Author:
Tiberi Simon,Payen Marie-Christine,Sotgiu Giovanni,D'Ambrosio Lia,Alarcon Guizado Valentina,Alffenaar Jan Willem,Abdo Arbex Marcos,Caminero Jose A.,Centis Rosella,De Lorenzo Saverio,Gaga Mina,Gualano Gina,Roby Arias Aurora Jazmín,Scardigli Anna,Skrahina Alena,Solovic Ivan,Sulis Giorgia,Tadolini Marina,Akkerman Onno W.,Alarcon Arrascue Edith,Aleska Alena,Avchinko Vera,Bonini Eduardo Henrique,Chong Marín Félix Antonio,Collahuazo López Lorena,de Vries Gerard,Dore Simone,Kunst Heinke,Matteelli Alberto,Moschos Charalampos,Palmieri Fabrizio,Papavasileiou Apostolos,Spanevello Antonio,Vargas Vasquez Dante,Viggiani Pietro,White Veronica,Zumla Alimuddin,Migliori Giovanni Battista
Abstract
No large study has ever evaluated the efficacy, safety and tolerability of meropenem/clavulanate to treat multidrug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR- and XDR-TB). The aim of this observational study was to evaluate the therapeutic contribution, effectiveness, safety and tolerability profile of meropenem/clavulanate added to a background regimen when treating MDR- and XDR-TB cases.Patients treated with a meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimen (n=96) showed a greater drug resistance profile than those exposed to a meropenem/clavulanate-sparing regimen (n=168): in the former group XDR-TB was more frequent (49% versus 6.0%, p<0.0001) and the median (interquartile range (IQR)) number of antibiotic resistances was higher (8 (6–9) versus 5 (4–6)). Patients were treated with a meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimen for a median (IQR) of 85 (49–156) days.No statistically significant differences were observed in the overall MDR-TB cohort and in the subgroups with and without the XDR-TB patients; in particular, sputum smear and culture conversion rates were similar in XDR-TB patients exposed to meropenem/clavulanate-containing regimens (88.0% versus 100.0%, p=1.00 and 88.0% versus 100.0%, p=1.00, respectively). Only six cases reported adverse events attributable to meropenem/clavulanate (four of them then restarting treatment).The nondifferent outcomes and bacteriological conversion rate observed in cases who were more severe than controls might imply that meropenem/clavulanate could be active in treating MDR- and XDR-TB cases.
Publisher
European Respiratory Society (ERS)
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Cited by
91 articles.
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