# A 10-year review of isoniazid-resistant TB management in Uzbekistan 2009-2020

**Authors:** M.L. Rekart, P. Thit, M. Oluya, S. Moe, T. Hasan, N. Parpieva, K. Safaev, A. Khristusev, T. Zinaida, J. Singh, S. Allamuratova, I. Azamat, C.G. Restrepo, N. Sitali, J. Achar, J.L. Alvaraez, A. Sinha

PMC · DOI: 10.5588/ijtldopen.23.0533 · 2024-07-01

## TL;DR

This study reviews 10 years of managing isoniazid-resistant TB in Uzbekistan, finding that a specific drug regimen is effective and safer than others.

## Contribution

The study evaluates real-world effectiveness of the WHO-recommended regimen for isoniazid-resistant TB in Uzbekistan over a decade.

## Key findings

- The 6REZLfx regimen achieved a 92.0% treatment success rate with short duration and no resistance amplification.
- Regimens containing injections had lower success and higher loss to follow-up compared to non-injection regimens.
- Unsuccessful outcomes were more common in older patients, males, and those with diabetes or smear-positive TB.

## Abstract

Isoniazid (INH, H) resistance is the most common drug-resistant TB pattern, with treatment success rates lower than those in drug-susceptible TB. The WHO recommends a 6-month regimen of rifampicin (RIF, R), ethambutol (EMB, E), pyrazinamide (PZA, Z), and levofloxacin (Lfx) (6REZLfx) for INH-resistant, RIF-susceptible TB (HRRS-TB). Uzbekistan has a high burden of TB (62/100,000 population) and multidrug-resistant TB (12/100,000 population).

We conducted a retrospective, descriptive study of microbiologically confirmed HRRS-TB using routinely collected programmatic data from 2009 to 2020.

We included 854 HRRS-TB cases. Treatment success was 80.2% overall. For REZLfx, the treatment success rate was 92.0% over a short treatment duration, with no amplifications to RIF or second-line anti-TB drug resistance. We documented 46 regimens with REZLfx plus linezolid (success 87.0%) and 539 regimens using kanamycin or capreomycin (success 76.6%). We identified 37 treatment failures (4.3%), 30 deaths (3.5%), 25 resistance amplifications (2.9%), including eight to RIF (0.9%), and 99 lost to follow-up (LTFU) cases (11.6%). Unsuccessful outcomes were more common with older age, diabetes, chest X-ray cavities, smear positivity, smear-positive persistence, and male sex. LTFU was more common with injection-containing regimens.

REZLfx is a safe and effective first-line treatment for INH-resistant, RIF-susceptible TB. Treatment success was lower and LTFU was higher for injection-containing regimens.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** isoniazid (PubChem CID 3767), rifampicin (PubChem CID 135398735), ethambutol (PubChem CID 14052), pyrazinamide (PubChem CID 1046), levofloxacin (PubChem CID 149096), linezolid (PubChem CID 3929), kanamycin (PubChem CID 6032), capreomycin (PubChem CID 3000502)
- **Diseases:** tuberculosis (MONDO:0018076), diabetes (MONDO:0005015)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HRRS-TB (MESH:D014390), deaths (MESH:D003643), diabetes (MESH:D003920)
- **Chemicals:** 6REZLfx (-), linezolid (MESH:D000069349), INH (MESH:D007538), RIF (MESH:D012293), PZA (MESH:D011718), Lfx (MESH:D064704), EMB (MESH:D004977), kanamycin (MESH:D007612), capreomycin (MESH:D002207)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11257092/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11257092