Effect of delamanid on interim outcomes of bacteriological conversion amongst pediatric drug resistant tuberculosis cases in India

Author:

Kalawadia Dhruv1,Gandhi Darshini2,Dirkhipa Tsering Y.2,Jaiswal Akanksha1,Shah Daksha3,Salve Jyoti4,Parmar Malik5,Sachdeva Kuldeep S6,Bodhanwala Minnie7,Shah Ira8

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric TB Clinic, Pediatric Infectious Disease, B. J. Wadia Hospital for Children, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

2. Department of Pediatric, Seth G. S. Medical College and KEM Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

3. Joint Executive Health Officer, Municipal Corporation of Greater, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

4. World Health Organization—Country Office for India, New Delhi, India

5. Central TB Division, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India, New Delhi, India

6. International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, South East Asia

7. B. J. Wadia Hospital for Children, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

8. Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Nodal Officer, Pediatric DR-TB Center and Pediatric HIV/ART Center at B.J. Wadia Hospital for Children, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

Abstract

Aim: To determine the bacteriological conversion rate after 6 months of Delamanid (DLM) based treatment in children with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) and determine factors associated with bacteriological conversion. Methods: This is a descriptive retrospective study done in children between the age of 6-17 years with DR-TB who received DLM-based therapy from October 2018 to May 2021. The drug resistance pattern of TB was detected using Xpert RIF/MTB and phenotypic drug sensitivity testing (DST) on TB-MGIT culture reports. Follow-up sputum TB MGIT culture was carried out monthly after DLM initiation for 6 months. Factors associated with sputum bacteriological conversion such as age, gender, pulmonary TB (PTB) versus disseminated TB, unilateral or bilateral lung involvement, type of DR-TB, prior treatment failure, and type of DR-TB regimen were analyzed. Results: Sixty patients received DLM of which two had extrapulmonary TB (EPTB) and sputum conversion could not be assessed. The mean age at presentation was 12.69 ± 3.03 years. Five patients (8.3%) died while on DLM treatment. On follow-up, 8 (13.7%) out of 58 patients had no sputum bacteriological conversion after 6 months of DLM initiation of which three patients were on salvage therapy; 46 (79.3%) had sputum bacteriological conversion within 6 months of DLM initiation. Conclusion: Sputum bacteriological conversion rate was almost 80% at the end of 6 months of DLM-based treatment.

Publisher

Medknow

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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