TB Research

Effectiveness and safety of bedaquiline-based, modified all-oral 9–11-month treatment regimen for rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis in Vietnam

Thi Mai Phuong Nguyen, Thi Hai Minh Le, Corinne Merle, Debora Pedrazzoli, Nhat Linh Nguyen, Tom Decroo, Hoa Binh Nguyen, Thi Thanh Thuy Hoang, et al. (9 authors)

International Journal of Infectious Diseases · 2022-11

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: World Health Organization recommends a 7-drug 9-11-month rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) short treatment regimen (STR). To reduce the pill burden, we assessed the safety and effectiveness of a 5-drug 9-11-month modified STR (mSTR). METHODS: Prospective cohort study of an all-oral mSTR (comprising bedaquiline, levofloxacin, linezolid [LZD], clofazimine, and/or pyrazinamide) for patients with RR-TB without confirmed fluoroquinolone resistance, enrolled in Vietnam between 2020-2021. RESULTS: A total of 108 patients were enrolled in this study. Overall, 63 of 74 (85%) achieved culture conversion at 2 months. Of 106 evaluated, 95 (90%) were successfully treated, six (6%) were lost-to-follow-up, one (1%) died, and four (4%) had treatment failure, including three with permanent regimen change owing to adverse events (AE) and one with culture reversion. Of 108, 32 (30%) patients encountered at least one AE. Of 45 AEs recorded, 13 (29%) were serious (hospitalization, life threatening, or death). The median time to AE was 3 months (IQR: 2-5). A total of 26 AEs led to regimen adaptation: either dose reduction (N = 1), drug temporary interruption (N = 19), or drug permanent discontinuation (N = 6, 4 attributed to LZD). CONCLUSION: The high treatment success of 5-drug mSTR might replace the 7-drug regimen in routine care. AEs were frequent, but manageable in most patients. Active AEs monitoring is essential, particularly when using LZD throughout.

MeSH terms

  • Bedaquiline
  • Rifampicin
  • Regimen
  • Medicine
  • Tuberculosis