Shortening treatment in adults with noncavitary tuberculosis and 2-month culture conversion

JL Johnson, DJ Hadad, R Dietze… - American journal of …, 2009 - atsjournals.org
JL Johnson, DJ Hadad, R Dietze, EL Noia Maciel, B Sewali, P Gitta, A Okwera, RD Mugerwa…
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 2009atsjournals.org
Rationale: Cavitary disease and delayed culture conversion have been associated with
relapse. Combining patient characteristics and measures of bacteriologic response might
allow treatment shortening with current drugs in some patients. Objectives: To assess
whether treatment could be shortened from 6 to 4 months in patients with noncavitary
tuberculosis whose sputum cultures converted to negative after 2 months. Methods: This
study was a randomized, open-label equivalence trial. HIV-uninfected adults with …
Rationale: Cavitary disease and delayed culture conversion have been associated with relapse. Combining patient characteristics and measures of bacteriologic response might allow treatment shortening with current drugs in some patients.
Objectives: To assess whether treatment could be shortened from 6 to 4 months in patients with noncavitary tuberculosis whose sputum cultures converted to negative after 2 months.
Methods: This study was a randomized, open-label equivalence trial. HIV-uninfected adults with noncavitary tuberculosis were treated daily with isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol for 2 months, followed by 2 months of isoniazid and rifampin. After 4 months, patients with drug-susceptible TB whose sputum cultures on solid media were negative after 8 weeks of treatment were randomly assigned to continue treatment for 2 more months or to stop treatment. Patients were followed for relapse for 30 months after beginning treatment.
Measurements and Main Results: Enrollment was stopped by the safety monitoring committee after 394 patients were enrolled due to apparent increased risk for relapse in the 4-month arm. A total of 370 patients were eligible for per protocol analysis. Thirteen patients in the 4-month arm relapsed, compared with three subjects in the 6-month arm (7.0 vs. 1.6%; risk difference, 0.054; 95% confidence interval with Hauck-Anderson correction, 0.01–0.10).
Conclusion: Shortening treatment from 6 to 4 months in adults with noncavitary disease and culture conversion after 2 months using current drugs resulted in a greater relapse rate. The combination of noncavitary disease and 2-month culture conversion was insufficient to identify patients with decreased risk for relapse.
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