Ragonnet Romain, Trauer James M, Denholm Justin T, Marais Ben J, McBryde Emma S
Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Centre for Population Health, Burnet Institute, 85 Commercial Road, Melbourne, 3141, VIC, Australia.
BMC Infect Dis. 2017 Jan 6;17(1):36. doi: 10.1186/s12879-016-2171-1.
Globally 3.9% of new and 21% of re-treatment tuberculosis (TB) cases are multidrug-resistant or rifampicin-resistant (MDR/RR), which is often interpreted as evidence that drug resistance results mainly from poor treatment adherence. This study aims to assess the respective contributions of the different causal pathways leading to MDR/RR-TB at re-treatment.
We use a simple mathematical model to simulate progression between the different stages of disease and treatment for patients diagnosed with TB. The model is parameterised using region and country-specific TB disease burden data reported by the World Health Organization (WHO). The contributions of four separate causal pathways to MDR/RR-TB among re-treatment cases are estimated: I) initial drug-susceptible TB with resistance amplification during treatment; II) initial MDR/RR-TB inappropriately treated as drug-susceptible TB; III) MDR/RR-TB relapse despite appropriate treatment; and IV) re-infection with MDR/RR-TB.
At the global level, Pathways I, II, III and IV contribute 38% (28-49, 95% Simulation Interval), 44% (36-52, 95% SI), 6% (5-7, 95% SI) and 12% (7-19, 95% SI) respectively to the burden of MDR/RR-TB among re-treatment cases. Pathway II is dominant in the Western Pacific (74%; 67-80 95% SI), Eastern Mediterranean (68%; 60-74 95% SI) and European (53%; 48-59 95% SI) regions, while Pathway I makes the greatest contribution in the American (53%; 40-66 95% SI), African (43%; 28-61 95% SI) and South-East Asian (50%; 40-59 95% SI) regions.
Globally, failure to diagnose MDR/RR-TB at first presentation is the leading cause of the high proportion of MDR/RR-TB among re-treatment cases. These findings highlight the need for contextualised solutions to limit the impact and spread of MDR/RR-TB.
在全球范围内,3.9%的新发结核病病例和21%的复治结核病病例为耐多药或利福平耐药(MDR/RR),这通常被视为耐药主要源于治疗依从性差的证据。本研究旨在评估导致复治时MDR/RR - 结核病的不同因果途径的各自贡献。
我们使用一个简单的数学模型来模拟结核病确诊患者疾病和治疗不同阶段之间的进展。该模型使用世界卫生组织(WHO)报告的特定区域和国家的结核病疾病负担数据进行参数化。估计了复治病例中导致MDR/RR - 结核病的四个独立因果途径的贡献:I)初始药物敏感结核病在治疗期间出现耐药性扩增;II)初始MDR/RR - 结核病被不恰当地当作药物敏感结核病治疗;III)尽管治疗得当,MDR/RR - 结核病仍复发;IV)再次感染MDR/RR - 结核病。
在全球层面,途径I、II、III和IV对复治病例中MDR/RR - 结核病负担的贡献分别为38%(28 - 49,95%模拟区间)、44%(36 - 52,95% SI)、6%(5 - 7,95% SI)和12%(7 - 19,95% SI)。途径II在西太平洋地区(74%;67 - 80 95% SI)、东地中海地区(68%;60 - 74 95% SI)和欧洲地区(53%;48 - 59 95% SI)占主导地位,而途径I在美洲地区(53%;40 - 66 95% SI)、非洲地区(43%;28 - 61 95% SI)和东南亚地区(50%;40 - 59 95% SI)贡献最大。
在全球范围内,初次就诊时未能诊断出MDR/RR - 结核病是复治病例中MDR/RR - 结核病比例高的主要原因。这些发现凸显了需要因地制宜的解决方案来限制MDR/RR - 结核病的影响和传播。