To the Editor:
In the June issue of the European Respiratory Journal (ERJ), A. Skrahina and co-workers reported alarming rates of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Minsk, Belarus. In their survey, they diagnosed MDR-TB in 35.3% of new patients and 76.5% of previously treated patients [1]. The reflex response to such figures is to strengthen classical infection control activities, to intensify case detection, and to strengthen adherence to and rational use of the first-line antituberculosis regimen. Unfortunately, with the MDR-TB rates now emerging from Eastern Europe and Central Asia, it is questionable how appropriate the current first-line regimen and its rigid use in newly diagnosed cases are in that setting. Is it not time to consider an entirely new first-line treatment for countries or regions where, for example, >25% of tuberculosis in previously untreated patients is MDR-TB? In a different setting, that of community-acquired pneumonia, the use of macrolides as first-line therapy despite 25% macrolide resistance among its causative agents results in therapy-attributable mortality in around one in 100 persons treated [2]. Generally speaking, should we not consider revising the current first-line regimen once a yet-to-be-determined level of MDR-TB is measured, in order to prevent therapy-attributable mortality?
Prolonged continuation of current first-line regimens in high-prevalence MDR-TB settings favours the further emergence of such strains. Strains with resistance to the initial treatment choice are given a selective advantage and opportunity to spread in the community or nosocomially, which they would not otherwise have. Initial treatment with an ineffective regimen also provides conditions which may favour their adaptation towards preservation of transmissibility (e.g. by acquiring so-called compensatory mutations) [3].
Recent studies have found that regimens including bedaquiline (TMC207), PA-824, pyrazinamide, moxifloxacin and clofazimine have similar or stronger bactericidal activity than the current regimen of isoniazid, rifampicin and pyrazinamide with ethambutol or streptomycin. These novel compounds lack any cross-resistance with existing drugs [4, 5]. Different strategies for their implementation can be used. First, these regimens could serve as a universal regimen for settings where MDR-TB is so prevalent that it is unsafe and perhaps unethical to continue by just enforcing the old first-line regimen.
As a second strategy would entail the use of a new universal regimen followed by de-escalation to the current first-line regimen for patients infected with strains treatable with current first-line therapy. Unrestricted access to rapid molecular resistance detection or phenotypic susceptibility testing is critical to this strategy. Such screening also provides the opportunity for separate quarantine measures for patients with sensitive tuberculosis, who rapidly become uninfectious after initiation of therapy. Where possible, these patients would not be admitted to hospitals where they are at risk of superinfection with MDR-TB. This may help to slow the truly alarming increases in resistance rates seen in areas where prolonged in-patient treatment of tuberculosis is the norm.
Of course, the switch to a universal regimen can only be successful if it is part of a stable programme that also involves rigid infection control activities, active case detection, close monitoring of individual treatment adherence and rational use of the novel drugs, as set out in the recent review series in the ERJ, introduced and summarised by Zumla et al. [6].
The use of an initial regimen that is ineffective for a sizeable proportion of the patients and encourages the spread and further adaptation of resistant strains is unacceptable. The tuberculosis community must now push forward and start clinical trials of universal regimens that are equally active against pan-susceptible and MDR-TB.
Footnotes
Statement of Interest
None declared.
- ©ERS 2013