| Literature DB >> 30574687 |
Yong Soo Kwon1, Won Jung Koh2, Charles L Daley3.
Abstract
The pathogen Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) is the most common cause of nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease worldwide. The decision to initiate long-term antibiotic treatment is difficult for the physician due to inconsistent disease progression and adverse effects associated with the antibiotic treatment. The prognostic factors for the progression of MAC pulmonary disease are low body mass index, poor nutritional status, presence of cavitary lesion(s), extensive disease, and a positive acid-fast bacilli smear. A regimen consisting of macrolides (clarithromycin or azithromycin) with rifampin and ethambutol has been recommended; this regimen significantly improves the treatment of MAC pulmonary disease and should be maintained for at least 12 months after negative sputum culture conversion. However, the rates of default and disease recurrence after treatment completion are still high. Moreover, treatment failure or macrolide resistance can occur, although in some refractory cases, surgical lung resection can improve treatment outcomes. However, surgical resection should be carefully performed in a well-equipped center and be based on a rigorous risk-benefit analysis in a multidisciplinary setting. New therapies, including clofazimine, inhaled amikacin, and bedaquiline, have shown promising results for the treatment of MAC pulmonary disease, especially in patients with treatment failure or macrolide-resistant MAC pulmonary disease. However, further evidence of the efficacy and safety of these new treatment regimens is needed. Also, a new consensus is needed for treatment outcome definitions as widespread use of these definitions could increase the quality of evidence for the treatment of MAC pulmonary disease. Copyright©2019. The Korean Academy of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium avium; Mycobacterium avium Complex; Mycobacterium intracellulare; Nontuberculous Mycobacteria; Treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 30574687 PMCID: PMC6304322 DOI: 10.4046/trd.2018.0060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tuberc Respir Dis (Seoul) ISSN: 1738-3536
Figure 1Treatment initiation algorithm for treatment naïve MAC-PD. Treatment should be considered when patients have risk factors for disease progression, including cavitary lesion(s), low body mass index, poor nutritional status, extensive disease, and AFB smear-positive sputum. If patients have mild disease and no risk factors for progression, treatment should be initiated when patients exhibit disease progression. MAC-PD: Mycobacterium avium complex pulmonary disease; HRCT: high-resolution computed tomography; AFB: acid-fast bacilli.
Figure 2Fibrocavitary form of Mycobacterium intracellulare pulmonary disease in a 57-year-old male patient. (A) Chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) shows a large, thick-walled cavity in the right upper lobe. (B) After 12 months of daily azithromycin, ethambutol, and rifampin treatment in combination with streptomycin injection for the initial 3 months, chest HRCT showed improvement of the cavitary lesion.
Figure 3Cavitary nodular bronchiectatic form of Mycobacterium avium pulmonary disease in a 61-year-old female patient. (A) Chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) shows severe bronchiectasis in the lingular segment of the left upper lobe. Note the cavity and multiple nodules suggesting bronchiolitis in the left lower lobe. (B) After 12 months of daily azithromycin, ethambutol, and rifampin treatment, chest HRCT showed improvement of cavitary and nodular lesions.
Figure 4Non-cavitary nodular bronchiectatic form of pulmonary disease caused by Mycobacterium intracellulare in a 57-year-old female patient. (A) Chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) shows severe bronchiectasis in the right middle lobe and the lingular segment of the left upper lobe. Note the peribronchiectatic consolidation, the multiple, small nodules, and tree-in-bud appearances suggesting bronchiolitis in both lungs. (B) After 12 months of three-times-weekly antibiotic therapy that included azithromycin, ethambutol, and rifampin, chest HRCT showed a decreased extent of bilateral consolidation and improvement of bronchiolitis.
Summary of studies with meta-analysis on treatment outcomes of Mycobacterium avium complex pulmonary disease
| Study | No. of studies | No. of patients | Selection criteria of studies | Definition of treatment success | Treatment success rate (% or 95% CI) | Other outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Field et al. (2004) | 38 | 1,152 | All | Variable | Prior to introduction of ethambutol or rifampin: 32 | |
| Regimens included ethambutol and/or rifampin: 39 | ||||||
| Macrolide-containing regimens: 56 | ||||||
| Xu et al. (2014) | 28 | 2,422 | Studies with cases of culture-confirmed MAC by ATS guidelines, outcome definitions specified by mycobacterial culture, and outcomes reported according to the ATS classifications | Variable, specified by mycobacterial culture endpoints | 39 (38–41) | Failure 27 (25.29) |
| Treatment success rate of regimens with macrolide vs. without macrolide, 42 (40–44) vs. 28 (24–32) | Relapse 6 (5.7) | |||||
| Death 17 (15.18) | ||||||
| Default 12 (11.13) | ||||||
| Kwak et al. (2017) | 16 | 1,462 | Randomized, controlled trials and observational studies published in peer-reviewed journals | 12 Months of sustained culture negativity | 60 (55–65) | Default rate of all studies vs. studies with tiw dosing: 16 (12–20) vs. 12 (9–15) |
| Pasipanodya et al. (2017) | 21 | 2,534 | Clinical trials, prospective and retrospective studies | Sputum culture conversion | 6-Month culture conversion with macrolide-containing regimen: 65 (58–72) | |
| Culture conversion at the end of treatment with macrolide-containing regimens: 64 (55–73) | ||||||
| Culture conversion at the end of treatment with macrolide-free regimens: 53 (15–89) | ||||||
| Sustained culture conversion with macrolide-containing regimens: 54 (45–63) | ||||||
| Sustained culture conversion with macrolide-free regimens: 38 (25–52) | ||||||
| Diel et al. (2018) | 42 | 2,376 | Clinical trials, prospective and retrospective studies | Sputum culture conversion | Culture conversion with macrolidecontaining regimen: 52 (45–60) | |
| Culture conversion with ATSrecommended three-drug regimen: 61 (50–73) | ||||||
| Culture conversion with ATSrecommended three-drug regimen after more than 1 year: 66 (53–77) |
CI: confidence interval; MAC: Mycobacterium avium complex; ATS: American Thoracic Society; tiw: three times weekly.
Treatment of Mycobacterium avium complex pulmonary disease
| Indications | Regimen | Duration of therapy |
|---|---|---|
| Non-cavitary nodular bronchiectatic form | Azithromycin 500 mg tiw or clarithromycin 1,000 mg tiw and rifampin 600 mg tiw and ethambutol 25 mg/kg tiw | 12 Months beyond sputum culture conversion to negative |
| Fibrocavitary form or cavitary nodular bronchiectatic form | Azithromycin 250–500 mg daily or clarithromycin 1000 mg daily and rifampin 450–600 mg daily and ethambutol 15 mg/kg daily and/or amikacin 15 mg/kg IV or IM tiw | 12 Months beyond sputum culture conversion to negative |
| Macrolide-resistant | Rifampin 450–600 mg daily and ethambutol 15 mg/kg daily and/or moxifloxacin 400 mg daily and/or clofazimine 100 mg daily and/or inhaled amikacin and/or bedaquiline | 12 Months beyond sputum culture conversion to negative |
tiw: three times weekly; IV: intravenous injection; IM: intramuscular injection.
International expert consensus on treatment outcome definitions for non-tuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary diseases
| Outcome | Definition |
|---|---|
| Culture conversion | The finding of at least three consecutive negative mycobacterial cultures from respiratory samples, collected at least 4 weeks apart, during antimycobacterial treatment |
| Microbiological cure | Finding multiple consecutive negative but no positive cultures with the causative species from respiratory samples after culture conversion and until the end of antimycobacterial treatment |
| Clinical cure | Patient-reported and/or objective improvement of symptoms during antimycobacterial treatment, sustained until at least the end of treatment, but no cultures available to prove culture conversion or microbiological cure |
| Cure | Antimycobacterial treatment completed, with fulfilment of criteria for both microbiological and clinical cure |
| Treatment failure | The re-emergence of multiple positive cultures or persistence of positive cultures with the causative species from respiratory samples after ≥12 months of antimycobacterial treatment, while the patient is still on treatment |
| Recurrence | The re-emergence of at least two positive cultures with the causative species from respiratory samples after cessation of antimycobacterial treatment |
| Relapse | The emergence of at least two positive cultures with the same strain of the causative species after the end of treatment |
| Reinfection | The emergence of at least two positive cultures with a different strain of the causative species or a strain of a different species after the initiation of the treatment episode |
| Death | Death due to any reason during treatment of NTM-PD |
| Death due to NTM-PD | All causes of death that would not have occurred if the patient had not had NTM-PD |
| Treatment halted | Physician- or patient-initiated pre-term cessation of antimycobacterial treatment |
| Unknown outcome | Patient is no longer seen by his/her treating physician, so follow-up of treatment outcome is not possible (umbrella term for “lost to follow-up” and “transfer out”) |
Reprinted from van Ingen et al. Eur Respir J 2018;51:1800170, with permission of the European Respiratory Society76.
NTM-PD: nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease.