1 / 26

Drug-Resistant TB in Children: Patterns, Epidemiology, Diagnosis, and Management

Explore resistance patterns, epidemiology, MDR-TB in children, diagnosis, and management strategies for drug-resistant TB in children. Presented by Dr. Saumu Wayuwa KPA at the Annual Scientific Conference 2019.

davidb
Download Presentation

Drug-Resistant TB in Children: Patterns, Epidemiology, Diagnosis, and Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DRUG RESISTANT TB IN CHILDREN DR SAUMU WAYUWA KPA ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE 2019

  2. OUTLINE • Resistance patterns • Epidemiology • MDR TB in children • Diagnosis • Management

  3. TB RESISTANCE PATTERNS • Mono-resistant TB • Resistant to any one drug. • Poly-resistant TB • Resistant to more than one drug but not both isoniazid and rifampicin. • Multi-drug resistant (MDR) TB • Resistant to at least both isoniazid and rifampicin. • Extensive drug resistant (XDR) TB • Resistant to rifampicin, isoniazid, an injectable and a quinolone.

  4. BACILLARY POPULATIONS 1. Rapidly multiplying bacilli - Optimum medium: Extracellular. PH 6.5-7, maximum oxygenation (cavity wall) - Large number of bacilli → High probability of spontaneous mutations and natural resistance 2. Slowly multiplying bacilli - Intramacrophagic location. Acid pH.Population<105Relapse capacity 3. Intermittently growing bacilli - Unfavourable conditions. Solid caseum. Extracellular - Population <105. Relapse capacity 4. Bacilli in latent state: Not susceptible to drugs - Reactivations and relapses

  5. M. TUBERCULOSISRESISTANCE • Natural resistance – characteristic of the bacilli • Acquired resistance – therapy problem (resistance in previously treated patients) • Primary resistance – transmission problem (resistance in previously untreated patients)

  6. DR TB TRENDS IN KENYA

  7. Since 2013, more than 50% of new cases of MDR-TBwereamongpeoplewhohaveneverbeentreatedfor TB before, highlightingtheimportance of transmissionand thelack of appropriateinfection control measures, particularly at communitylevel GLOBAL EPIDEMIC MDR-TB SITUATION WHO Reports 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017

  8. MDR-TB IN CHILDREN • Is mainly primary (transmitted) drug resistance • Disease in children usually (>90%) develops within 12 months of infection • Is more difficult to acquire because of the paucibacillary nature of primary disease • Possible if cavitary pulmonary disease • Children with DR TB are not major contributors to the spread of DR TB in the community • Good source for surveillance on drug resistant TB • May reflect the transmission of these organisms in the community

  9. MDR-TB IN CHILDREN • Children at high risk • Contacts of patients with MDR-TB • Living in MDR-TB high prevalence areas

  10. RATES OF MDR-TB AMONG CONTACTS OF MDR-TB PATIENTS

  11. MDR-TB IN CHILDREN Furthersuspectdrug-resistant TB: • If a child gets worse on treatment or fails despite adherence to treatment • If an adult index case with unknown susceptibility pattern is: • a treatment failure (sputum smear positive after 5 months treatment) • a retreatment case • a chronic TB case (TB despite 2 previous treatment courses)

  12. DIAGNOSIS OF MDR-TB IN CHILDREN Drug-susceptible vs. drug-resistant TB in children • No clinical or radiological difference between these two groups • Clinical features and chest radiography does not distinguish DS from DR/MDR TB • Confirmed MDR TB is a laboratory diagnosis

  13. DIAGNOSIS OF MDR-TB IN CHILDREN Confirmed DR TB is a laboratory diagnosis : nucleic acid amplification test (e.g. Xpert MTB/RIF) or culture with DSTBacteriological diagnosis should always be attempted for drug sensitivity testingProbable DR TB is diagnosed in a child with active TB disease and a recent close contact with DR TBSuspected DR TB is when a child fails to improve while adherent to first-line anti-TB treatment OR if the adult source case is a treatment failure, a retreatment case or recently died from TB

  14. DIAGNOSIS OF MDR-TB IN CHILDREN • Bacteriologic confirmation of TB is more difficult • Lower bacillary load • Less forceful cough • Difficult to obtain specimens • More extra pulmonary cases (< 5 years) • Important role for X-ray film • Gene Xpertisa useful tool

  15. DIAGNOSIS OF MDR TB • History of contact/previous treatment • Sputum smear • Drug Susceptibility Test (DST) - Molecular DST Gene xpert LPA - ConventionalDST Liquid culture (MGIT) Solid culture

  16. BASELINE LABORATORY INVESTIGATIONS • Sputum smear, FLD and SLD LPA, culture and DST • Hemogram • UECr • LFTs • TSH • HIV • CXR • Audiometry • ECG

  17. DR TB CLINICAL REVIEW • County physician, Pediatrician, CTLC/SCTLC, CASCO, Pharmacist, Lab technologist, Nutritionist, Social worker, PHO, psychologist • Review team meets at central facility at county/sub county level • Patients brought by their facility DOTs nurse/clinician • Team reviews the following; • Patient’s progress • Patient`s suspected or documented ADR`s • Sputum smears and cultures • Biochemistry lab results • Deliberations and notes recorded in patient log book

  18. PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT OF MDR-TB IN CHILDREN The same principles apply as for adults. • Do not add a single drug to a failing regimen • At least 4 susceptible drugs. • Lower bacillary load  Probably enough with only 3 drugs?? • Use the adult index case’s isolate DST pattern if no isolate from child is available • Favorable treatment outcomes: adverse reactions are very infrequent, even with SLD • Caution with Bdq <6 years and Dlm <3 years • Longer oral or shorter MDR/RR-TB regimens - weight based dosing

  19. DESIRABLE CHARACTERISTICS OF DRUGS Adapted from: Caminero JA, et al. Treatment of TB. EurRespirMonogr 2012; 58: 154–166 Caminero et al. Treatment of drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB. EurRespirMonograph 2018: 205-227 • Bactericidal– to rapidly eliminate the bulk of active bacilli INH, RIF, Lfx/Mfx, SLD Inject, Lzd, Bdq, Dlm 2. “Sterilization” – killing dormant or intermittent growing bacilli RIF, PZA, hMfx, Lfx, Lzd, Cfz, Bdq, Dlm 3. Prevention of Resistancewith drug combination 4. Minimal Toxicity

  20. WHO RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DR-TB TREATMENT WHO 2011 update WHO 2016 update

  21. WHO DR-TB Guidelines 2018. Grouping Medicines for use in Longer MDR-TB Regimens

  22. MDR TB TREATMENT REGIMENS Short term regimen Intensive phase 4-6 Km-Mfx-Pto-Cfz-E-Z-Hhigh-dose Continuation phase 5 Mfx-Cfz-Z-E Individualized regimen

  23. CLINICAL AND LABORATORY FOLLOW UP

  24. OUTCOMES OF MDR-TB TREATMENT IN CHILDREN • Systematic review and meta-analysis reviewed treatment outcomes for children with MDR-TB. • Eight studies, which reported outcomes on 315 patients, contributed to the database. • Average duration of treatment ranged from 6 months to 34 months. • The pooled estimate for treatment success (defined as a composite of cure and completion) was 81.7% with death in 5.9%, and default in 6.2% of patients. • Adverse reactions occurred in 39.1% of the children, the most common of which were nausea and vomiting followed by hearing loss, psychiatric effects and hypothyroidism. • Ettehad D, Schaaf HS, Seddon JA, Cooke GS, Ford N. Treatment outcomes for children with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet Infect Dis 2012;12:449-56. • Good treatment outcomes due to paucibacillary disease and DOTS (as compared to adults with high bacilli load/presence of cavities making treatment difficult-resistance selection)

  25. SUMMARY OF MANAGEMENT OF MDR-TB IN CHILDREN • Confirm MDR TB… if possible • Management and review by DR TB clinical review team • Use the adult index case’s isolate DST pattern if no isolate from child is available • Give at least 4 or more drugs to which the patient’s isolate is susceptible to and/or naïve • Counsel parents at every visit about possible adverse events, and the importance of adherence to treatment • DOT with daily treatment is essential • Close Follow-up is essential: clinical, radiologic and cultures

  26. THANK YOU

More Related