TB Research

Pretomanid with bedaquiline and linezolid for drug-resistant TB: a comparison of prospective cohorts

Suzette Oelofse, Aliasgar Esmail, Andreas H. Diacon, Francesca Conradie, Olatunde Olayanju, Nosipho Ngubane, Pauline Howell, Daniel E. Everitt, et al. (17 authors)

The International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease · 2021-05

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There are no data comparing the 6–9 month oral three-drug Nix regimen (bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid [BPaL]) to conventional regimens containing bedaquiline (B, BDQ) and linezolid (L, LZD). METHODS: Six-month post end-of-treatment outcomes were compared between Nix-TB ( n = 109) and 102 prospectively recruited extensively drug-resistant TB patients who received an ˜18-month BDQ-based regimen (median of 8 drugs). A subset of patients received BDQ and LZD ( n = 86), and a subgroup of these ( n = 75) served as individually matched controls in a pairwise comparison to determine differences in regimen efficacy. RESULTS: Favourable outcomes (%) were significantly better with BPaL than with the B–L-based combination regimen (98/109, 89.9% vs. 56/86, 65.1%; adjusted relative risk ratio [aRRR] 1.35; P < 0.001) and in the matched pairwise analysis (67/75, 89.3% vs. 48/75, 64.0%; aRRR 1.39; P = 0.001), despite significantly higher baseline bacterial load and prior second-line drug exposure in the BPaL cohort. Time to culture conversion ( P < 0.001), time to unfavourable outcome ( P < 0.01) and time to death ( P < 0.03) were significantly better or lower with BPaL than the B-L-based combinations. CONCLUSION: The BPaL regimen (and hence substitution of multiple other drugs by pretomanid and/or higher starting-dose LZD) may improve outcomes in drug-resistant TB patients with poor prognostic features. However, prospective controlled studies are required to definitively answer this question.

MeSH terms

  • Bedaquiline
  • Medicine
  • Linezolid
  • Regimen
  • Internal medicine
  • Prospective cohort study
  • Culture conversion
  • Drug
  • Pharmacology