Long-term bedaquiline-related treatment outcomes in patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis from South Africa
Olayanju O, Limberis J, Esmail A, Oelofse S, Gina P, Pietersen E, Fadul M, Warren R, et al. (9 authors)
The European respiratory journal · 2018-05
Abstract
Optimal treatment regimens for patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) remain unclear. Long-term prospective outcome data comparing XDR-TB regimens with and without bedaquiline from an endemic setting are lacking.We prospectively followed-up 272 South African patients (49.3% HIV-infected; median CD4 count 169 cells·µL -1 ) with newly diagnosed XDR-TB between 2008 and 2017. Outcomes were compared between those who had not received bedaquiline (pre-2013; n=204) and those who had (post-2013; n=68; 80.9% received linezolid in addition).The 24-month favourable outcome rate was substantially better in the bedaquiline versus the non-bedaquiline group (66.2% (45 out of 68) versus 13.2% (27 out of 204); p versus 26.0%; p versus 15.2%; p 50 kg, an increasing number of anti-TB drugs and bedaquiline were independent predictors of survival (the bedaquiline survival effect remained significant in HIV-infected persons, irrespective of CD4 count).XDR-TB patients receiving a backbone of bedaquiline and linezolid had substantially better favourable outcomes compared to those not using these drugs. These data inform the selection of XDR-TB treatment regimens and roll-out of newer drugs in TB-endemic countries.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- HIV Infections
- Antitubercular Agents
- Treatment Outcome
- Long-Term Care
- Withholding Treatment
- Prospective Studies
- Predictive Value of Tests
- Time Factors
- Adolescent
- Adult
- Aged
- Middle Aged
- South Africa
- Female
- Male
- Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
- Young Adult
- Diarylquinolines
- Linezolid