High treatment success rate for multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis using a bedaquiline-containing treatment regimen

Norbert Ndjeka(National Health Laboratory Service), Kathryn Schnippel(University of Cape Town), Iqbal Master, Graeme Meintjes(University of Cape Town), Gary Maartens(University of Cape Town), Rodolfo Romero(Western Cape Department of Health), Xavier Padanilam(Johannesburg Hospital), Martin Enwerem, Sunitha Chotoo, Nalini Singh, Jennifer Hughes(Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation), Ebrahim Variava(Kalafong Hospital), Hannetjie Ferreira(Kalafong Hospital), Julian te Riele(Brooklyn Chest Hospital), Nazir Ismail(National Health Laboratory Service), Erika Mohr-Holland(Médecins Sans Frontières), Nonkqubela Bantubani(South African Medical Research Council), Francesca Conradie(University of the Witwatersrand)
European Respiratory Journal
October 25, 2018
Cited by 132Open Access
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Abstract

South African patients with rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (TB) and resistance to fluoroquinolones and/or injectable drugs (extensively drug-resistant (XDR) and preXDR-TB) were granted access to bedaquiline through a clinical access programme with strict inclusion and exclusion criteria. PreXDR-TB and XDR-TB patients were treated with 24 weeks of bedaquiline within an optimised, individualised background regimen that could include levofloxacin, linezolid and clofazimine as needed. 200 patients were enrolled: 87 (43.9%) had XDR-TB, 99 (49.3%) were female and the median age was 34 years (interquartile range (IQR) 27–42). 134 (67.0%) were living with HIV; the median CD4 + count was 281 cells·μL −1 (IQR 130–467) and all were on antiretroviral therapy. 16 out of 200 patients (8.0%) did not complete 6 months of bedaquiline: eight were lost to follow-up, six died, one stopped owing to side effects and one was diagnosed with drug-sensitive TB. 146 out of 200 patients (73.0%) had favourable outcomes: 139 (69.5%) were cured and seven (3.5%) completed treatment. 25 patients (12.5%) died, 20 (10.0%) were lost from treatment and nine (4.5%) had treatment failure. 22 adverse events were attributed to bedaquiline, including a QT interval corrected using the Fridericia formula (QTcF) >500 ms (n=5), QTcF increase >50 ms from baseline (n=11) and paroxysmal atrial flutter (n=1). Bedaquiline added to an optimised background regimen was associated with a high rate of successful treatment outcomes for this preXDR-TB and XDR-TB cohort.


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