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Course of Adverse Events during Short Treatment Regimen in Patients with Rifampicin-Resistant Tuberculosis in Burundi
- Source :
- Journal of Clinical Medicine, Volume 9, Issue 6, Journal of Clinical Medicine, Vol 9, Iss 1873, p 1873 (2020)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2020.
-
Abstract
- The introduction of the nine-month short-treatment regimen (STR) has drastically improved outcomes of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) treatment. Adverse events (AE) commonly occur, including injectable-induced hearing loss. In Burundi we retrospectively assessed the frequency of adverse events and treatment modifications in all patients who initiated the STR between 2013&ndash<br />2017. Among 225 included patients, 93% were successfully treated without relapse, 5% died, 1% was lost-to-follow-up, 0.4% had treatment failure and 0.4% relapsed after completion. AE were reported in 53%, with grade 3 or 4 AE in 4% of patients. AE occurred after a median of two months. Hepatotoxicity (31%), gastro-intestinal toxicity (22%) and ototoxicity (10%) were most commonly reported. One patient suffered severe hearing loss. Following AE, 7% of patients had a dose reduction and 1% a drug interruption. Kanamycin-induced ototoxicity led to 94% of modifications. All 18 patients with a modified regimen were cured relapse-free. In this exhaustive national RR-TB cohort, RR-TB was treated successfully with the STR. Adverse events were infrequent. To replace the present STR, all-oral regimens should be at least as effective and also less toxic. During and after transition, monitoring, management, and documentation of AE will remain essential.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Tuberculosis
Hearing loss
Burundi
lcsh:Medicine
Article
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Ototoxicity
Internal medicine
medicine
030212 general & internal medicine
Adverse effect
multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis
short treatment regimen
business.industry
Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis
lcsh:R
General Medicine
medicine.disease
humanities
Regimen
030228 respiratory system
Toxicity
Cohort
medicine.symptom
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20770383
- Volume :
- 9
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Clinical Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....25e120860e878ca5c6f72c3f9040e4ca