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General Principles in
The Treatment of TB

     Dr Nahid Ali Sherbini
Introduction
  Tuberculosis (TB) is the most common
 cause of infection-related death
 worldwide.
 In 1993, the World Health Organization
 (WHO) declared TB to be a global public
 health emergency.
 Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the most
 common cause of TB.
Current therapy of TB follows
  several basic principles
1. successful treatment requires more
 than one drug to which the organisms
 are susceptible .
2. drugs must be taken in appropriate
 dose .
3. drugs must be taken regularly.
4. drugs must continue for a sufficient
 period of time.
Basic Principles of Combination
          Drug Regimens
Ithas to be chosen based on
 knowledge of the likely drug
 susceptibility .
Most include at least two effective
 drugs.
Fixed drug combinations contains
 INH,RIF or INH,RIF,PZA.
DOT
 Itis the best way to reassure completion
  of appropriate therapy.
 One report from Texas compare

 407 episodes of TB between 1980-1986
  treated with standard therapy.
&581 episodes of TB between 1986-1992
  treated with DOT.
 Results: despite higher rate of TB among
  IV drug abuse &homelessness.
Results
 Lower rate of 1ry drug resistance
       6.7 Vs 13%
 Lower rate of acquired drug resistance

       2.1 Vs 14%
 Lower relapse rate

       5.5 Vs 20.9%
Recommended Regimens by
            ATS/CDC/IDSA
Initial phase               Continuation phase
Reg      drugs   duration   Reg   drugs      duration
1        INH      7d/w      1a    INH      7d/w for18w
          RIF     or 5d/w         /RIF     or 5d/w 18w
         PZA                1b    INH      2x/w for 18w
         EMB                      /RIF




                                          PUPLISHED IN 2004
Initial phase               Continuation phase
Reg      drugs   duration   Reg   drugs    duration
2        INH       7d/w     2a    INH      2x/w
          RIF     for 2w          /RIF     for 18w
         PZA     2x/w      2b    INH      once/w
         EMB     for 6w           /RPF     for 18w
Major Anti-TB drugs
1st line therapy

 INH daily dose of 5mg/kg
 RIF daily dose of 10 mg /kg
 RIFABUTIN daily dose of 5mg/kg
 RIFAPANTINE weekly dose of 10mg/kg
 PZA daily dose of 15- 30 mg/kg
 EMB daily dose of 15-20 mg/kg
2nd line therapy
 Reserved for:
               Drug intolerance
                 (include hypersensitivity)
               Resistance to 1st line drugs
 FDA approved :

Cycloserine , Ethionamide ,Streptomycin &
 Capreomycin
 Not   approved but used to treat MDR-TB:
Levofloxacin , Moxifloxacin, Gatifloxacin,
        P-aminosalicylic acid & Amikacin
  /Kanamycin.
Classified as 2nd for many reasons
1.   Lack of clinical experience with the drug
     relative to 1st line .
2.   More toxicity.
3.   Unfavourable pharmacokinitic
4.   Increase incidence & severity of adverse
     events
Monitoring



Adverse effects


                  Clinical response to therapy
Monitoring of adverse effects
 Baseline :
AST ,BIL, ALP
PLT
CREATININE
VISUAL ACUITY
RED- GREEN COLOR DISCRIMINATION
Repeated Measurement should be
:obtained in the following conditions
1.   The baseline results are abnormal
2.   A drug reaction is suspected
3.   HIV infection
4.   Liver disease
5.   Pregnancy or 1st 3 months of post partum
     period
6.   Patients on combination therapy with
     PZA
)Isoniazid (INH
 Adverse   effects:
   Hepatic  enzyme elevation
   Hepatitis
   Peripheral neuropathy
   CNS effects
   SLE-like symptoms
   Hypersensitivity reaction
   Monoamine (Histamine/tyramine poisoning)
   Diarrhea
INH Drug Interactions & Monitoring
 Drug   Interaction
   Phenytoin

 Monitoring
   Routine  monitoring is not necessary
   For patients with pre-existing liver disease or who
    develop abnormal liver function test should be
    measured monthly and when symptoms occur
 Prevention
   VitaminB6 may prevent peripheral neuropathy and
    CNS effects
)Rifampin (RIF
 Adverse   effects:
   Cutaneous   reactions
   Gastrointestinal reactions
   Flu-like syndrome
   Hepatotoxicity
   Severe immunologic reactions
   Orange discoloration of bodily fluids
     Patientsshould be informed in advance of urine
      and contact lens discoloration
RIF Drug Interactions
 Drug   Interactions
   Antiinfectives
   Hormone     therapy
   Narcotics
   Anticoagulants
   Immunosuppressive     agents
   Anticonvulsants
   Cardiovascular  agents
   Bronchodilators
   Sulfonylurea hypoglycemics
   Hypolipidemics
   Psychotropic drugs
RIF Monitoring
 Monitoring

    No routine monitoring required
   Whengiven with drugs that interact, may
   necessitate regular measurements of the
   serum concentrations of the drugs in question
)Rifabutin (RFB
 Adverse     effects:
   Hematologic    toxicity
   Uveitis
   GI symptoms
   Polyarthralgia
   Hepatitis
   Rash
   Orange discoloration of bodily fluids
 Drug   interactions and monitoring – see
 RIF
)Rifapentine (RPT
 Adverse     effects:
   Similarto those associated with RIF
   May increase metabolism of co-administered
    drugs that are metabolized by hepatic
    enzymes
 Drug    Interactions:
   Are   likely to be similar to those of RIF
 Monitoring:
   Similar   to that for RIF
(Ethambutol (EMB
 Adverse   effect:
   Opticneuritis (impaired perception of the red
    and green colors(
   Cutaneous reactions
 Monitoring
   Baseline  and monthly tests of visual acuity
    and color vision
   Educate patient about self monitoring their
    vision and reporting any visual changes to
    their physician immediately
(Pyrazinamide (PZA
 Adverse    effects:
   Hepatotoxicity
   GIsymptoms
   Non-gouty polyarthralgia
   Hyperuricemia
   Acute gouty arthritis
   Rash

 Monitoring
   Serum   uric acid measurements are not routinely
    recommended
   Liver function tests should be performed when the
    drug is used in patients with underlying liver disease
Second-Line Anti-TB Medications
 Cycloserine
   Psychosis,   seizures
 Ethionamide     and PAS
   GI   upset
 Fluoroquinolones
   Tendon   rupture
 Aminoglycosides
   Deafness
   Renal   failure
Importance of Monitoring
 Closemonitoring of patients throughout
 treatment can:
  Prevent  serious complications
  Promote continuity of care
  Improve patient-health care provider
   relationship
  Encourage adherence
  Ensure successful completion of treatment
Response to Therapy
 Patients
         of pulmonary TB should have
 monthly sputum smear until two
 consecutive negative smears.

 For   extrapulmonary depends on site.
Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis
             DEFINITIONS

    D rug-resistant tuberculosis" refers to cases of
    tuberculosis caused by an isolate of Mycobacterium
    tuberculosis, which is resistant to one of the first-line
    antituberculosis drugs: isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide,
    or ethambutol.
    Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB( is
    caused by an isolate of M. tuberculosis, which is
    resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampin.
   Primary drug-resistance : occur in a patient who has
    never received antituberculosis therapy.
   Secondary resistance refers to the development of
    resistance during or following chemotherapy, for what
    had previously been drug-susceptible TB.
DIAGNOSIS

  The diagnosis of drug-resistant
  tuberculosis depends upon the collection
  and processing of adequate specimens for
  culture and sensitivity testing prior to the
  institution of therapy .
 Sputum cultures are positive in 85 to 90
  percent of cases of pulmonary
  tuberculosis, and every attempt should be
  made to collect adequate material before
  treatment is initiated.
The following are important risk
   . factors for drug resistance
 Previous  treatment for tuberculosis
  especially if prolonged.
 Contact with another patient known to
  have drug resistant disease.
 Immigration from an area with a high
  incidence of drug resistance.
 HIV seropositivity.
 Substance abuse.
 Homelessness.
Management of treatment failure
 Retreatment of patients with MDR-TB
 should be made after careful review of
 previous medications.
 This includes patients whose :

   -disease is progressing despite
 compliance with the drug regimen,
   -patients presenting for treatment who
 have been noncompliant with previous
 regimens.
The following general principles
       apply in these settings

• Any agent taken previously for more than
  30 days is likely to have decreased
  efficacy.
• An empiric retreatment regimen should
  include at least four drugs likely to be
  effective, one of them a parenteral agent.
  This will usually entail the use of second-
  line drugs that have increased toxicity
  compared with first line drugs.
 Patients considered to be at high risk for
 relapse who have localized disease may
 benefit from surgical resection.
 Patients should receive either hospital-
 based or domiciliary DOT.
 The implications of treatment failure and
 further acquired resistance are such that
 these cases should receive highest priority
 for DOT.
Glucocorticoid
 Controversial
 Predinsone   1mg /kg po od initialy has
 been used in combination with anti-TB
 drugs for life threatening complication
 such as meningitis &pericarditis.
Surgical Care
 Pulmonary resection in patients with TB
 may be required in drug-resistant cases
 because of the high likelihood of failure of
 the medication regimen.
 Surgical resection also may be required in
 patients with advanced disease with
 extensive caseation necrosis.
 Tubercular abscesses and
 bronchopleural fistulae also should be
 removed surgically.
Immunotherapy for Tuberculosis


 Protectiveimmunity against
 Mycobacterium tuberculosis is believed to
 be mediated by T-lymphocytes that
 produce the type 1 (Th1) helper T cell
 cytokines IFN- and interleukin (IL)-2
 Administration of low-dose recombinant
 human interleukin 2 (rhuIL-2) in
 combination with multidrug chemotherapy
 to patients with multidrug-resistant
 tuberculosis (MDR TB) induces
 measurable changes in in vitro immune
 response parameters which are
 associated with changes in the clinical and
 bacteriologic status of the patients
 interleukin-2 (IL-2) has received increasing
 attention as an immunomodulatory drug in
 human infectious diseases.
 This cytokine is a pivotal regulator of cell-
 mediated immunity and has been shown
 to induce the proliferation and
 differentiation of lymphoid cells .
 reported that patients with MDR TB
 treated with low-dose recombinant human
 IL-2 (rhuIL-2), in combination with
 optimized antituberculosis chemotherapy,
 show evidence of an enhanced
 antimicrobial response.
 Changes   included decreased sputum
 bacterial load and viability, improved chest
 X-ray results, and decreased symptoms in
 approximately 60% of patients .
 IL-2stimulates expansion and enhanced
 functional capacity of natural killer cells,
 which can eliminate intracellular M.
 tuberculosis .
 Small studies also suggested that IL-2
 has favorable clinical effects on patients
 with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
Potential Effects of IL-2
 1st:in
       patients with multidrug-resistant
  tuberculosis, current therapy is
  suboptimal, and adjunctive
  immunomodulation may facilitate initial
  bacillary clearance and increase cure
  rates.
 2nd: potential use for immunotherapy is to
  shorten the duration of treatment for drug-
  susceptible tuberculosis, reducing cost
  and increasing treatment completion rate
 3rd: down regulate the host inflammatory
  responses.
 All are still in vitro experiments .
General principles in the treatment of tb

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General principles in the treatment of tb

  • 1. General Principles in The Treatment of TB Dr Nahid Ali Sherbini
  • 2. Introduction  Tuberculosis (TB) is the most common cause of infection-related death worldwide.  In 1993, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared TB to be a global public health emergency.  Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the most common cause of TB.
  • 3. Current therapy of TB follows several basic principles 1. successful treatment requires more than one drug to which the organisms are susceptible . 2. drugs must be taken in appropriate dose . 3. drugs must be taken regularly. 4. drugs must continue for a sufficient period of time.
  • 4. Basic Principles of Combination Drug Regimens Ithas to be chosen based on knowledge of the likely drug susceptibility . Most include at least two effective drugs. Fixed drug combinations contains INH,RIF or INH,RIF,PZA.
  • 5. DOT  Itis the best way to reassure completion of appropriate therapy.  One report from Texas compare 407 episodes of TB between 1980-1986 treated with standard therapy. &581 episodes of TB between 1986-1992 treated with DOT.  Results: despite higher rate of TB among IV drug abuse &homelessness.
  • 6. Results  Lower rate of 1ry drug resistance 6.7 Vs 13%  Lower rate of acquired drug resistance 2.1 Vs 14%  Lower relapse rate 5.5 Vs 20.9%
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9. Recommended Regimens by ATS/CDC/IDSA Initial phase Continuation phase Reg drugs duration Reg drugs duration 1 INH 7d/w 1a INH 7d/w for18w RIF or 5d/w /RIF or 5d/w 18w PZA 1b INH 2x/w for 18w EMB /RIF PUPLISHED IN 2004
  • 10. Initial phase Continuation phase Reg drugs duration Reg drugs duration 2 INH 7d/w 2a INH 2x/w RIF for 2w /RIF for 18w PZA 2x/w 2b INH once/w EMB for 6w /RPF for 18w
  • 11.
  • 12. Major Anti-TB drugs 1st line therapy  INH daily dose of 5mg/kg  RIF daily dose of 10 mg /kg  RIFABUTIN daily dose of 5mg/kg  RIFAPANTINE weekly dose of 10mg/kg  PZA daily dose of 15- 30 mg/kg  EMB daily dose of 15-20 mg/kg
  • 13. 2nd line therapy  Reserved for: Drug intolerance (include hypersensitivity) Resistance to 1st line drugs  FDA approved : Cycloserine , Ethionamide ,Streptomycin & Capreomycin  Not approved but used to treat MDR-TB: Levofloxacin , Moxifloxacin, Gatifloxacin, P-aminosalicylic acid & Amikacin /Kanamycin.
  • 14. Classified as 2nd for many reasons 1. Lack of clinical experience with the drug relative to 1st line . 2. More toxicity. 3. Unfavourable pharmacokinitic 4. Increase incidence & severity of adverse events
  • 15. Monitoring Adverse effects Clinical response to therapy
  • 16. Monitoring of adverse effects  Baseline : AST ,BIL, ALP PLT CREATININE VISUAL ACUITY RED- GREEN COLOR DISCRIMINATION
  • 17. Repeated Measurement should be :obtained in the following conditions 1. The baseline results are abnormal 2. A drug reaction is suspected 3. HIV infection 4. Liver disease 5. Pregnancy or 1st 3 months of post partum period 6. Patients on combination therapy with PZA
  • 18. )Isoniazid (INH  Adverse effects:  Hepatic enzyme elevation  Hepatitis  Peripheral neuropathy  CNS effects  SLE-like symptoms  Hypersensitivity reaction  Monoamine (Histamine/tyramine poisoning)  Diarrhea
  • 19. INH Drug Interactions & Monitoring  Drug Interaction  Phenytoin  Monitoring  Routine monitoring is not necessary  For patients with pre-existing liver disease or who develop abnormal liver function test should be measured monthly and when symptoms occur  Prevention  VitaminB6 may prevent peripheral neuropathy and CNS effects
  • 20. )Rifampin (RIF  Adverse effects:  Cutaneous reactions  Gastrointestinal reactions  Flu-like syndrome  Hepatotoxicity  Severe immunologic reactions  Orange discoloration of bodily fluids Patientsshould be informed in advance of urine and contact lens discoloration
  • 21. RIF Drug Interactions  Drug Interactions  Antiinfectives  Hormone therapy  Narcotics  Anticoagulants  Immunosuppressive agents  Anticonvulsants  Cardiovascular agents  Bronchodilators  Sulfonylurea hypoglycemics  Hypolipidemics  Psychotropic drugs
  • 22. RIF Monitoring  Monitoring No routine monitoring required  Whengiven with drugs that interact, may necessitate regular measurements of the serum concentrations of the drugs in question
  • 23. )Rifabutin (RFB  Adverse effects:  Hematologic toxicity  Uveitis  GI symptoms  Polyarthralgia  Hepatitis  Rash  Orange discoloration of bodily fluids  Drug interactions and monitoring – see RIF
  • 24. )Rifapentine (RPT  Adverse effects:  Similarto those associated with RIF  May increase metabolism of co-administered drugs that are metabolized by hepatic enzymes  Drug Interactions:  Are likely to be similar to those of RIF  Monitoring:  Similar to that for RIF
  • 25. (Ethambutol (EMB  Adverse effect:  Opticneuritis (impaired perception of the red and green colors(  Cutaneous reactions  Monitoring  Baseline and monthly tests of visual acuity and color vision  Educate patient about self monitoring their vision and reporting any visual changes to their physician immediately
  • 26. (Pyrazinamide (PZA  Adverse effects:  Hepatotoxicity  GIsymptoms  Non-gouty polyarthralgia  Hyperuricemia  Acute gouty arthritis  Rash  Monitoring  Serum uric acid measurements are not routinely recommended  Liver function tests should be performed when the drug is used in patients with underlying liver disease
  • 27. Second-Line Anti-TB Medications  Cycloserine  Psychosis, seizures  Ethionamide and PAS  GI upset  Fluoroquinolones  Tendon rupture  Aminoglycosides  Deafness  Renal failure
  • 28. Importance of Monitoring  Closemonitoring of patients throughout treatment can: Prevent serious complications Promote continuity of care Improve patient-health care provider relationship Encourage adherence Ensure successful completion of treatment
  • 29. Response to Therapy  Patients of pulmonary TB should have monthly sputum smear until two consecutive negative smears.  For extrapulmonary depends on site.
  • 30. Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis DEFINITIONS  D rug-resistant tuberculosis" refers to cases of tuberculosis caused by an isolate of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which is resistant to one of the first-line antituberculosis drugs: isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, or ethambutol.  Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB( is caused by an isolate of M. tuberculosis, which is resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampin.  Primary drug-resistance : occur in a patient who has never received antituberculosis therapy.  Secondary resistance refers to the development of resistance during or following chemotherapy, for what had previously been drug-susceptible TB.
  • 31. DIAGNOSIS  The diagnosis of drug-resistant tuberculosis depends upon the collection and processing of adequate specimens for culture and sensitivity testing prior to the institution of therapy .  Sputum cultures are positive in 85 to 90 percent of cases of pulmonary tuberculosis, and every attempt should be made to collect adequate material before treatment is initiated.
  • 32. The following are important risk . factors for drug resistance  Previous treatment for tuberculosis especially if prolonged.  Contact with another patient known to have drug resistant disease.  Immigration from an area with a high incidence of drug resistance.  HIV seropositivity.  Substance abuse.  Homelessness.
  • 33. Management of treatment failure  Retreatment of patients with MDR-TB should be made after careful review of previous medications.  This includes patients whose : -disease is progressing despite compliance with the drug regimen, -patients presenting for treatment who have been noncompliant with previous regimens.
  • 34. The following general principles apply in these settings • Any agent taken previously for more than 30 days is likely to have decreased efficacy. • An empiric retreatment regimen should include at least four drugs likely to be effective, one of them a parenteral agent. This will usually entail the use of second- line drugs that have increased toxicity compared with first line drugs.
  • 35.  Patients considered to be at high risk for relapse who have localized disease may benefit from surgical resection.  Patients should receive either hospital- based or domiciliary DOT.  The implications of treatment failure and further acquired resistance are such that these cases should receive highest priority for DOT.
  • 36. Glucocorticoid  Controversial  Predinsone 1mg /kg po od initialy has been used in combination with anti-TB drugs for life threatening complication such as meningitis &pericarditis.
  • 37. Surgical Care  Pulmonary resection in patients with TB may be required in drug-resistant cases because of the high likelihood of failure of the medication regimen.  Surgical resection also may be required in patients with advanced disease with extensive caseation necrosis.  Tubercular abscesses and bronchopleural fistulae also should be removed surgically.
  • 38. Immunotherapy for Tuberculosis  Protectiveimmunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis is believed to be mediated by T-lymphocytes that produce the type 1 (Th1) helper T cell cytokines IFN- and interleukin (IL)-2
  • 39.  Administration of low-dose recombinant human interleukin 2 (rhuIL-2) in combination with multidrug chemotherapy to patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB) induces measurable changes in in vitro immune response parameters which are associated with changes in the clinical and bacteriologic status of the patients
  • 40.  interleukin-2 (IL-2) has received increasing attention as an immunomodulatory drug in human infectious diseases.  This cytokine is a pivotal regulator of cell- mediated immunity and has been shown to induce the proliferation and differentiation of lymphoid cells .
  • 41.  reported that patients with MDR TB treated with low-dose recombinant human IL-2 (rhuIL-2), in combination with optimized antituberculosis chemotherapy, show evidence of an enhanced antimicrobial response.
  • 42.  Changes included decreased sputum bacterial load and viability, improved chest X-ray results, and decreased symptoms in approximately 60% of patients .
  • 43.  IL-2stimulates expansion and enhanced functional capacity of natural killer cells, which can eliminate intracellular M. tuberculosis .  Small studies also suggested that IL-2 has favorable clinical effects on patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.
  • 44. Potential Effects of IL-2  1st:in patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, current therapy is suboptimal, and adjunctive immunomodulation may facilitate initial bacillary clearance and increase cure rates.
  • 45.  2nd: potential use for immunotherapy is to shorten the duration of treatment for drug- susceptible tuberculosis, reducing cost and increasing treatment completion rate  3rd: down regulate the host inflammatory responses.  All are still in vitro experiments .