Abstract

Approximately 3% of all pediatric TB cases develop MDR-TB, with only 3-4% of such children receiving MDR-TB treatment. In Tajikistan, children as a proportion of all DR-TB in the country increased from 4.3 to 7.5% during 2013-2018. Despite limited evidence on the use of new anti-TB drugs in children, WHO has updated its guidelines for DR-TB treatment for children, and Tajikistan did so in 2013 and 2017. Novel and adapted regimens included individual regimens for RR/MDR, XDR (with and without Bedaquiline and Delamanid) and short treatment regimens with and without injectables. It is important to document the outcomes of the treatment regimens. Therefore, the aim of this study was to describe characteristics of children receiving different treatment regimens for DR-TB, the culture conversion and treatment outcomes. Cohort study of children enrolled in DR-TB treatment by the National Tuberculosis Program in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, January 2013 to July 2019. The study included 60 DR-TB children. The male to female ratio was 1:2 and mean age 13.6 years. Median time to culture conversion was 66 days [IQR:31-103; Range:2-232]. In children with treatment outcomes (N = 58), 93% had favorable outcomes. There were four children (7%) with unfavorable treatment outcomes, all of whom were female 15-17 years, on standard (RR/MDR) treatment during 2013-2015. Favorable outcomes by DR-TB type were 91%, 90%, and 100% in RR/MDR, PreXDR, and XDR-TB patients, respectively. All children enrolled after the introduction of modified guidelines for novel and adapted regimens for DR-TB showed positive TB treatment outcomes.

Highlights

  • 3% of all pediatric TB cases develop MDR-TB, with only 3–4% of such children receiving MDR-TB treatment

  • Between 1 July 2013 and 31 July 2019 in Dushanbe, 60 drug resistant (DR)-TB children were enrolled for treatment in the national TB program

  • For the majority of children (25/26, 96%) culture conversion was recorded during the course of the treatment

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Summary

Introduction

3% of all pediatric TB cases develop MDR-TB, with only 3–4% of such children receiving MDR-TB treatment. The aim of this study was to describe characteristics of children receiving different treatment regimens for DR-TB, the culture conversion and treatment outcomes. 3% of all pediatric TB cases develop multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB, resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampicin), with only 3–4% of such children receiving MDR-TB treatment. The Central Asian Republics (Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan) exhibit MDR-TB rates between 22-27% for new and 45-63% for previously treated cases [3]. In 2017, a drug resistance survey conducted in Tajikistan found that 20% of new cases and 40% of previously treated cases had MDR-TB [1,4]

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