Response to treatment and low serum vitamin D levels in North Indian patients with treatment-naive category I and multi-drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis
Jaishriram Rathored, Surendra K. Sharma, Jayant Nagesh Banavaliker, V. Sreenivas, Abhay Srivastava
Annals of Medicine · 2024-09
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial infection that usually affects the lungs, although it can also affect other parts of the body. Vitamin D deficiency and response to treatment have been demonstrated in patients with active TB in several studies, but not in MDR-TB patients, which is a new observation in the present study. OBJECTIVE: To study the time to initial sputum culture conversion and to associate baseline vitamin D levels and response to treatment in patients with PTB Cat I and MDR-TB. METHODS: A total of 897 North Indian participants were recruited and divided into three groups: treatment-naïve PTB Cat I, MDR-TB, and healthy controls. Serum biochemistry, including 25-hydroxyvitamin D and calcium, was measured in all participants with PTB, Cat I, and MDR-TB. RESULTS: month and baseline in PTB Cat I. CONCLUSION: Low serum vitamin D deficiency was observed in both groups during treatment and is one of the important factors responsible for susceptibility to TB in both groups; however, its significance is uncertain. Patients with continuous positive sputum for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) had a worse prognosis than those with sputum bacteriology conversion. Two months into a treatment regimen, sputum smear conversions may be a useful indicator of an MDR-TB patient's prognosis.
MeSH terms
- Pulmonary tuberculosis
- Medicine
- Drug
- Internal medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Drug treatment
- Drug-naïve
- Drug resistance
- Immunology
- Gastroenterology
- Surgery
- Pharmacology