TB Research

Treatment outcomes of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in Europe: a retrospective cohort study.

Yousra Kherabi, Ole Skouvig Pedersen, Christoph Lange, François Bénézit, Dumitru Chesov, Luigi Ruffo Codecasa, Andrii Dudnyk, Nana Kiria, et al. (20 authors)

The Lancet regional health. Europe · 2025-09

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In 2021, World Health Organization revised of definition of extensive drug-resistant tuberculosis. We aimed to determine treatment outcomes of individuals affected by extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in Europe.

METHODS: This observational, retrospective cohort study included patients diagnosed with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in the World Health Organization European Region from 2017 to 2023. Participating centres collected consecutive, detailed individual data for extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis patients. Data were analysed with meta- and regression methods, accounting for between-country heterogeneity.

FINDINGS: Among 11,003 patients with multidrug-resistant/rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis, 188 (1&#xb7;7%) from 16 countries had extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis. Of these, 48&#xb7;4% harboured strains with resistance to bedaquiline (n = 91/188), 34&#xb7;0% to linezolid (n = 64/188), and 17&#xb7;6% to both (n = 33/188). The individual composition of anti-tuberculosis regimens was highly variable, with 151 different drug combinations. Among the 156/188 (83&#xb7;0%) patients with available treatment outcomes, the pooled percentage of successful outcomes was 40&#xb7;2% (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 28&#xb7;4%-53&#xb7;2%). In patients with unsuccessful treatment outcomes (101/156), most experienced treatment failure (n = 57/156 [pooled proportion 37&#xb7;1%], 95% CI: 26&#xb7;1%-49&#xb7;7%) or death (n = 30/156 [pooled proportion 21&#xb7;3%], 95% CI: 15&#xb7;7%-28&#xb7;2%). After adjustment for disease severity, each additional likely effective drug decreased the odds of unsuccessful outcomes (adjusted odds ratio: 0&#xb7;65, 95% CI: 0&#xb7;45-0&#xb7;96) (p = 0&#xb7;026), whereas being treated in an upper-middle-income country increased the odds of unsuccessful outcomes compared with being treated in a high-income country (adjusted odds ratio: 13&#xb7;7, 95% CI: 3&#xb7;7-50&#xb7;2) (p < 0&#xb7;001). Compared with other levels of drug resistance, treatment outcomes were significantly worse for extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis.

INTERPRETATION: Only four out of ten patients affected by extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis achieved successful treatment outcomes. These findings highlight the need for adequate, individualised treatment regimens and optimised drug susceptibility testing.

FUNDING: None.