Trauer James M, Achar Jay, Parpieva Nargiza, Khamraev Atadjan, Denholm Justin T, Falzon Dennis, Jaramillo Ernesto, Mesic Anita, du Cros Philipp, McBryde Emma S
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
The Victorian Tuberculosis Program at the Peter Doherty Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
BMC Med. 2016 Nov 18;14(1):187. doi: 10.1186/s12916-016-0723-2.
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is a major threat to global TB control. MDR-TB treatment regimens typically have a high pill burden, last 20 months or more and often lead to unsatisfactory outcomes. A 9-11 month regimen with seven antibiotics has shown high success rates among selected MDR-TB patients in different settings and is conditionally recommended by the World Health Organization.
We construct a transmission-dynamic model of TB to estimate the likely impact of a shorter MDR-TB regimen when applied in a low HIV prevalence region of Uzbekistan (Karakalpakstan) with high rates of drug resistance, good access to diagnostics and a well-established community-based MDR-TB treatment programme providing treatment to around 400 patients. The model incorporates acquisition of additional drug resistance and incorrect regimen assignment. It is calibrated to local epidemiology and used to compare the impact of shorter treatment against four alternative programmatic interventions.
Based on empirical outcomes among MDR-TB patients and assuming no improvement in treatment success rates, the shorter regimen reduced MDR-TB incidence from 15.2 to 9.7 cases per 100,000 population per year and MDR-TB mortality from 3.0 to 1.7 deaths per 100,000 per year, achieving comparable or greater gains than the alternative interventions. No significant increase in the burden of higher levels of resistance was predicted. Effects are probably conservative given that the regimen is likely to improve success rates.
In addition to benefits to individual patients, we find that shorter MDR-TB treatment regimens also have the potential to reduce transmission of resistant strains. These findings are in the epidemiological setting of treatment availability being an important bottleneck due to high numbers of patients being eligible for treatment, and may differ in other contexts. The high proportion of MDR-TB with additional antibiotic resistance simulated was not exacerbated by programmatic responses and greater gains may be possible in contexts where the regimen is more widely applicable.
耐多药结核病(MDR-TB)是全球结核病控制的重大威胁。耐多药结核病治疗方案通常服药负担高,疗程长达20个月或更长时间,且往往导致不尽人意的结果。一种含七种抗生素的9 - 11个月疗程在不同环境下的部分耐多药结核病患者中显示出高成功率,并得到世界卫生组织的有条件推荐。
我们构建了一个结核病传播动力学模型,以估计在乌兹别克斯坦耐药率高、诊断可及性良好且有完善的社区耐多药结核病治疗项目(为约400名患者提供治疗)的低艾滋病毒流行地区(卡拉卡尔帕克斯坦)应用较短疗程耐多药结核病治疗方案可能产生的影响。该模型纳入了额外耐药性的获得和治疗方案分配错误的情况。它根据当地流行病学进行校准,并用于比较较短疗程治疗与四种替代项目干预措施的影响。
基于耐多药结核病患者的实际结果,并假设治疗成功率无提高,较短疗程将耐多药结核病发病率从每年每10万人口15.2例降至9.7例,耐多药结核病死亡率从每年每10万人口3.0例降至1.7例,与替代干预措施相比取得了相当或更大的成效。预计更高水平耐药负担不会显著增加。鉴于该疗程可能提高成功率,实际效果可能较为保守。
除了对个体患者有益外,我们发现较短疗程的耐多药结核病治疗方案也有可能减少耐药菌株的传播。这些发现在治疗可及性因符合治疗条件的患者数量众多而成为重要瓶颈的流行病学背景下成立,在其他背景下可能有所不同。模拟的具有额外抗生素耐药性的耐多药结核病高比例情况并未因项目应对措施而加剧,在该疗程更广泛适用的情况下可能取得更大成效。