-line drugs), see Chart 3. If susceptibility testing shows polyresistance (R + resistance to first-line drugs other than H), continue the regimen for R-resistant tuberculosis with the addition of H: 8HCm3EZLfxTrd/10 HLfxTrd (Chart 4). ) cOptionally replace O with Lfx. ) dExtend the intensive phase for 6 months in cases of extensive bilateral disease.
Adverse reactions and approach.a
| Adverse reactions | Probable causative drug | Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Minor | ||
| Anorexia, vomiting, nausea, abdominal pain | R, H, Z | Advise patients to take the antituberculosis drugs at the appropriate time, prescribe symptomatic treatment, and reassess the need for requesting the determination of hepatic enzyme levels. |
| Orange- or red-colored sweat/urine | R | Instruct patients. |
| Pruritus | S, R | Prescribe antihistamines. |
| Joint pain | Z | Prescribe aspirin. |
| Paresthesia | H (common) or E (uncommon) | Prescribe pyridoxine (50 mg/day). |
| Asymptomatic hyperuricemia | Z | Prescribe follow-up/diet. |
| Hyperuricemia and arthralgia | E | Prescribe follow-up/diet/symptomatic treatment. |
| Arthritis/arthralgia | H, Z | Prescribe symptomatic treatment. |
| Headache, anxiety, euphoria, insomnia | H | Instruct patients. |
| Major | ||
| Exanthema/pruritus | S, R | Discontinue the drugs and reintroduce one drug at a time. |
| Fever, oliguria, exanthema (interstitial nephritis, rhabdomyolysis) | Z | Discontinue Z. Use the 2RHE/7RH regimen. |
| Hypoacusis | S | Replace S with E (maintain the planned duration of the regimen). |
| Vertigo/nystagmus | S | Replace S with E (maintain the planned duration of the regimen). |
| Convulsive seizures, encephalopathy | H | Use the 2RZES5/7RE regimen. |
| Vomiting and mental confusion (prehepatic jaundice?) | Any drug (H, R, Z, E, S, Et) | Discontinue the regimen and request the determination of hepatic enzyme levels. If ALT is abnormal, follow a regimen for managing hepatotocixity.b |
| Jaundice (if other causes have been ruled out) | Any drug (H, R, Z, E, S, Et) | Discontinue the regimen and request the determination of hepatic enzyme levels. If ALT is abnormal, follow a regimen for managing hepatotoxicity.b |
| Optic neuritis (loss of side vision, change in color vision) | E (common) and H (uncommon) | Use the 2RHZ/4RH or 2RZES5/7RE regimen. |
| Shock, purpura | R | Use the 2HZES5/10HE regimen. |
Adapted from Conde et al., Maciel et al., and Ferreira et al. ) R: rifampin; H: isoniazid; Z: pyrazinamide; E: ethambutol; S: streptomycin; Et: ethionamide; and ALT: alanine aminotransferase. aThe number preceding the acronym indicates duration of treatment in weeks. The subscript number after a drug abbreviation indicates the number of days per week that the drug should be used; if there is no subscript number, treatment with that drug is daily. bSee “Tuberculosis and liver disease.”
Infectious Diseases Society of America/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/American Thoracic Society joint recommendations, based on PICO (an acronym based on questions regarding the Patients of interest, Intervention being studied, Comparison of the intervention, and Outcome of interest) questions and on the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach and endorsed by the European Respiratory Society.
| Question | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| 1. Does adding case management interventions to curative therapy improve outcomes compared with curative therapy alone among patients with tuberculosis? (Case management is defined as patient education/counseling, home visits, integration/coordination of care with specialists and general practitioners, patient reminders, and use of incentives/enablers) | 1. We suggest using case management interventions during treatment of patients with tuberculosis. (Conditional recommendation; very low certainty in the evidence) |
| 2. Does self-administered therapy have similar results compared with directly observed therapy in patients with various forms of tuberculosis? | 2. We suggest using directly observed therapy rather than self-administered therapy for routine treatment of all forms of tuberculosis. (Conditional recommendation; low certainty in the evidence) |
| 3. Does intermittent dosing in the intensive phase have similar outcomes compared with daily dosing in the intensive phase for treatment of drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis? | 3a. We recommend the use of daily rather than intermittent dosing in the intensive phase of therapy for drug susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis. (Strong recommendation; moderate certainty in the evidence)) |
| 4. Does intermittent dosing in the maintenance phase have similar outcomes compared with daily dosing in the maintenance phase in patients with drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis? | 4a. We recommend the use of daily or thrice-weekly dosing in the maintenance phase of therapy for drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis. (Strong recommendation; moderate certainty in the evidence) |
| 5. Does extending treatment beyond 6 months improve outcomes compared with the standard 6-month treatment regimen among pulmonary tuberculosis patients coinfected with HIV? | 5a. For HIV-infected individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy, we recommend using the standard 6-month daily regimen consisting of an intensive phase of 2 months of isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol followed by a maintenance phase of 4 months of rifampin and isoniazid for the treatment of drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis. (Conditional recommendation; very low certainty in the evidence) |
| 6. Does initiation of antiretroviral therapy during tuberculosis treatment compared with at the end of tuberculosis treatment improve outcomes among tuberculosis patients coinfected with HIV? | 6. We recommend initiating antiretroviral therapy during tuberculosis treatment. Antiretroviral therapy should ideally be initiated within the first 2 weeks of tuberculosis treatment for individuals with CD4 counts < 50 cells/µL and by 8-12 weeks of tuberculosis treatment initiation for individuals with CD4 counts ≥ 50 cells/µL. (Strong recommendation; high certainty in the evidence) |
| 7. Does the use of adjuvant corticosteroids in tuberculous pericarditis provide mortality and morbidity benefits? | 7. We recommend that adjunctive corticosteroid therapy not be routinely used in individuals with tuberculous pericarditis. (Conditional recommendation; very low certainly in the evidence) |
| 8. Does the use of adjuvant corticosteroids in tuberculous meningitis provide mortality and morbidity benefits? | 8. We recommend adjunctive corticosteroid therapy with dexamethasone or prednisolone tapered over 6-8 weeks for individuals with tuberculous meningitis. (Strong recommendation; moderate certainty in the evidence) |
| 9. Does a shorter duration of treatment have similar outcomes compared with the standard 6-month treatment duration among HIV-uninfected individuals with paucibacillary tuberculosis (i.e., sputum smear negative, culture negative)? | 9. We suggest that a 4-month treatment regimen is adequate for treatment of HIV-uninfected adults with sputum smear-negative, culture-negative pulmonary tuberculosis. (Conditional recommendation; very low certainly in the evidence) |
Adapted from Sotgiu et al. and Nahid et al.