# Effectiveness and safety of a shortened oral regimen for rifampicin- or multidrug-resistant TB

**Authors:** E. Herrera-Flores, E. Shen, D. Vargas-Vasquez, F. Llanos-Tejada, Z. Ruiz-Vargas, J. Cornejo-García, D. Vela-Trejo, Z.M. Puyen-Guerra, M.C. Rojas, D.M. Guerra, M.L. Romo, J. Jimenez, E. Osso, L. Trevisi, A. LaHood, M.L. Rich, K.J. Seung, C.D. Mitnick, M.F. Franke, L. Lecca, V. Alarcon-Guizado

PMC · DOI: 10.5588/ijtldopen.25.0553 · IJTLD OPEN · 2026-03-13

## TL;DR

A 9-month oral treatment for drug-resistant tuberculosis was found to be effective and safe, with high success rates and improved patient outcomes.

## Contribution

The study evaluates a 9-month, all-oral regimen for MDR/RR-TB under real-world conditions in Peru, showing its effectiveness and safety.

## Key findings

- 100% of participants with positive sputum cultures achieved culture conversion within a median of 39 days.
- 85.1% of participants had favorable end-of-treatment outcomes.
- Quality-of-life and dyspnoea scores improved significantly in successful cases.

## Abstract

Multidrug-resistant or rifampicin-resistant TB (MDR/RR-TB) poses significant challenges to patients, providers, and programmes. We evaluated a 9-month, 5-drug all-oral regimen implemented under operational conditions in Peru.

Between February and September 2023, we enrolled 50 adults with confirmed pulmonary MDR/RR-TB in a prospective observational study conducted within Peru’s National Tuberculosis Programme. The regimen consisted of bedaquiline, linezolid, levofloxacin, clofazimine, and delamanid, administered for 9 months and potentially extended to 12 months. We describe the frequency of clinically relevant adverse events of special interest, sputum culture conversion, end-of-treatment outcomes, and changes in dyspnoea and quality of life.

Of 50 participants, 24 (48%) were women, and median age was 28.5 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 23–59 years); 38 (76%) had cavitary disease, and 29 (58%) had bilateral disease. Adverse events were infrequent and manageable; only one case of linezolid-associated myelosuppression led to permanent drug discontinuation. Of 33 participants with positive sputum culture, 100% experienced culture conversion (median: 39 days, IQR: 31–61). Favourable end-of-treatment outcomes were observed in 40 (85.1%) (95% confidence interval: 72.3%–92.6%). Quality-of-life and dyspnoea scores improved significantly in those with treatment success.

This 9-month oral regimen was effective and safe and improved patient-reported outcomes. These results support broader adoption in national TB programmes across Latin America and beyond.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** bedaquiline (PubChem CID 5388906), linezolid (PubChem CID 3929), levofloxacin (PubChem CID 149096), clofazimine (PubChem CID 2794), delamanid (PubChem CID 6480466)
- **Diseases:** tuberculosis (MONDO:0018076)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cavitary disease (MESH:C566924), TB (MESH:D014390), MDR/RR-TB (MESH:D018088), Tuberculosis (MESH:D014376)
- **Chemicals:** linezolid (MESH:D000069349), levofloxacin (MESH:D064704), rifampicin (MESH:D012293), bedaquiline (MESH:C493870), delamanid (MESH:C516022), clofazimine (MESH:D002991)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12991560/full.md

## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12991560/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12991560