From the Journals

Study affirms shorter regimens for drug-resistant tuberculosis


 

‘A revolution in MDR tuberculosis’

“The authors must be commended on completing this challenging high-quality, phase 3, non-inferiority, randomized controlled trial involving 13 health care facilities across Ethiopia, Georgia, India, Moldova, Mongolia, South Africa, and Uganda ... despite the COVID-19 pandemic,” noted Keertan Dheda, MD, PhD, and Christoph Lange, MD, PhD, in an accompanying comment titled, “A Revolution in the Management of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis”.

Although the WHO recently approved an all-oral 6-month bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid plus moxifloxacin (BPaLM) regimen, results from the alternate 6-month regimen examined in STREAM stage 2 “do provide confidence in using 2 months of an injectable as part of a salvage regimen in patients for whom MDR tuberculosis treatment is not successful” or in those with extensively drug-resistant (XDR) or pre-XDR TB, “for whom therapeutic options are few,” noted Dr. Dheda, from the University of Cape Town (South Africa) and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and Dr. Lange, from the University of Lübeck (Germany), Baylor College of Medicine, and Texas Children’s Hospital, both in Houston.

The study authors and the commentators stress that safer and simpler treatments are still needed for MDR TB. “The search is now on for regimens that could further reduce duration, toxicity, and pill burden,” note Dr. Dheda and Dr. Lange.

However, they also note that “substantial resistance” to bedaquiline is already emerging. “Therefore, if we are to protect key drugs from becoming functionally redundant, drug-susceptibility testing capacity will need to be rapidly improved to minimize resistance amplification and onward disease transmission.”

The study was funded by USAID and Janssen Research and Development. Dr. Goodall has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Dheda has received funding from the EU and the South African Medical Research Council for studies related to the diagnosis or management of drug-resistant tuberculosis. Dr. Lange is supported by the German Center for Infection Research and has received funding from the European Commission for studies on the development of novel antituberculosis medicines and for studies related to novel diagnostics of tuberculosis; consulting fees from INSMED; speaker’s fees from INSMED, GILEAD, and Janssen; and is a member of the data safety board of trials from Medicines sans Frontiers, all of which are unrelated to the current study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

AAP issues guidelines to combat rise in respiratory illness
MDedge Infectious Disease
Children and COVID: Weekly cases maintain a low-level plateau
MDedge Infectious Disease
The right indoor relative humidity could ward off COVID
MDedge Infectious Disease
HIV prevention: Clinician attitudes may be curtailing PrEP use
MDedge Infectious Disease
Opt-out HIV testing in EDs can help identify undiagnosed cases
MDedge Infectious Disease
More vaccinated people dying of COVID as fewer get booster shots
MDedge Infectious Disease
PrEP education during STI testing could boost HIV protection
MDedge Infectious Disease
Study finds chronic jet lag–like body clocks in people with HIV
MDedge Infectious Disease
People living with HIV are a model population for vaccination
MDedge Infectious Disease
Future HIV PrEP innovations aim to address adherence, women’s health, and combination treatments
MDedge Infectious Disease