TB Research

Definitive outcomes in patients with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis treated in Niger from 2012 to 2019: A retrospective cohort study

Mahamadou Bassirou Souleymane, Tom Decroo, Saïdou Mamadou, A Soumana, Ibrahim Mamane Lawan, Assiatou Gagara-Issoufou, Eric Adéhossi, Nimer Ortuño‐Gutiérrez, et al. (13 authors)

International Health · 2022-03

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Outcomes of retreatment for rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) are rarely reported. We report 'definitive outcomes' after a cascade approach to RR-TB treatment. After a bacteriologically adverse outcome for the 9-months fluoroquinolone-based Short Treatment Regimen (STR), patients were retreated with a bedaquiline-based regimen (BDQ-regimen). METHODS: A Retrospective cohort study of RR-TB patients treated with the STR during 2012-2019 and retreated with a BDQ-regimen in case of failure or relapse was conducted. Definitive relapse-free cure took into account BDQ-regimen outcomes. RESULTS: Of 367 patients treated with the STR, 20 (5.4%) experienced failure or relapse. Out of these 20 patients, 14 started a BDQ-regimen, of whom none experienced failure or relapse. Definitive end of treatment outcomes of STR after revising with third-line BDQ-regimen outcomes, 84.7% (311/367) were cured relapse-free, 10.6% (39/367) died during treatment and 3.0% (11/367) were lost to follow-up during treatment with either the STR or BDQ-regimen. Six patients (1.6%; 6/367) with STR failure/relapse died before starting a BDQ-regimen. No patient had definitive treatment failure or relapse and remained without treatment. CONCLUSIONS: If fluoroquinolone resistance is excluded or rare, it is beneficial to use fluoroquinolone as the core drug for a first RR-TB treatment regimen and to safeguard bedaquiline for those in need of retreatment.

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Retrospective cohort study
  • Tuberculosis
  • Rifampicin
  • Cohort
  • Cohort study
  • Internal medicine