Hepatocellular Injury in Children Treated for Rifampicin-resistant Tuberculosis: Incidence, Etiology and Outcome
Duvenhage J, Draper HR, Garcia-Prats AJ, Winckler J, Hesseling AC, Schaaf HS
The Pediatric infectious disease journal · 2022-09
Abstract
Background Hepatocellular injury has been reported commonly in adults on rifampicin-resistant and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB) treatment. However, there are limited data in children. Methods Two pharmacokinetic studies of children (0-17 years) routinely treated for RR/MDR-TB were conducted in Cape Town, South Africa between October 2011 and February 2020. Hepatocellular injury adverse events (AEs; defined as elevated alanine aminotransferase [ALT]) were documented serially. Data were analyzed to determine the incidence, etiology, risk factors, management and outcome of ALT elevation. Results A total of 217 children, median age 3.6 years (interquartile range, 1.7-7.1 years) at enrollment were included. The median follow-up time was 14.0 months (interquartile range, 9.8-17.2 months). Fifty-five (25.3%) patients developed an ALT AE. Of these, 43 of 55 (78%) patients had 54 ALT AEs attributed to their RR/MDR-TB treatment. The incidence rate of ALT AEs related to RR-TB treatment was 22.4 per 100 person-years. Positive HIV status and having an elevated ALT at enrollment were associated with time to ALT AE attributed to RR/MDR-TB treatment, with P values 0.0427 and P Conclusions Hepatocellular injury in children on RR/MDR-TB treatment is common, although usually mild; having elevated ALT early in treatment and HIV-positive status are possible risk factors. Hepatitis A was a common etiology of severe ALT AE in children treated for RR/MDR-TB.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
- Hepatitis A
- Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
- Liver Neoplasms
- Rifampin
- Antitubercular Agents
- Treatment Outcome
- Incidence
- Adult
- Child
- Child, Preschool
- South Africa