Efficacy of isoniazid in paediatric tuberculosis: an individual participant data meta-analysis
Béranger A, Solans BP, Miyakawa R, McIlleron H, Tarning J, Shah I, Aruldhas BW, Mathew BS, et al. (29 authors)
The European respiratory journal · 2026-03
Abstract
Background Isoniazid is a cornerstone of management therapy for tuberculosis (TB). Our aim was to determine the association between isoniazid exposure and clinical outcomes, to develop a pharmacokinetic model, and to optimise the dosing regimen in children treated for drug-susceptible (DS)-TB. Methods For this individual participant data meta-analysis, PubMed was searched for observational studies, involving children (aged 0-18 years), being treated for DS-TB. The relationship between isoniazid exposure and clinical outcomes was analysed using a mixed effects logistic regression model. Pharmacokinetic parameters were described using non-linear mixed effects modelling. The pharmacokinetic target was the median adult area under the concentration-time curve at steady-state (AUC ss ) of 23.4 mg·h·L -1 . Results Six studies provided clinical outcomes, including 405 patients, of which 21% had unfavourable outcomes. 16 studies (1255 patients) were included in the pharmacokinetic model. Unfavourable outcomes were only related to lower body mass index (BMI) for age z-score (BAZ) (OR 0.96, 95% CI 0.93-0.99; p N -acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) genotype, weight, age and nutritional status (using BAZ). With currently recommended World Health Organization (WHO) doses, isoniazid exposure was similar to that of adults. Pharmacokinetic target attainment was 71.7% and 29.5% for slow and fast metabolisers, respectively (p 0 and 42.6% for malnourished patients (BAZ Conclusion Our findings showed that the only predictor of unfavourable clinical outcomes was a lower BAZ. We support the current WHO-recommended dosing regimen for isoniazid. To equalise and attain our pharmacological target for all children, dosing regimens could be adjusted on NAT2 genotype and nutritional status.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis
- Isoniazid
- Arylamine N-Acetyltransferase
- Antitubercular Agents
- Body Mass Index
- Treatment Outcome
- Area Under Curve
- Logistic Models
- Genotype
- Adolescent
- Child
- Child, Preschool
- Infant
- Infant, Newborn
- Female
- Male
- Observational Studies as Topic