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Treatment of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis. An Official ATS/CDC/ERS/IDSA Clinical Practice Guideline

Authors :
Jan Brozek
Zhiyi Lan
Neha Shah
Adithya Cattamanchi
Michael Lauzardo
John W. Wilson
H. Simon Schaaf
Dick Menzies
Sundari Mase
C. Robert Horsburgh
Suzanne M. Marks
Charles L. Daley
Fayez Kheir
Graham H. Bothamley
Joan M. Mangan
Diana M. Nilsen
Terence Chorba
Payam Nahid
Faiz Ahmad Khan
Ann Raftery
Raquel Duarte
Alfred Lardizabal
Barbara Seaworth
Tracy Dalton
Charles A. Peloquin
Farah Parvez
Lisa Chen
J. Peter Cegielski
Carole D. Mitnick
Federica Fregonese
Jeffrey R. Starke
Jonathan M. Wortham
Giovanni Battista Migliori
Giovanni Sotgiu
Lindsay McKenna
Source :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, vol 200, iss 10
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Thoracic Society, 2019.

Abstract

Background: The American Thoracic Society, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, European Respiratory Society, and Infectious Diseases Society of America jointly sponsored this new practice guideline on the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB). The document includes recommendations on the treatment of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) as well as isoniazid-resistant but rifampin-susceptible TB. Methods: Published systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and a new individual patient data meta-analysis from 12,030 patients, in 50 studies, across 25 countries with confirmed pulmonary rifampin-resistant TB were used for this guideline. Meta-analytic approaches included propensity score matching to reduce confounding. Each recommendation was discussed by an expert committee, screened for conflicts of interest, according to the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology. Results: Twenty-one Population, Intervention, Comparator, and Outcomes questions were addressed, generating 25 GRADE-based recommendations. Certainty in the evidence was judged to be very low, because the data came from observational studies with significant loss to follow-up and imbalance in background regimens between comparator groups. Good practices in the management of MDR-TB are described. On the basis of the evidence review, a clinical strategy tool for building a treatment regimen for MDR-TB is also provided. Conclusions: New recommendations are made for the choice and number of drugs in a regimen, the duration of intensive and continuation phases, and the role of injectable drugs for MDR-TB. On the basis of these recommendations, an effective all-oral regimen for MDR-TB can be assembled. Recommendations are also provided on the role of surgery in treatment of MDR-TB and for treatment of contacts exposed to MDR-TB and treatment of isoniazid-resistant TB.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15354970 and 1073449X
Volume :
200
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....195ffb5385667c54238ffa8506617c12