Suárez Pedro G, Floyd Katherine, Portocarrero Jaime, Alarcón Edith, Rapiti Elisabetta, Ramos Gilbert, Bonilla Cesar, Sabogal Ivan, Aranda Isabel, Dye Christopher, Raviglione Mario, Espinal Marcos A
National Tuberculosis Control Programme, Ministry of Health, Lima, Peru.
Lancet. 2002 Jun 8;359(9322):1980-9. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)08830-X.
There are no data on the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of using second-line drugs to treat patients with chronic tuberculosis, many of whom are infected with multidrug resistant (MDR) strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, in low or middle-income countries.
A national programme to treat chronic tuberculosis patients with a directly observed standardised 18-month daily regimen, consisting of kanamycin (3 months only), ciprofloxacin, ethionamide, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol, was established in Peru in 1997. Compliance and treatment outcomes were analysed for the cohort started on treatment between October, 1997, and March, 1999. Total and average costs were assessed. Cost-effectiveness was estimated as the cost per DALY gained.
466 patients were enrolled; 344 were tested for drug susceptibility and 298 (87%) had MDR tuberculosis. 225 patients (48%) were cured, 57 (12%) died, 131 (28%) did not respond to treatment, and 53 (11%) defaulted. Of the 413 (89%) patients who complied with treatment, 225 (55%) were cured. Among MDR patients, resistance to five or more drugs was significantly associated with an unfavourable outcome (death, non-response to treatment, or default; odds ratio 3.37, 95% CI 1.32-8.60; p=0.01). The programme cost US $0.6 million per year, 8% of the National Tuberculosis Programme budget, and US $2381 per patient for those who completed treatment. The mean cost per DALY gained was $211 ($165 at drug prices projected for 2002).
Treating chronic tuberculosis patients with high levels of MDR with second-line drugs can be feasible and cost-effective in middle-income countries, provided a strong tuberculosis control programme is in place.
在低收入或中等收入国家,尚无关于使用二线药物治疗慢性结核病患者(其中许多人感染了耐多药结核分枝杆菌菌株)的可行性和成本效益的数据。
1997年在秘鲁建立了一项国家计划,采用直接观察下的标准化18个月每日治疗方案治疗慢性结核病患者,该方案包括卡那霉素(仅3个月)、环丙沙星、乙硫异烟胺、吡嗪酰胺和乙胺丁醇。对1997年10月至1999年3月开始治疗的队列的依从性和治疗结果进行了分析。评估了总成本和平均成本。成本效益估计为每获得一个伤残调整生命年的成本。
466名患者入组;344名患者进行了药敏试验,298名(87%)患有耐多药结核病。225名患者(48%)治愈,57名(12%)死亡,131名(28%)治疗无效,53名(11%)失访。在413名(89%)依从治疗的患者中,225名(55%)治愈。在耐多药患者中,对五种或更多药物耐药与不良结局(死亡、治疗无效或失访)显著相关(比值比3.37,95%可信区间1.32 - 8.60;p = 0.01)。该计划每年花费60万美元,占国家结核病计划预算的8%,对于完成治疗的患者,每位患者花费为2381美元。每获得一个伤残调整生命年的平均成本为211美元(按照2002年预计的药品价格为165美元)。
在中等收入国家,如果有强大的结核病控制计划,使用二线药物治疗耐多药水平高的慢性结核病患者可能是可行且具有成本效益的。