| Literature DB >> 35456056 |
Pauline Howell1, Jay Achar2, G Khai Lin Huang3, Andrei Mariandyshev4,5, H Simon Schaaf6, Anthony J Garcia-Prats6,7.
Abstract
Children affected by rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB; TB resistant to at least rifampicin) are a neglected group. Each year an estimated 25,000-30,000 children develop RR-TB disease globally. Improving case detection and treatment initiation is a priority since RR-TB disease is underdiagnosed and undertreated. Untreated paediatric TB has particularly high morbidity and mortality. However, children receiving TB treatment, including for RR-TB, respond well. RR-TB treatment remains a challenge for children, their caregivers and TB programmes, requiring treatment regimens of up to 18 months in duration, often associated with severe and long-term adverse effects. Shorter, safer, effective child-friendly regimens for RR-TB are needed. Preventing progression to disease following Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is another key component of TB control. The last few years have seen exciting advances. In this article, we highlight key elements of paediatric RR-TB case detection and recent updates, ongoing challenges and forthcoming advances in the treatment of RR-TB disease and infection in children and adolescents. The global TB community must continue to advocate for more and faster research in children on novel and repurposed TB drugs and regimens and increase investments in scaling-up effective approaches, to ensure an equitable response that prioritises the needs of this vulnerable population.Entities:
Keywords: children; multidrug-resistant; paediatrics; prevention; rifampicin-resistant; treatment; tuberculosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35456056 PMCID: PMC9024964 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11040381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Summary of phase IIc/III clinical studies of adults with MDR-TB or extensively DR-TB1 (adapted from [18,24,25]).
| Study (N) | Phase | Regimen (Population 3) | Outcome | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nix-TB | III | 6BPaL | Relapse-free cure at 12 mo |
90% relapse-free cure status 6 mo after end of treatment Led to FDA approval of Pa in the BPaL regimen combination in August 2019 and EMA approval in July 2020 |
| NC-007, ZeNix | III | 6BPaL1200 | Incidence of bacteriologic failure or relapse/clinical failure through 78 weeks |
High rate of favourable clinical outcomes: 93% in 6BPaL1200, 89% in 2BPaL1200/4BPa, 91% in 6BPaL600, and 84% in 2BPaL600/4BPa 6BPaL1200 arm had higher rates of adverse events of peripheral neuropathy and myelosuppression/anaemia |
| TB- PRACTECAL | II/III | 6BPaL | Percentage of patients with unfavourable outcome through 72 weeks |
Stage 1 assessed all arms by liquid media culture conversion at 8 weeks. BPaLM advanced to stage 2 In mITT analysis 48.5% (32/66) SOC had an unfavourable outcome vs. 11.3% (7/62) BPaLM Treatment discontinuation more common in control vs. BPaLM 42.4% (28/66) vs. 8.1% (5/62) |
| NExT | III | 6–9BLLxTzdZ(Eto or Hhd) | Treatment success (cure + completion) at 24 mo |
Terminated early when South African guidelines changed to replace SLID with BDQ. mITT favourable outcome more than twice as likely in NExT 51% (25/49) vs. control (22.7% 10/44) and faster time to culture conversion |
| endTB | III | 9BLMZ | Week 73 Efficacy |
Fully enrolled Estimated completion Feb 2023 |
| STREAM II | III | 4BCLxEZHhdPto/5BCLxEZ | Favourable outcome week 76 |
Fully enrolled Estimated completion Aug 2022 |
| NC-008, SimpliciTB (N = 450) | IIc | 6BPaMZ | Time to culture conversion over 8 weeks |
Results Q2 2022 |
| BEAT-Tuberculosis | III | 6BDL (Lx, C or both) | Successful outcome at end of treatment |
Recruiting Estimated completion Mar 2023 |
1 Pre-2021 definitions: preXDR-TB = pre-extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR plus resistance to fluoroquinolone or second-line injectable drug), XDR-TB = extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR plus resistance to fluoroquinolone and second-line injectable drug); 2 Treatment Intolerant/Non-responsive: 3 Numbers at the beginning of each regimen represent treatment duration in months, letters represent individual drugs of each regimen. Hd = high-dose, B = bedaquiline, D = delamanid, Pa = pretomanid, L = linezolid, Lx = levofloxacin, M = moxifloxacin, Z = pyrazinamide, Eto = ethionamide, H = isoniazid, Tzd = terizidone (cycloserine), C = clofazimine, SLID = second-line injectable drug, FQ-R-RR-TB = fluoroquinolone-resistant rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis, mo = month/s, wks = weeks.
Tuberculosis (TB) medications used in children with rifampicin-resistant TB: doses, common adverse effects and comments (adapted from [18,36,37]).
| Medication | Current Dose Recommendations | Important Adverse Effects | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| WHO Group A | |||
| Levofloxacin (Lfx) | 15–20 mg/kg/day | Sleep disturbance, GI disturbance, arthralgia/arthritis, idiopathic raised intracranial pressure. Little effect on QT-interval | Modelling data suggest higher doses needed. |
| Moxifloxacin (Mfx) | 10–15 mg/kg/day | As for levofloxacin, including more QT-interval prolongation effect than Lfx | Pharmacokinetic data in young infants needed. |
| Bedaquiline (Bdq) | >12 years and >30 kg body weight: 400 mg daily x2 weeks, followed by 200 mg M/W/F x22 weeks | Headache, nausea, liver dysfunction, QT-interval prolongation | Dose-finding and safety studies ongoing in children younger than 6 years of age. WHO soon to release interim dosing for children of all ages [ |
| Linezolid (Lzd) [ | Children ≤15 kg body weight: 15 mg/kg once daily | Diarrhoea, headache, nausea, myelosuppression, peripheral neuritis, optic neuritis, lactic acidosis and pancreatitis | Complete blood count and differential white cell counts to be done 2-weekly for first month, then monthly. Monitoring for vision and peripheral neuritis also important. Adverse effects common |
| WHO Group B | |||
| Clofazimine (Cfz) | 2–5 mg/kg/day. Because of current 50 or 100 mg gel capsule/tablet formulations, alternative day dosing may be necessary in young children. (long half-life) | Skin discolouration, ichthyosis, QT-interval prolongation, abdominal pain. | Pharmacokinetic studies in children ongoing. |
| Cycloserine (Cs) | 15–20 mg/kg/day | Neurological and psychological adverse effects | Pharmacokinetic studies in children ongoing |
| WHO Group C | |||
| Ethambutol | 15–25 mg/kg/day | Optic neuritis | Only to use in longer MDR-TB regimen if susceptibility is confirmed |
| Pyrazinamide | 30–40 mg/kg/day | Arthritis/arthralgia (especially with fluoroquinolone use), hepatitis, skin rashes | Only to use in longer MDR-TB regimen if susceptibility is confirmed |
| Amikacin * (Am) or Streptomycin (Sm) | 15–20 mg/kg IMI or IVI daily | Ototoxicity (irreversible), nephrotoxicity | Higher doses only if therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is available. To use only if confirmed susceptibility as part of salvage regimens |
| Delamanid (Dlm) | >12 years/≥35 kg: 100 mg twice daily | Nausea, vomiting, dizziness, paraesthesia, anxiety, QT-interval prolongation, hallucinations and night terrors | Dose-finding and safety studies ongoing. WHO soon to release interim dosing for children of all ages—doses in older children may be adapted [ |
| Meropenem (Mpm) | 20–40 mg/kg 8 hourly (IV) | GI intolerance, hypersensitivity reactions, seizures, liver and renal dysfunction | Always combine with clavulanate (Amoxiclav) |
| Amoxicillin-clavulanate (Amx-Clv) | 75 mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses of amoxicillin component | GI intolerance, hypersensitivity reactions, seizures, liver and renal dysfunction | Always combine with a carbapenem (not effective on its own) |
| Ethionamide (Eto) /Prothionamide (Pto) | 15–20 mg/kg/day | GI intolerance, metallic taste, hypothyroidism. Rare: gynecomastia | Co-resistance if |
| 200–300 mg/kg daily as single dose (only divide dose if single dose not tolerated) | GI intolerance, hypothyroidism, hepatitis | Pharmacokinetic studies ongoing. Tolerance with single daily dose good according to experience | |
| Other medications not in WHO groups | |||
| Isoniazid (H) high-dose # | 15–20 mg/kg/day (maximum 400 mg) | Hepatitis, peripheral neuropathy | High-dose H had good early bactericidal activity in adults with MDR-TB with |
# If Isoniazid is used, supplement with pyridoxine (Vitamin B6) in infants and adolescents, in all malnourished and HIV-positive children, and when high-dose isoniazid is used to prevent peripheral neuropathy. * Can be given with lidocaine to reduce the pain of IM injections. GI = gastrointestinal; M/W/F = Monday/Wednesday/Friday.