| Literature DB >> 34727494 |
Abstract
Diagnosing and treating latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) is an important part of efforts to combat tuberculosis (TB). The Korean guidelines for TB published in 2020 recommend 2 LTBI regimens for children and adolescents: 9 months of daily isoniazid (9H) and 3 months of daily isoniazid plus rifampicin. Isoniazid for 6-12 months has been used to effectively treat LTBI in children for over 50 years. However, a long treatment period results in poor patient compliance. This review summarizes pediatric data on the treatment completion rate, safety, and efficacy of 4 months of daily rifampicin (4R) and evaluates the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of rifampicin in children. The 4R regimen has a higher treatment completion rate than the 9H regimen and equivalent safety in children. The efficacy of preventing TB is also consistent with that of 9H when summarizing reports published to date. A shorter treatment period could increase patient compliance and, therefore, prevent TB in more patients. By using an effective, safe, and highly compliant regimen for the treatment of children with LTBI, we would become one step closer to our goal of eradicating TB.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Latent tuberculosis; Patient compliance; Rifampicin
Year: 2021 PMID: 34727494 PMCID: PMC9082252 DOI: 10.3345/cep.2021.01186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Pediatr ISSN: 2713-4148
Studies comparing 4R to other latent tuberculosis treatment regimens administered to children only
| Study | Population | Comparator regimen | Country | Study design | Follow-up duration | Period of study | Completion rates, n/N (%) | Permanent drug discontinuation because of treatment related adverse events, n/N | Active TB progression, n | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age | PLHIV, n (%) | 4R | 4R | Comparator | 4R | Comparator | ||||||
| Diallo et al. [ | 10.2 | 0 (0) | 9H | Australia, Benin, Brazil, Canada, Ghana, Guinea, Indonesia | Multicenter, randomly assigned open-label trial | 16-Month follow-up after randomization | 2011-2014 | 360/422 (85.3) | 0/422 | 0/407 | 0/562 Person-years | 2/542 Person-years |
| Gaensbauer et al. [ | 4R: 13 | NR | 9H | United States | Single center, retrospective study | NA | 2006-2015 | 330/395 (83.5) | 6/395 | 6/779 | NR | NR |
| 9H: 11 | ||||||||||||
| Cruz and Starke [ | 8.0 | 0 (0) | 9H and | USA | Single center, retrospective cohort study | NR | 2014-2017 | SAT, 66/79 (83.5); ESAT, 16/18 (88.9); DOPT, 34/35 (97.1) | 1/132 | 9H | 0 | 1 |
| 8/252 | ||||||||||||
| 3HP | 3HP | |||||||||||
| 4/283 | ||||||||||||
| Cruz and Starke [ | 6.6 | NR | 9H | USA | Single center, retrospective cohort study | 6–48 Months | 2010-2013 | SAT, 54/57 (93); ESAT, 13/13 (100); DOPT, 10/10 (100) | 1/80 | 6/324 | 0 | 0 |
4R, 4 months of rifampin; PLHIV, people living with human immunodeficiency virus; TB, tuberculosis; 9H, 9 months of isoniazid; NA, not available; NR, not reported; 3HP, 3 months of isoniazid plus rifapentine; SAT, self-administered therapy; ESAT, enhanced self-administered therapy (medication delivered to the home monthly from the public health center with periodic reminder calls and administered to the child by family members); DOPT, directly observed preventive therapy
Outcomes of studies that compared 4R to other latent tuberculosis treatment regimens administered to children and adults
| Study | No. of total cohorts | Population | Comparator regimen | Country | Study design | Period of study | Completion rates, n/N (%) | Safety, following results from a drug adverse events, n/N (%) | Active TB progression, n/N | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age distribution, year: number | PLHIV, n (%) | 4R | Comparator | 4R | Comparator | 4R | Comparator | ||||||
| Lardizabal et al. [ | 474 | 1–24: 348 | NR | 9H | USA | Retrospective cohort | 2000– 2003 | 210/261 (80.5) | 113/213 (53.1) | Discontinuation: | Discontinuation: | 0/261 | 1/213 |
| 25–34: 48 | 8/261 (3.1) | 13/213 (6.1) | |||||||||||
| 35–44: 49 | |||||||||||||
| ≥45: 29 | |||||||||||||
| Page et al. [ | 2,149 | <18: 254 | 12 (1.1) | 9H | USA | Retrospective cohort | 1999– 2004 | 987/1,379 (71.6) | 405/770 (52.6) | Discontinuation: | Discontinuation: | 1/1,379 | 0/770 |
| 18–35: 1,086 | 23/1229 (1.9) | 31/670 (4.6) | |||||||||||
| >35: 809 | |||||||||||||
| Ronald et al. [ | 10,559 | 0–19: 2,359 | 108 (0.01) | 9H | Canada | Retrospective cohort | 2003–2007 | 468/875 (53.5) | 3,573/9,684 (36.9) | Severe hepatic adverse events | Severe hepatic adverse events | NR | NR |
| 20–34: 3,314 | |||||||||||||
| 35–49: 2,777 | 1/875 (0.001) | 15/9,684 (0.0015)[ | |||||||||||
| 50–64: 1,380 | |||||||||||||
| ≥65: 729 | |||||||||||||
4R: 4 months of rifampin; PLHIV: people living with human immunodeficiency virus; NR, not reported; 9H: 9 months of isoniazid; TB: tuberculosis.
The studies by Lardizabal and Page did not report age-stratified results. The study by Ronald et al. stratified results by age and comorbidity (defined as one or more hospitalizations within one year prior to the initiation of latent tuberculosis treatment). Among patients aged 0–19 years with comorbidities, the treatment completion rate of the 4R group was 28.6%, while that of the 9H group was 19.4%; no cases of severe liver disease occurred in either group. Among patients aged 0–19 years without comorbidities, the treatment completion rate of the 4R group was 61.6%, while that of the 9H group was 33.8%. Severe liver disease occurred in 2 patients (0.09%) without comorbidities in the 9H group.
Included liver transplants (n=2) and hospitalizations ending in death (n=1)