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Management of patients with multidrug-resistant/extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in Europe: a TBNET consensus statement

Authors :
Lange, Christoph
Abubakar, Ibrahim
Alffenaar, Jan-Willem C
Bothamley, Graham
Caminero, Jose A
Carvalho, Anna Cristina C
Chang, Kwok-Chiu
Codecasa, Luigi
Correia, Ana
Crudu, Valeriu
Davies, Peter
Dedicoat, Martin
Drobniewski, Francis
Duarte, Raquel
Ehlers, Cordula
Erkens, Connie
Goletti, Delia
Günther, Gunar
Ibraim, Elmira
Kampmann, Beate
Kuksa, Liga
de Lange, Wiel
van Leth, Frank
van Lunzen, Jan
Matteelli, Alberto
Menzies, Dick
Monedero, Ignacio
Richter, Elvira
Rüsch-Gerdes, Sabine
Sandgren, Andreas
Scardigli, Anna
Skrahina, Alena
Tortoli, Enrico
Volchenkov, Grigory
Wagner, Dirk
van der Werf, Marieke J
Williams, Bhanu
Yew, Wing-Wai
Zellweger, Jean-Pierre
Cirillo, Daniela Maria
TBNET
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY SOC JOURNALS LTD, 2014.

Abstract

The emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) and extensively drug-resistant (XDR) tuberculosis (TB) substantially challenges TB control, especially in the European Region of the World Health Organization, where the highest prevalence of MDR/XDR cases is reported. The current management of patients with MDR/XDR-TB is extremely complex for medical, social and public health systems. The treatment with currently available anti-TB therapies to achieve relapse-free cure is long and undermined by a high frequency of adverse drug events, suboptimal treatment adherence, high costs and low treatment success rates. Availability of optimal management for patients with MDR/XDR-TB is limited even in the European Region. In the absence of a preventive vaccine, more effective diagnostic tools and novel therapeutic interventions the control of MDR/XDR-TB will be extremely difficult. Despite recent scientific advances in MDR/XDR-TB care, decisions for the management of patients with MDR/XDR-TB and their contacts often rely on expert opinions, rather than on clinical evidence. This document summarises the current knowledge on the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of adults and children with MDR/XDR-TB and their contacts, and provides expert consensus recommendations on questions where scientific evidence is still lacking.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09031936
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....e15d9579833fbaf22d411cbdde0d9a70