Drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment
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- 6.6 Values and preferences
- Section 7. Surgery for patients on MDR-TB treatment 7.1 Recommendation No. Recommendation
6.5 Risks
The successful implementation of this recommendation will depend upon the availability of more providers trained specifically in the care of HIV and DR-TB, and drug–drug interactions. A substantial increase in the availability of and patient’s access to treatment, and additional support for ensuring adherence would likely be needed. The need for increased integration of HIV and TB care for effective patient management, prompt evaluation of AEs and case-holding throughout treatment will necessitate more resources. For the benefit of the user, a table of AEs for which both an antiretroviral agent and an antituberculosis medicine have been implicated and could conceivably interact was included when these guidelines were published. Updated information on drug–drug interactions between antiretroviral and antituberculosis medicines is now available online (36). 6.6 Values and preferences A high value was placed on outcomes such as prevention of early death and TB transmission, and a lower value was placed on the resources required to make ART available to all MDR-TB patients infected with HIV. Recommendations 60 Section 7. Surgery for patients on MDR-TB treatment 7.1 Recommendation No. Recommendation 7.1 In patients with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) or multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB), elective partial lung resection (lobectomy or wedge resection) may be used alongside a recommended MDR-TB regimen. (Conditional recommendation, very low certainty in the evidence) 7.2 Justification and evidence The recommendation in this section addresses one PICO question: PICO question 13 (DR-TB, 2016): Among patients on MDR-TB treatment, are the following two interventions (delay in start of treatment and elective surgery) likely to lead to cure and other outcomes? 57 Surgery has been employed in treating TB patients since before the advent of chemotherapy. In many countries, it remains one of the treatment options for TB. With the challenging prospect in many settings of inadequate regimens to treat MDR/XDR-TB, and the risk of serious sequelae, the role of pulmonary surgery is being re-evaluated as a means to reduce the amount of lung tissue with intractable pathology, reduce bacterial load and thus improve prognosis. The review for this question was based on both an IPD-MA to evaluate the effectiveness of different forms of elective surgery as an adjunct to combination medical therapy for MDR-TB (114), as well as a systematic review and study-level meta-analysis (115) (web Annex 6[DR-TB, 2016]). Demographic, clinical, bacteriological, surgical and outcome data of MDR-TB patients on treatment were obtained from the authors of 26 cohort studies participating in the adult individual patient data (aIPD) (61). The analyses summarized in the GRADE tables consist of three strata comparing treatment success (e.g. cure and completion) with different combinations of treatment failure, relapse, death and loss to follow-up. Two sets of such tables were prepared for (i) partial pulmonary resection, and (ii) pneumonectomy. Based on an assessment of the certainty of the evidence, carried out using predefined criteria and documented in GRADEpro, the certainty of the evidence was rated as very low to low, depending on the outcome being assessed and type of study. In the study-level meta-analysis that examined all forms of surgery together, there was a statistically significant improvement in cure and successful treatment outcomes among patients who received surgery. However, when the aIPD meta-analysis examined patients who underwent partial lung resection and those who had a more radical pneumonectomy versus patients who did not undergo surgery, those who underwent partial lung resection had statistically significantly higher rates of treatment success. Those patients who underwent pneumonectomy did not have better outcomes than those who did not undergo surgery. Prognosis appeared to be better when partial lung resection was performed after culture conversion. This effect was not observed in patients who underwent pneumonectomy. There are several important caveats to these data. Substantial bias is likely to be present, as only patients judged to be fit for surgery would have been operated upon. No patient with HIV coinfection in the aIPD underwent lung resection surgery. Therefore, the effects of surgery among HIV-infected patients with MDR-TB could not be evaluated. Rates of death did not differ significantly between those who underwent surgery versus those who received medical treatment 57 The outcomes comprise: 1. Cured/completed by end of treatment, 2. Culture conversion by 6 months, 3. Failure, 4. Relapse, 5. Survival (or death), 6. Adverse reactions (severity, type, organ class), and 7. Adherence to treatment (or treatment interruption due to non-adherence). WHO consolidated guidelines on tuberculosis: drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment 61 only. However, the outcomes could be biased because the risk of death could have been much higher among patients in whom surgery was prescribed had they not been operated upon. Download 1.73 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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