Impact of heteroresistance on treatment outcomes of people with drug-resistant TB
Rebecca Crowder, Midori Kato‐Maeda, Brian Schwem, Angelo dela Tonga, Donna Mae G. Gaviola, E. Lopez, C.L. Valdez, A.R. Lim, et al. (30 authors)
IJTLD OPEN · 2024-10
Abstract
BACKGROUND: in the same sample) has been identified in some people with TB, but its impact on treatment outcomes is unknown. METHODS: We used targeted deep sequencing to identify mutations associated with DR-TB and heteroresistance in culture samples of 624 people with DR-TB. We evaluated the association between heteroresistance and time to unfavorable treatment outcome using Cox proportional hazards regression. RESULTS: The proportion of drug-resistant isolates with a known mutation conferring resistance was lower for streptomycin (45.2%) and second-line injectables (79.1%) than for fluoroquinolones (86.7%), isoniazid (93.2%) and rifampin (96.5%). Fifty-two (8.3%) had heteroresistance, and it was more common for fluoroquinolones (4.6%) than rifampin (2.2%), second-line injectables (1.4%), streptomycin (1.7%), or isoniazid (1.3%). There was no association between heteroresistance and time to unfavorable outcome among people with multidrug-resistant TB (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.74, 95% CI 0.39-7.72) or pre-extensively DR-TB (aHR 0.65, 95% CI 0.24-1.72). CONCLUSIONS: Heteroresistance was relatively common (8.3%) among people with DR-TB in the Philippines. However, we found insufficient evidence to demonstrate an impact on unfavorable treatment outcomes.
MeSH terms
- Drug
- Tb treatment
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Environmental health
- Tuberculosis
- Pharmacology