Outcomes of WHO-conforming, longer, all-oral multidrug-resistant TB regimens and analysis implications.

Rich ML Khan U Zeng C LaHood A Franke MF Atwood S Bastard M Burhan E Danielyan N Dzhazibekova PM Gadissa D Ghafoor A Hewison C Islam MS Kazmi E Khan PY Lecca L Maama LB Melikyan N Naing YY Philippe K Saki NA Seung KJ Skrahina A Tefera GB Varaine F Vilbrun SC Võ L Mitnick CD Huerga H
The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease : the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease 2023 Jun 01; 27(6); . doi: 10.5588/ijtld.22.0613. Epub 2023 05 29

Abstract

Evidence of the effectiveness of the WHO-recommended design of longer individualized regimens for multidrug- or rifampicin-resistant TB (MDR/RR-TB) is limited. To report end-of-treatment outcomes for MDR/RR-TB patients from a 2015-2018 multi-country cohort that received a regimen consistent with current 2022 WHO updated recommendations and describe the complexities of comparing regimens. We analyzed a subset of participants from the endTB Observational Study who initiated a longer MDR/RR-TB regimen that was consistent with subsequent 2022 WHO guidance on regimen design for longer treatments. We excluded individuals who received an injectable agent or who received fewer than four likely effective drugs. Of the 759 participants analyzed, 607 (80.0%, 95% CI 77.0-82.7) experienced successful end-of-treatment outcomes. The frequency of success was high across groups, whether stratified on number of Group A drugs or fluoroquinolone resistance, and ranged from 72.1% to 90.0%. Regimens were highly variable regarding composition and the duration of individual drugs. Longer, all-oral, individualized regimens that were consistent with 2022 WHO guidance on regimen design had high frequencies of treatment success. Heterogeneous regimen compositions and drug durations precluded meaningful comparisons. Future research should examine which combinations of drugs maximize safety/tolerability and effectiveness.