Management of TB and Multidrug
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Transcript Management of TB and Multidrug
Management of Tuberculosis (TB)
and
Multidrug-Resistant TB (MDR TB)
Monica Avendano, MD, FRCPC
Associate Professor of Medicine
University of Toronto
Medical Director, TB Service
West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto
Tuberculosis is a
Social Disease
with a Medical
Aspect.
Sir William Osler in 1902
(1849-1919)
Worldwide Trends &
the Burden of TB Disease
TB
is still one of the leading causes
of death in low-income and middleincome countries.
TB remains a threat to public
health in industrialized countries.
The worldwide burden is still growing.
Risk Factors
which Perpetuate Worldwide TB
Ongoing
Exposure to TB
Increasing
Poverty:
-Lack of or poor housing
-Poor nutrition
-Over crowding
-No access or erratic access to
healthcare
Wars
and Natural Disasters
Mass Migrations usually from poor
resources settings to industrialized
settings
Tuberculosis in the World
Incidence: 9.5 million new cases/year
Prevalence: 14 million cases
95% of cases in resource poor settings
1.1 millions co-infection TB/ HIV (12%
HIV Positive have TB)
1.7 millions deaths/year
98% deaths in poor resource countries
WHO 2010
Tuberculosis in Canada
(Demographically and Geographically Focused)
1,600 Cases in 2009
TB Rate - 4.7/100.000
65% of cases in Foreign Born personsRate 14/100.000
21% in First Nation People- Rate 28/100.000
Rate in Nunavut 174/100.000
75% of cases are in large urban centres in
Ontario, BC and Quebec
Socially marginalized groups
Rate in Atlantic Region 1/100.000
Management of TB
• Medical Management
Diagnosis
Treatment
Follow-up
• Psychosocial Management
Stigma
Multicultural issues
Financial implications
Impact on family life
Management of TB
Diagnosis
Suspect TB/Think TB
Clinical (presenting symptoms, duration of
symptoms, previous TB)
Diagnostic Imaging
(X-Rays, CT Scans, MRI’s)
Bacteriology (smears, cultures)
Pathology of biopsy specimens
Epidemiological Factors
Management of TB
Obtain adequate clinical specimen
Drug susceptibility in first isolate
At least 3 bactericidal drugs
Adequate duration of treatment: beyond
the time of sputum conversion and
amelioration of symptoms
Adequate follow-up: prescribing the drugs
is just the beginning
Attention to psychosocial factors
Treatment of TB
Goals
1. Sterilize the lesion
2. Avoid development of resistance
Clinical Principles
1. Treat with multiple drugs
2. Adequate dosages
3. Sufficient duration
4. Expert monitoring
Drug Susceptibility in TB
Fully susceptible to all first line drugs
Mono-Resistant: resistant to a single first
line drug (Most frequently to Isoniazid)
Poly-Resistant: resistant to 2 or more first line
drugs but not to Isoniazid and Rifampin
Multidrug-Resistant (MDR TB): resistant
to Isoniazid and Rifampin
Extensively Drug-resistant (XDR TB): MDR TB
with additional resistance to a quinolone and an
injectable
Anti-TB Drugs
Group 1
- Isoniazid, Rifampin, Pyrazinamide,Ethambutol
Group 2
- Amikacin, Kanamycin, Capreomycin
Group 3
- F-Quinolones
Group 4
- Ethionamide, Cycloserine. PAS,Prothionamide
Group 5
- Clofazimine,Imipenem, Thioacetazone, Clavulin,
Macrolides, Linezolid
Duration of TB Treatment
Drugs
Duration
INH/RMP/PZA + EMB x 2
months INH/RMP x 4
months
6 months
INH/RMP + EMB
No INH or No RMP
9 months
18 – 24 months
Poly-Resistant TB
Case Study
KL, 44 year old female, born in Congo. Lived in Russia
for 3 months looking after sister in a TB ward
Arrived in Canada as a refuge claimant 3 years prior to
her diagnosis of TB
No previous history of TB
Gave a 1 year history of right sided chest pain and cough
3 weeks of fever, chills, malaise and weight loss
Seen by community physician who diagnosed
pneumonia Biaxin x 7 days; Levofloxacin x 7 days
Not better
Stopped working as a PSW in a seniors home
Went to an ER
Abnormal CXR: bilateral UL’s cavities
Referred to the WPHC’s TB Clinic
Poly-resistant TB
Case Study
Admitted with presumptive diagnosis of TB
Induced Sputum: AFB+, AMTD +
Treatment with the 4 drugs from Group 1
Culture grew in 4 weeks
M. TB resistant to Isoniazid, Ethambutol,
Pyrazinamide,Streptomycin, Ofloxacin and
Ethionamide POLY- RESISTANT TB
Poly-resistant TB
Case Study
Treatment modified :
Rifampin iv, Amikacin iv, Imipenem iv,
Clarithromycin, PAS and Clofazimine
PAS discontinued due to increased TSH
Bacteriologic conversion after 5 months of
treatment
Treated for 2 years after bacteriologic
conversion
Completed treatment January 2011
Last seen March 2011. Remains well, CXR and
CT Scan show scarring
MDR TB
• > 450,000 cases identified every year
• 150,000 deaths/year from a disease that could
and should be curable
• MDR TB is MAN MADE
-Mismanagement of Fully susceptibleTB or INH
resistant TB
-Poor quality of drugs
-Drugs shortages erratic supply
- Patients not taking drugs correctly
• XDR TB results from failure to properly manage
MDR TB
MDR TB Case Study (1)
LW,19 year old male, born in China
Arrived in Canada as a landed immigrant
In China
Pulmonary TB treated for 2 years with frequent
changes in his medications (Rifampin,Isoniazid,
Ethambutol , Ofloxacin and Amikacin)
Because of persistent disease Treatment
Failure, admitted to hospital (3 months)
Left Upper Lobectomy.
Came to Canada 2 months after discharge from
the Chinese hospital
MDR TB Case Study(1)
In Canada
Attended school in Toronto (grade 9), from
November until June the following year
Chest X-Ray in March (for surveillance
purposes) reported abnormal. Not investigated
Presented in July with productive cough, weight
loss, night sweats and fatigue of 3 months
duration
Referred by community physician to the TB
Clinic at WPHC. Abnormal Chest Radiography
Admitted to WPHC from the clinic with
presumptive diagnosis of MDR TB
MDR TB Case Study(1)
On admission
Cachectic, febrile, cough +++
Sputum Smears 4+, AMTD +
Initial Treatment : Moxifloxacin iv, Amikacin
iv, Clofazimine, Cycloserine and PAS
Culture positive in 3 weeks
MDR TB with additional resistance to
Ethambutol and Rifabutin
MDR TB Case Study(1)
Slow response to the treatment
At West Park for 7 months
Regular follow-ups in clinic after discharge
Completed 32 months of treatment in January
2011 (24 months after bacteriologic conversion)
Follow-up every 3 months for the first year after
treatment completion: CXR, bacteriologic update
(induced sputum) and Chest CT Scan if CXR
shows even minimal changes
Last clinic visit April 2011. Remains well.
MDR TB CASE STUDY (2)
22 years old man, Tibetan born, lived in India for 10
years, came to Canada January 2008 as a refugee
claimant
No previous history of TB
Smoker, ETHOL drinker, “party boy”
September 2009:
Malaise, poor appetite, anal pain radiated to left
lumbosacral area and left gluteus
Unable to walk, febrile, not responding to “Tibetan
medicines”
November 15, 2009 , went to ER.
Admitted to acute care Hospital
Diagnosed: Sacral Osteomyelitis
Pus aspirated, grew anaerobes and Gram negative
organisms. Treated with IV Moxifloxacin and Flagyl
MDR TB Case Study (2)
In Acute Care:
Chest X-Ray abnormal. Sputum AFB +++
CT Scan of Chest Posterior Segment RUL
infiltrate
Bronchoscopy Smear +
December 1st,2009, Started anti-TB Treatment:
Oral Rifampin, Ethambutol and Moxifloxacin
December 15, 2009: Isoniazid and B6 added
Stools with mucus and blood
Totally unable to walk and sit down
December 21, 2009: MDR TB with additional
resistance to Ethambutol, Ethionamide,
Streptomycin and Rifabutin
December 22, 2009: Transferred to WPHCC
MDR TB Case (2)
On Admission to WPHC:
Febrile, cachectic, large right thigh abscess (sacral
abscess drained through the rectum and down through
the abdominal muscles sheet)
Stools grew TB
Initial Phase of Treatment (6 months):
IV Amikacin, Moxifloxacin and Imipenem, plus oral
Pyrazinamide (x 3 months),Clofazimine,Cycloserine,
Linezolid, and B6
Continuation Phase of Treatment:
Oral Moxifloxacin, Cycloserine, Clavulin B6, and
Clofazimine
Bacteriologic conversion May 2010
Resolution of abscesses
MDR TB Case (2)
Discharged July 30, 2010 after 7 months in hospital
Follow up every 3 months for 1 year after discharge
December 2010, significant improvement, able to
ambulate with a walker, gaining weight
Last seen in Clinic April 11, 2011
- Weight gain 23 ½ kilos
-Able to walk without a gait aid
-Chest x-ray clear
Plan is to continue treatment until May 2012
MDR TB Management
Treatment should be individualized and based on
drug susceptibility studies
Patient to receive all the drugs to which the infecting
M.TB is susceptible. When available drugs need to
be given iv
If there is past history of TB and drugs previously
received are known, give at least 3 drugs
(bactericidal) never used before
If drug susceptibility still unknown give at least 3
bactericidal drugs, but no Rifampin or Isoniazid
Treatment for 2 years following bacteriologic
conversion
DOT mandatory
Well structured and strict follow-up
Surgery in selected cases
Management of MDR TB
Prolonged Hospitalization
Significant psycho-social issues
Requires increased number of drugs
Poor tolerance to the drugs
Increased drug- associated toxicity
Long term Follow-Up is necessary
Increased health care costs
MDR TB in Ontario
Affects mainly foreign born individuals in
Canada for less than 5 years
Significant number of patients have
previous history of TB
People from countries with high burden of
TB and Drug Resistant TB will continue to
migrate to Canada
MDR TB Control
Extraordinary measures are needed in
countries with the highest rates of TB and
MDR TB: rapid detection, access to drugs
and steady drugs supply and effective and
expert care.
The only reasonable approach is
strengthening TB Control worldwide to
prevent MDR TB and XDR TB
Tuberculosis
anywhere
is
Tuberculosis
everywhere