Characteristics of children and adolescents with multidrug-resistant and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis and their association with treatment outcomes: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis.

Garcia-Prats AJ Garcia-Cremades M Cox V Kredo T Dunbar R Schaaf HS Seddon JA Furin J Achar J Radke K Sachs T Abubakirov A Ahmed S Akkerman OW Al Ani NA Amanullah F Ahmad N Anderson LF Asfaw M Bango F Bauer T Becerra M Boeree M Brinkmann F Brown R Brust J Campbell JR Carvalho AC Carvalho I Cegielski JP Centis R Chan ED Chauhan S Chiang SS Chan PC D'Ambrosio L Dalcolmo M Daneilyan N de Vries G Draper HR Fairlie L Francis JR Franke M Gegia M Restrepo CG Guenther A Gureva T Haecker B Harausz E Hewison C Hicks RM Huerga H Hughes J Isaakidis P Kadri SM Khan MA Kotrikadze T Kuksa L Lachenal N Lange C Lecca L Lopez-Varela E Lucena S Mariandyshev A Mattoo S Mendez-Echevarria A Migliori GB Mitnick C Mohr-Holland E Mulanda W Murzabakova T Myrzalieve B Ndjeka N Niemann S Ozere I Padayatchi N Parmar M Parpieva N Manzur-Ul-Alam M Rybak N Sachdeva KS Salmon K Santiago-Garcia B Schaub D Shah I Shah S Shah V Sharma S Shim TS Shin S Sinha A Skrahina A Solanki H Solans BP Soriano-Arandes A Toktogonova A van der Werf T Velásquez GE Williams B Yim JJ Savic R Hesseling A
The Lancet. Child & adolescent health 2025 Feb ; 9(2); . doi: 10.1016/S2352-4642(24)00330-4. Epub 2025 01 24

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There are few data on the treatment of children and adolescents with multidrug-resistant (MDR) or rifampicin-resistant (RR) tuberculosis, especially with more recently available drugs and regimens. We aimed to describe the clinical and treatment characteristics and their associations with treatment outcomes in this susceptible population.

METHODS: We conducted a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis. Databases were searched from Oct 1, 2014, to March 30, 2020. To be eligible, studies must have included more than five children or adolescents (0-19 years of age) treated for microbiologically confirmed or clinically diagnosed MDR or RR tuberculosis within a defined treatment cohort, and reported on regimen composition and treatment outcomes. Abstracts were screened independently by two authors to identify potentially eligible records. Full texts were reviewed by two authors independently to identify studies meeting the eligiblity criteria. For studies meeting eligiblity criteria, anonymised individual patient data was requested and individiual level data included for analysis. The main outcome assessed was treatment outcome defined as treatment success (cure or treatment completed) versus unfavourable outcome (treatment failure or death). Multivariable logistic regression models were used to identify associations between clinical and treatment factors and treatment outcomes. This study is registered with Prospero (CRD42020187230).

FINDINGS: 1417 studies were identified through database searching. After removing duplicates and screening for eligibility, the search identified 23 369 individual participants from 42 studies, mostly from India and South Africa. Overall, 16 825 (72·0%) were successfully treated (treatment completed or cured), 2848 died (12·2%), 722 (3·1%) had treatment failure, and 2974 (12·7%) were lost to follow-up. In primary analyses, the median age was 16 (IQR 13-18) years. Of the 17 764 (87·1%) participants with reported HIV status, 2448 (13·8%) were living with HIV. 17 707 (89·6%) had microbiologically confirmed tuberculosis. After adjusting for significant factors associated with treatment outcome, the use of two (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1·41 [95% CI 1·09-1·82]; p=0·008) or three (2·12 [1·61-2·79]; p

INTERPRETATION: Younger and clinically diagnosed children are underrepresented among those treated for MDR and RR tuberculosis and should be a focus for case-finding efforts. Overall treatment outcomes in our analysis were better than in adults but lower than the international targets of 90% or more individuals successfully treated. Treatment with more group A drugs was associated with better treatment outcomes in children and adolescents, highlighting the need for more rapid access to these drugs and improved regimens.

FUNDING: Unitaid.

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