Abstract

BackgroundMeta-analysis of patients with isoniazid-resistant tuberculosis (TB) given standard first-line anti-TB treatment indicated an increased risk of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) emerging (8%), compared to drug-sensitive TB (0.3%). Here we use whole genome sequencing (WGS) to investigate whether treatment of patients with preexisting isoniazid-resistant disease with first-line anti-TB therapy risks selecting for rifampicin resistance, and hence MDR-TB.MethodsPatients with isoniazid-resistant pulmonary TB were recruited and followed up for 24 months. Drug susceptibility testing was performed by microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay, mycobacterial growth indicator tube, and by WGS on isolates at first presentation and in the case of re-presentation. Where MDR-TB was diagnosed, WGS was used to determine the genomic relatedness between initial and subsequent isolates. De novo emergence of MDR-TB was assumed where the genomic distance was 5 or fewer single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), whereas reinfection with a different MDR-TB strain was assumed where the distance was 10 or more SNPs.ResultsTwo hundred thirty-nine patients with isoniazid-resistant pulmonary TB were recruited. Fourteen (14/239 [5.9%]) patients were diagnosed with a second episode of TB that was multidrug resistant. Six (6/239 [2.5%]) were identified as having evolved MDR-TB de novo and 6 as having been reinfected with a different strain. In 2 cases, the genomic distance was between 5 and 10 SNPs and therefore indeterminate.ConclusionsIn isoniazid-resistant TB, de novo emergence and reinfection of MDR-TB strains equally contributed to MDR development. Early diagnosis and optimal treatment of isoniazid-resistant TB are urgently needed to avert the de novo emergence of MDR-TB during treatment.

Highlights

  • Meta-analysis of patients with isoniazid-resistant tuberculosis (TB) given standard first-line anti-TB treatment indicated an increased risk of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) emerging (8%), compared to drug-sensitive TB (0.3%)

  • Resistance to the first-line anti-TB drug isoniazid is the most common drug-resistant TB, with a global prevalence of 10%, and it is associated with increased risk of treatment failure and emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB with standard first-line TB therapy (11% and 8%, respectively) compared to drug-susceptible TB (1% and 0.3%, respectively) [2, 3]

  • Three hundred ninety-two patients had TB strains with isoniazid resistance on microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS); 50 patients declined to be followed up over 24 months and their results were excluded; 68 patients had MDR-TB and 274 had isolates with resistance to isoniazid and susceptibility to rifampicin

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Summary

Methods

Patients with isoniazid-resistant pulmonary TB were recruited and followed up for 24 months. Drug susceptibility testing was performed by microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay, mycobacterial growth indicator tube, and by WGS on isolates at first presentation and in the case of re-presentation. Where MDR-TB was diagnosed, WGS was used to determine the genomic relatedness between initial and subsequent isolates. Between December 2008 and June 2011, newly diagnosed patients with smear-positive pulmonary TB were recruited in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, for a clinical study investigating the bacterial risk factors for treatment failure among patients with isoniazid-resistant TB [2]. Initial screening for isoniazid resistance was done using microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS) [14] with results later confirmed using mycobacterial growth indicator tube (MGIT) [2]. The patients were treated by directly observed treatment, short course (DOTS) with the standard first-line regimens according to the Vietnamese Ministry of Health guidelines for susceptible, including isoniazid-resistant, TB: 2 months of isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol followed by 6 months of isoniazid and ethambutol or 2 months of isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and streptomycin followed by 6 months of isoniazid and ethambutol or other individualized treatment regimens (Supplementary Table 1) [2, 15]

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