Tuberculosis medical therapy: Difference between revisions

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__NOTOC__
__NOTOC__
{{Tuberculosis}}
{{Tuberculosis}}
{{CMG}} {{AE}} {{CP}} {{AZ}}
{{CMG}}; {{AE}} {{CP}}; {{AZ}}; {{Ammu}}; {{SaraM}}


==Overview==
==Overview==
If their is a high probability of infection, presumptively treat the patient even if the stain is negative, while waiting for the culture results.  The patient should be brought back in few weeks.  Patients usually feel better a few weeks post-treatment. In the U.S., all TB is tested for [[drug resistance]].
The [[treatment]] of [[tuberculosis]] with [[anti-TB drugs]] is divided mainly into two phases; the initiation phase and maintenance phase. If there is a high likelihood of [[infection]], start anti-TB treatment the patient even if the [[AFB stain|AFB]] stain is negative, while waiting for the culture results.  The patient should come back in few weeks.  Patients usually feel better a few weeks post-treatment. Patients have to be monitored for [[adverse effect|side effect]]s and [[treatment failure]]. In addition, all TB cases are tested for [[drug resistance]] in the U.S.


===Deciding To Initiate Treatment===  
==Deciding To Initiate Treatment==  


The decision to initiate combination antituberculosis [[chemotherapy]] should be based on [[epidemiological]] information; clinical, [[pathological]], and [[radiographic]] findings; and the results of microscopic examination of [[acid-fast bacilli]] (AFB)--stained [[sputum]] (smears) (as well as other appropriately collected diagnostic specimens) and cultures for [[mycobacteria]]. A [[purified protein derivative (PPD)-tuberculin skin test]]may be done at the time of initial evaluation, but a negative PPD-tuberculin skin test does not exclude the diagnosis of active tuberculosis. However, a positive PPD-tuberculin skin test supports the diagnosis of culture-negative pulmonary tuberculosis, as well as latent tuberculosis infection in persons with stable abnormal [[chest radiographs]] consistent with inactive tuberculosis.
*The decision to initiate combination anti-tuberculous therapy is made according to the following:


If the suspicion of tuberculosis is high or the patient is seriously ill with a disorder, either pulmonary or extrapulmonary, that is thought possibly to be tuberculosis, combination [[chemotherapy]] using one of the recommended regimens should be initiated promptly, often before AFB smear results are known and usually before mycobacterial culture results have been obtained. A positive AFB smear provides strong inferential evidence for the diagnosis of tuberculosis. If the diagnosis is confirmed by isolation of ''M. tuberculosis'' or a positive nucleic acid amplification test, treatment can be continued to complete a standard course of therapy. When the initial AFB smears and cultures are negative, a diagnosis other than tuberculosis should be considered and appropriate evaluations undertaken. If no other diagnosis is established and the PPD-tuberculin skin test is positive (in this circumstance a reaction of 5 mm or greater induration is considered positive), empirical combination chemotherapy should be initiated. If there is a clinical or radiographic response within 2 months of initiation of therapy and no other diagnosis has been established, a diagnosis of culture-negative pulmonary tuberculosis can be made and treatment continued with an additional 2 months of INH and RIF to complete a total of 4 months of treatment, an adequate regimen for culture-negative pulmonary tuberculosis. If there is no clinical or radiographic response by 2 months, treatment can be stopped and other diagnoses including inactive tuberculosis considered.
:*[[Epidemiological]] information
:*Clinical evidence
:*[[Pathological]]
:*[[Radiographic]] findings
:*[[Microscopic examination]] of [[acid-fast bacilli]] ([[AFB stain|AFB]])--stained [[sputum]] (smears) and [[cultures]] for [[mycobacteria]]
:*Positive [[PPD-tuberculin skin test|PPD]]-[[Mantoux test|tuberculin skin test]]


If AFB smears are negative and suspicion for active tuberculosis is low, treatment can be deferred until the results of mycobacterial cultures are known and a comparison [[chest radiograph]] is available (usually within 2 months). In low-suspicion patients not initially being treated, if cultures are negative, the [[PPD-tuberculin skin test]] is positive (5 mm or greater induration), and the chest radiograph is unchanged after 2 months, one of the three regimens recommended for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection could be used. These include [[INH]] for a total of 9 months, [[RIF]] with or without INH for a total of 4 months, or RIF and [[PZA]] for a total of 2 months. Because of reports of an increased rate of hepatotoxicity with the RIF--PZA regimen, it should be reserved for patients who are not likely to complete a longer course of treatment, can be monitored closely, and do not have contraindications to the use of this egimen.
[[Image: Screen Shot 2016-10-14 at 8.24.10 AM.png|Factors to be considered in deciding to initiate treatment empirically for active tuberculosis (TB) ( prior to microbiologic confirmation)<ref name="CID-guidelines">Clinical Infectious Diseases. Official American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Practice Guidelines: Treatment of Drug-Susceptible Tuberculosis. (2016) http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/63/7/e147.full.pdf+html Accessed on October 14, 2016</ref>|800px|thumb|center]]


==Medical Therapy==
==Drugs Used in the Treatment of Tuberculosis==
====Essential anti-TB drugs====
{| style="border: 0px; font-size: 90%; margin: 3px; width: 500px;" align="center"
'''First-Line Drugs''':
| valign="top" |
:*[[Isoniazid]]
|+
:*[[Rifampin]]
! style="background: #4479BA; width: 200px;" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Groups}}
:*[[Rifabutin]]
! style="background: #4479BA; width: 200px;" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Drugs}}
:*[[Rifapentine]]
|-
:*[[Pyrazinamide]]  
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC; font-weight: bold" |Group 1: <br> First-line oral drugs
:*[[Ethambutol]]
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
:*Fixed-dose combination preparations: Two combined preparations, INH and RIF (Rifamate®) and INH, RIF, and PZA (Rifater®).
*[[Isoniazid]]
 
*[[Rifampicin]]
'''Second-Line Drugs''':
*[[Pyrazinamide]]
Group 2: Injectable Agents
*[[Ethambutol]]
:*[[Streptomycin]]
*[[Rifabutin]]
:*[[Amikacin]]
|-
:*[[kanamycin]]  
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC; font-weight: bold" |Group 2: <br> Injectable drugs
 
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
Group 3: [[Fluoroquinolones]]
*[[Kanamycin]]
:*[[Levofloxacin]]
*[[Amikacin]]
:*[[Moxifloxacin]]
*[[Capreomycin]]
:*[[Ofloxacin]]
*[[Streptomycin]]
 
|-
Group 4: Oral Bacteriostatic Second-Line Agents
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC; font-weight: bold" |Group 3: Fluoroquinolones
:*[[Cycloserine]]
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
:*[[Ethionamide]]  
*[[Levofloxacin]]
:*[[Terizidone]]
*[[Moxifloxacin]]
:*[[Protionamide]]
*[[Ofloxacin]]
:*[[Capreomycin]]  
|-
:*[[p-Aminosalicylic acid]]
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC; font-weight: bold" |Group 4: <br> Oral bacteriostatic second-line drugs
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*Para-[[aminosalicylic acid]]
*[[Cycloserine]]
*[[Terizidone]]
*[[Ethionamide]]
*[[Protionamide]]
|-
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC; font-weight: bold" |Group 5: <br> Agents with unclear role in treatment of drug resistant-TB
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*[[Clofazimine]]
*[[Linezolid]]
*[[Amoxicillin]]/[[clavulanate]]
*[[Thioacetazone]]
*[[Imipenem/cilastatin]]
*High-dose [[isoniazid]]
*[[Clarithromycin]]
*Pretomanid
|-
| colspan="2" style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |<small>Adapted from WHO 2013 Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines – 4th ed.<ref name="WHO 2013"> {{cite web|  url=http://www.who.int/tb/publications/tb_treatmentguidelines/en/| title=2013 WHO Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines for National Programmes (4th Edition) }}</ref></small>
|}


==Standard treatment regimens==
==Standard Treatment Regimens==
=====Empirical Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy=====
=====Empirical Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy=====
It should be considered that in developing countries where TB is endemic and in cases with high clinical suspicion of tuberculous pericarditis, starting with empiric antituberculous therapy is appropriate before establishing a definitive diagnosis. In the clinical settings where the diagnosis cannot be established based on bacteriology, histology, or pericardial fluid analysis, clinical response to antituberculous therapy serves as support for a diagnosis of tuberculous pericarditis.<ref name="Mayosi-2005">{{Cite journal  | last1 = Mayosi| first1 = BM. | last2 = Burgess | first2 = LJ. |last3 = Doubell | first3 = AF. | title = Tuberculous pericarditis. | journal = Circulation |volume = 112 | issue = 23 | pages = 3608-16 | month = Dec| year = 2005 | doi = 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.543066 | PMID = 16330703 }}</ref>In developed countries where TB is not endemic, antituberculous therapy should generally not be initiated empirically in the absence of definitive diagnosis.<ref name="Soler-Soler-2001">{{Cite journal  | last1 = Soler-Soler | first1 = J. | last2 = Sagristà-Sauleda | first2 = J.| last3 = Permanyer-Miralda | first3 = G. | title = Management of pericardial effusion. | journal = Heart | volume = 86 | issue = 2 | pages = 235-40 | month = Aug | year = 2001 | doi =  | PMID = 11454853 }}</ref>
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
=====Dosing Frequency and the Level Of Evidence<ref>{{Cite web  | last =  | first = titlehttp://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241547581_eng.pdf url=http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241547581_eng.pdf |publisher = |date = | accessdate = }}</ref>=====


<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
*In developing [[Endemic (epidemiology)|endemic]] countries and in cases with high clinical suspicion of tuberculous [[pericarditis]], it is recommended to start with empiric antituberculous treatment before establishing a definitive diagnosis.  In the clinical settings where the [[diagnosis]] cannot be confirmed according to [[bacteriology]], [[histology]], or [[pericardial fluid]] analysis, clinical response to antituberculous treatment can be suggestive of a diagnosis of [[tuberculous pericarditis]].<ref name="Mayosi-2005">{{Cite journal  | last1 = Mayosi| first1 = BM. | last2 = Burgess | first2 = LJ. |last3 = Doubell | first3 = AF. | title = Tuberculous pericarditis. | journal = Circulation |volume = 112 | issue = 23 | pages = 3608-16 | month = Dec| year = 2005 | doi = 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.543066 | PMID = 16330703 }}</ref>
*In developed countries where [[Tuberculosis|TB]] is not endemic, antituberculous treatment should not be started [[empirically]] without a definitive diagnosis.<ref name="Soler-Soler-2001">{{Cite journal  | last1 = Soler-Soler | first1 = J. | last2 = Sagristà-Sauleda | first2 = J.| last3 = Permanyer-Miralda | first3 = G. | title = Management of pericardial effusion. | journal = Heart | volume = 86 | issue = 2 | pages = 235-40 | month = Aug | year = 2001 | doi =  | PMID = 11454853 }}</ref>


====Standard Regimens for New Patients====
{|
{|
| valign="top" |
<div style="border-radius: 5px 5px 0 0; border: solid 1px #20538D; border-bottom: 0px; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: inset 0 1px 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5), 0 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); height: 30px; line-height: 30px; width: 250px; background: #A1BCDD; text-align: center;">
<font color="#FFF">
'''Adults'''
</font>
</div>
<div class="mw-customtoggle-table01" style="cursor: pointer; border-radius: 0 0 0 0; border: solid 1px #20538D; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: inset 0 1px 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5), 0 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); height: 30px; line-height: 30px; width: 250px; background: #4479BA;">
<font color="#FFF">
&nbsp;&nbsp;▸&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Preferred regimen'''
</font>
</div>
<div class="mw-customtoggle-table02" style="cursor: pointer; border-radius: 0 0 0 0; border: solid 1px #20538D; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: inset 0 1px 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5), 0 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); height: 30px; line-height: 30px; width: 250px; background: #4479BA;">
<font color="#FFF">
&nbsp;&nbsp;▸&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Alternate regimen 1'''
</font>
</div>
<div class="mw-customtoggle-table03" style="cursor: pointer; border-radius: 0 0 0 0; border: solid 1px #20538D; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: inset 0 1px 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5), 0 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); height: 30px; line-height: 30px; width: 250px; background: #4479BA;">
<font color="#FFF">
&nbsp;&nbsp;▸&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Alternate regimen 2'''
</font>
</div>
<div style="border-radius: 0 0 0 0; border: solid 1px #20538D; border-bottom: 0px; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: inset 0 1px 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5), 0 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); height: 30px; line-height: 30px; width: 250px; background: #A1BCDD; text-align: center;">
<font color="#FFF">
'''Children'''
</font>
</div>
<div class="mw-customtoggle-table04" style="cursor: pointer; border-radius: 0 0 5px 5px; border: solid 1px #20538D; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); box-shadow: inset 0 1px 1px rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.5), 0 1px 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); height: 30px; line-height: 30px; width: 250px; background: #4479BA;">
<font color="#FFF">
&nbsp;&nbsp;▸&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Preferred regimen'''
</font>
</div>
| valign="top" |
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
| valign="top" |
{| style="float: left; cellpadding=0; cellspacing= 0; width: 400px;"
! style="height: 30px; line-height: 30px; background: #4479BA; border: 0px; font-size: 100%; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Preferred Regimen - Adults}}
|-
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Intensive phase  <br> (Administer each drug daily for 8 weeks)'''''
|-
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg PO (5 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg PO (10 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Pyrazinamide]] 2 g PO (25 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO (15 mg/kg/day)'''''
|-
|-
| valign=top |
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Continuation phase <br> (Administer each drug for 18 weeks)'''''
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:35em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Dosing Frequency for New TB Adult Patients with Active Tuberculosis caused by Drug-Susceptible Organisms}}''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Optimal first line}}''
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg daily PO (5 mg/kg/day) '''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ ''''' [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg daily PO (10 mg/kg/day)'''''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Initial Phase''''': Daily
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |OR
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Continuation Phase''''': Daily
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg PO twice weekly (5 mg/kg/day) '''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO twice weekly (10 mg/kg/day)'''''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Alternative line in DOT}}''
|}
|}
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
| valign="top" |
{| style="float: left; cellpadding=0; cellspacing= 0; width: 400px;"
! style="height: 30px; line-height: 30px; background: #4479BA; border: 0px; font-size: 100%; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Alternate Regimen 1 - Adults}}
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''Initial Phase''''': Daily
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Intensive phase '''''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Continuation Phase''''': Three times a week
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS<br> ▸ '''''[[Pyrazinamide]] 2 g/day PO for 2 weeks (25 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS<br> ▸ '''''[[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)'''''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Alternative line accepted in limited situations †}}''
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC ;" align="left" |FOLLOWED BY
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Initial Phase''''': Three times a week
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS<br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO  twice weekly for 6 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Pyrazinamide]] 2 g/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks '''''<br> PLUS<br> ▸'''''[[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)'''''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Continuation Phase''''': Three times a week
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Continuation phase'''''
|-
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)'''''
|-
|-
|}
|}
|}
|}
:DOT; Direct Observed Therapy
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
:† if patient is getting DOT and not living with HIV infected patient or HIV prevalent setting
| valign="top" |
 
{| style="float: left; cellpadding=0; cellspacing= 0; width: 400px;"
:The '''level of evidence''' of the dosage frequency came from the systematic review showed that equivalent efficacy of daily intensive-phase dosing followed by two times weekly continuation phase, however twice weekly dosing is not recommended on operational grounds. Also showed that the daily (rather than three times weekly) intensive-phase dosing may also help to prevent acquired drug resistance in TB patients starting treatment with isoniazid resistance. The systematic review found that patients with isoniazid resistance treated with a three times weekly intensive phase had significantly higher risks of failure and acquired drug resistance than those treated with daily dosing during the intensive phase.<ref>{{Cite web  |last = | first = | title = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241547581_eng.pdf | url =http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241547581_eng.pdf | publisher =  | date =  | accessdate =  }}</ref>
! style="height: 30px; line-height: 30px; background: #4479BA; border: 0px; font-size: 100%; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Alternate Regimen 2 - Adults}}
 
|-
</div></div>
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |''''Intensive phase '''
 
|-
====Standard regimens for New Patients====
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day P.O thrice weekly for 8 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Pyrazinamide]] 2g/day PO thrice weekly for 8 week (25 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)'''''
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
|-
 
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Continuation phase'''''
=====Standard regimens for new TB patients (with presumed, or known, to have drug-susceptible TB)=====
|-
 
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)'''''
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
 
{|
|-
|-
| valign=top |
|}
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:35em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
|}
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Statandard Regimens For New TB Patients With Drug-Susceptible TB}}''
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
| valign="top" |
{| style="float: left; cellpadding=0; cellspacing= 0; width: 400px;"
! style="height: 30px; line-height: 30px; background: #4479BA; border: 0px; font-size: 100%; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Preferred Regimen-Children}}
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Intensive Initial Phase}}''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Intensive phase <br> (Administer each drug daily for 8 weeks)'''''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Initial Phase''''': 2 months of '''HRZE''' <sup></sup>
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 10 mg/kg PO (Max: 300 mg/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Rifampicin]] 15 mg/kg PO (Max: 600 mg/day)'''''<br> PLUS<br> ▸ '''''[[Pyrazinamide]] 35 mg/kg PO  (Max: 2 g/day)'''''<br> PLUS <br> ▸ '''''[[Ethambutol]] 20 mg/kg PO (Max: 1.6 g/day)'''''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Continuation phase}}''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 90%; background: #F5F5F5;" align="center" |'''''Continuation phase <br> (Administer each drug daily for 18 weeks)'''''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Continuation Phase''''': 4 months <sup></sup> of '''HR'''
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" align="left" |▸ '''''[[Isoniazid]] 10 mg/kg PO  (Max: 300 mg/day) '''''<br> PLUS<br> ▸ ''''' [[Rifampicin]] 15 mg/kg PO (Max: 600 mg/day )'''''
|-
|-
| style="font-size: 90%; padding: 0 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" align="left" |<small>Table adapted from WHO 2013 Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines – 4th ed.<ref name="WHO 2013"> {{cite web|  url=http://www.who.int/tb/publications/tb_treatmentguidelines/en/| title=2013 WHO Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines for National Programmes (4th Edition) }}</ref></small>
|}
|}
|}
|}
|}
† '''WHO''' no longer recommends omission of ethambutol during the intensive phase of treatment for patients with non-cavitary, smear-negative PTB or EPEPTB who are known to be HIV-negative. In tuberculous meningitis, ethambutol should be replaced by streptomycin.
‡ For cavitary tuberculosis on the initial film or a positive culture after completing the initial phase of treatment (i.e., at 2 months), the rates of relapse were 5--6%. In this group decisions to prolong the continuation phase should be made on an individual basis.<ref name="Blumberg-2003">{{Cite journal  | last1 = Blumberg | first1 = HM. | last2 = Burman | first2 = WJ. | last3 = Chaisson | first3 = RE. | last4 = Daley | first4 = CL. | last5 = Etkind | first5 = SC. | last6 = Friedman | first6 = LN. | last7 = Fujiwara | first7 = P. | last8 = Grzemska | first8 = M. | last9 = Hopewell | first9 = PC. | title = American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America: treatment of tuberculosis. | journal = Am J Respir Crit Care Med | volume = 167 | issue = 4 | pages = 603-62 | month = Feb | year = 2003 | doi = 10.1164/rccm.167.4.603 | PMID = 12588714 }}</ref>
</div></div>
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
=====Standard regimens for new TB patients (with known or suspected high levels of Isoniazid resistance TB)<sup>∞</sup>=====
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">


====Standard Regimens for Previously Treated Patients====
The previously treated patients should receive the '''8-months''' regimen with first-line drugs.
{|
{|
|-
|-
| valign=top |
| valign="top" |
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:35em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
{| style="border: 0px; font-size: 90%; margin: 3px; width: 500px;" align="center"
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Statandard regimens for new TB patients with isoniazid resistance TB}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #4479BA" align="center" |''{{fontcolor|#FFF|Standard regimens for previously treated patients}}''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background:#F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Intensive Initial Phase}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #DCDCDC" align="left" |'''Rapid molecular-based method'''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Initial Phase''''': 2 months of '''HRZE'''
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #F5F5F5" |▸ Drug Susceptibility Testing (DST) results available in 1–2 days confirm or exclude MDR to guide the choice of regimen
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Continuation phase}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #DCDCDC" align="left" |'''Conventional method'''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Continuation Phase''''': 4 months of '''HRE'''
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #F5F5F5" |▸ '''''High likelihood of MDR''''': '''[[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis medical therapy|Empirical MDR regimen]]'''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #F5F5F5" |▸ '''''Low likelihood of MDR''''': '''2HRZES / HRZE / 5HRE'''
(H = isoniazid, R= rifampicin, Z = pyrazinamide, E = ethambutol, S = streptomycin)<sup>†</sup>'''<br><small><sup>†</sup>Regimen should be modified once DST results are available up to 2–3 months after the start of treatment.<small>'''
|}
|}
|}
|}
:'''<sup>∞</sup>''' Applies also in the countries with high levels of isoniazid resistance in new TB patients, and where isoniazid drug susceptibility testing in new patients is not done (or results are unavailable) before the continuation phase begins
====Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis Treatment====
 
The principles underlying the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis can also be applied to extrapulmonary disease. Increasing evidence, including randomized controlled trials, reports that 6–9 month [[isoniazid]] and [[rifampicin]] containing regimens are effective for most of [[Extrapulmonary tuberculosis|extrapulmonary]] sites of disease.<ref name="CID-guidline">Clinical Infectious Diseases. Official American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Practice Guidelines: Treatment of Drug-Susceptible Tuberculosis. (2016) http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/63/7/e147.full.pdf+html Accessed on October 14, 2016</ref>
</div></div>
{| style="border: 0px; font-size: 90%; margin: 3px;" align="center"
 
|+
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
! style="background: #4479BA; width: 300px;" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Type of Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis}}
 
! style="background: #4479BA; width: 550px;" |{{fontcolor|#FFF|Treatment}}
====Standard Regimens for Previously Treated Patients====
|-
 
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Lymph Node Tuberculosis'''
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
 
*6-month regimen is adequate for initial treatment
The previously treated patients should receive the '''8-months''' regimen with first-line drugs.
*Therapeutic lymph node excision is not indicated
{|
*Incision and drainage in case of [[cervical]] [[lymphadenitis]] (associated with prolonged wound discharge and [[scarring]])
*Aspiration was reported to be useful (for large fluctuant [[lymph nodes]] that appear to be about to drain spontaneously)
|-
|-
| valign=top |
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Bone, Joint, and Spinal Tuberculosis'''
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:35em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Standard regimens for previously treated patients}}''
*6 to 9-month regimens including [[rifampicin ]] are at least as effective as 18-month regimens without [[rifampicin ]]
*Surgery can be considered in
**No response to [[chemotherapy]] with evidence of ongoing [[infection]] and clinical deterioration
**Relief of [[cord compression]] in patients with recurrent or persistent neurologic deficits
**Instability of the spine
*No additional value of [[surgical debridement]] in addition to [[chemotherapy]] in comparison with [[chemotherapy]] alone for [[spinal tuberculosis]]
*Adjunctive [[corticosteroids]] can be used in case of [[spinal tuberculosis]] with evidence of [[tuberculous]] [[meningitis]]
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Rapid molecular-based method}}''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''[[Pericardial Tuberculosis]]'''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*A 6-month regimen is adequate
*Adjunctive [[corticosteroids]] therapy is no longer recommended. However, selective use of [corticosteroids]] in patients who are at the highest risk for inflammatory complications may be possible in the following conditions:
**Large [[pericardial effusions]],
**High levels of inflammatory markers
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''DST results available in 1–2 days confirm or exclude MDR to guide the choice of regimen'''''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Pleural Tuberculosis'''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*A standard 6-month regimen
*No evidence to suggest the routine use of adjunctive corticosteroids
*[[Tuberculous]] [[empyema]] (occurs when a cavity ruptures into the pleural space), management includes:
**Drainage (often requiring a surgical procedure)
**Antituberculous chemotherapy
**The optimal duration of therapy is not defined
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Conventional method}}''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Tuberculous Meningitis'''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*Adult
**[[INH]], [[PZA]], [[RIF]], and [[EMB]] in an initial 2-month phase. [[INH]] and [[RIF]] continued for another 7–10 months
*Children
**Initial 4-drug regimen of [[INH]], [[RIF]], [[PZA]], and [[ethionamide]] or an [[aminoglycoside]] for 2 month, followed by 7–10 months of [[INH]] and [[RIF]]
*Optimal duration of chemotherapy is not defined
*[[Lumbar punctures]] may be performed to monitor changes in the cerebrospinal fluid cell during the treatment course
*Adjunctive [[corticosteroids]] is tapered over 6–8 weeks
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''High likelihood of MDR''''': '''Empirical MDR regimen'''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Disseminated Tuberculosis (miliary tuberculosis)'''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*Standard daily 6-month regimen is adequate
*The role of adjunct [[corticosteroid]] treatment in patients with miliary tuberculosis has not been established
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''Low likelihood of MDR''''': '''2HRZES / HRZE / 5HRERE<sup>†</sup>'''<br>Regimen should be modified once DST results are available up to 2–3 months after the start of treatment.
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Genitourinary Tuberculosis '''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*Standard daily 6-month regimen  is adequate
*In cases of Ureteral obstruction
**Procedures to relieve the obstruction are indicated.
*In cases of [[hydronephrosis]] and [[renal failure]] due to obstruction
**Renal drainage by stenting or [[nephrostomy]] is advised
*In cases of poorly functioning or nonfunctioning [[kidney]] (especially if [[hypertension]] or continuous flank pain is present)
**Nephrectomy is considered
*In cases of large tubo-ovarian [[abscesses]]
**Surgery may be indicated
|-
|-
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #DCDCDC;" |'''Abdominal Tuberculosis'''
| style="padding: 5px 5px; background: #F5F5F5;" |
*Standard daily 6-month regimen  is adequate
*Adjunctive [[corticosteroids]] therapy is not recommended
|}
|}
==Monitoring during treatment==
===Directly observed treatment, short-course (DOTS) strategy===
{| style="border: 0px; font-size: 90%; margin: 3px; width: 500px;" align="center"
! style="width: 500px;background: #4479BA" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| '''''5 components of DOTS strategy'''''}}
|-
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px; background: #F5F5F5" |Government committed to sustained TB control and activities
|-
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |Case detection by sputum smear microscopy among symptomatic patients self reporting to health services
|-
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |Standardized treatment, with supervision and patient support
|-
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |An effective drug supply and management system
|-
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |Monitoring and evaluation system, and impact measurement
|}
|}


</div></div>
====Monitoring the Patients and Baseline Evaluations====
 
*[[Tuberculosis]] patients should have the following:


==Monitoring during treatment==
:*[[Microscopic examination]] of [[sputum]] specimens and culture. It is recommended to obtain three [[sputum]] specimens. Induction of sputum with [[hypertonic]] saline may be required to obtain specimens and [[bronchoscopy]] is considered for certain patients who are unable to produce [[sputum]], according to the clinical evaluation.
====Monitoring the Patients and Baseline Evaluations====
:*[[Drug susceptibility testing]] for [[INH]], [[RIF]], and [[EMB]] should be done once the initial positive [[Culture medium|culture]] is obtained, regardless of the source of the specimen. Second-line drug susceptibility testing should be performed only in reference laboratories and only for specimens from those patients who had previous treatment, who are contacts of patients with [[drug-resistant|multi-drug resistant]] tuberculosis, who have shown [[Drug resistance|resistance]] to [[rifampin]] or to other first-line drugs, or who have positive cultures after more than 3 months of therapy.
Patients suspected of having tuberculosis should have the followings:
:*Counseling and testing for [[HIV]] infection is important. In patients with [[Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)|HIV]] infection, a [[CD4]]+ [[lymphocyte]] count should be ordered. In Patients with risk factors for [[hepatitis B]] or [[hepatitis C|C]] viruses (e.g., [[Injection (medicine)|injection]] [[drug use]], [[HIV AIDS|HIV infection]]) [[serologic tests]] for these viruses should be performed.
:*Appropriate sputum specimens collected for microscopic examination and [[mycobacterial]] culture. When the [[lung]] is the site of disease, three [[sputum]] specimens should be obtained. Sputum induction with [[hypertonic]] saline may be necessary to obtain specimens and [[bronchoscopy]] (both performed under appropriate infection control measures) may be considered for patients who are unable to produce sputum, depending on the clinical circumstances.  
:*Baseline measurements of [[Liver function tests|liver enzymes]] ([[aspartate aminotransferase]] [AST], [[alanine aminotransferase]] [ALT]), [[alkaline phosphatase]], [[bilirubin]] and [[serum creatinine]] and a [[platelet count]] should be performed.
:*Drug Susceptibility testing for [[INH]], [[RIF]], and [[EMB]] should be performed on a positive initial culture, regardless of the source of the specimen. Second-line drug susceptibility testing should be done only in reference laboratories and be limited to specimens from patients who have had prior therapy, who are contacts of patients with [[drug-resistant]] tuberculosis, who have demonstrated resistance to [[rifampin]] or to other first-line drugs, or who have positive cultures after more than 3 months of treatment.  
:*If a patient is treated with [[EMB]], [[visual acuity]] and red-green color discrimination should be tested.
:*Counseling and testing for [[HIV]] infection; for patients with HIV infection, a [[CD4]]+ [[lymphocyte]] count should be obtained. Patients with risk factors for [[hepatitis B]] or [[hepatitis C|C]] viruses (e.g., injection drug use, foreign birth in Asia or Africa, HIV infection) should have serologic tests for these viruses.  
 
:*Baseline measurements of serum amino transferases ([[aspartate aminotransferase]] [AST], [[alanine aminotransferase]] [ALT]), [[bilirubin]], [[alkaline phosphatase]], and [[serum creatinine]] and a [[platelet count]] should be routinely obtained.  
*During and following [[pulmonary]] [[tuberculosis]] therapy, the following should be performed:
:*Visual acuity and red-green color discrimination should be obtained when [[EMB]] is to be used.


Patients during and after [[pulmonary]] tuberculosis treatment, the following should be done:
:*[[Microscopic examination]] of a [[sputum]] specimen and [[Culture medium|culture]] should be performed at a minimum of monthly intervals until two consecutive specimens are negative on culture.
:* A [[sputum]] specimen for microscopic examination and culture should be obtained at a minimum of monthly intervals until two consecutive specimens are negative on culture.  
:*[[AFB stain|AFB]] smear can assess the early response to [[Tuberculosis|TB]] therapy and inform of the [[infectiousness]] of the patient
:*AFB smears may be useful to assess the early response to treatment and to provide an indication of infectiousness.
:*In case of [[extrapulmonary tuberculosis]], the frequency and types of evaluations will be based on the site involved.
:*For patients with extrapulmonary tuberculosis the frequency and kinds of evaluations will depend on the site involved.  
:*At least monthly clinical evaluation to detect possible [[Adverse effect (medicine)|side effects]] of the [[antituberculosis medications]] and to assess [[Compliance (medicine)|compliance]].
:*At least monthly clinical evaluation to identify possible adverse effects of the antituberculosis medications and to assess adherence.
:*Patients do not need follow-up after completion of treatment but should be instructed to seek medical care promptly in case of recurrence of signs or symptoms.
:*Generally, patients do not require follow-up after completion of therapy but should be instructed to seek care promptly if signs or symptoms recur.
:*Routine measurements of [[hepatic]] and [[renal]] function and [[platelet count]] are '''not indicated''' during the course of treatment unless patients have abnormal baseline measurements or are at high risk of [[hepatotoxicity]] (e.g., [[hepatitis B]] or [[hepatitis C|C]] virus infection, [[alcoholics]]).
:*Routine measurements of [[hepatic]] and [[renal]] function and [[platelet count]] are '''not necessary''' during treatment unless patients have baseline abnormalities or are at increased risk of hepatotoxicity (e.g., [[hepatitis B]] or [[hepatitis C|C]] virus infection, alcohol abuse).
:*Patients who are [[hepatitis]] [[virus]] [[carriers]], have a past history of [[acute hepatitis]], or current excessive [[alcohol]] consumption can be given the usual [[Tuberculosis|TB]] treatment regimens unless there is '''clinical evidence''' of [[chronic liver disease]]. However, [[Hepatotoxicity|hepatotoxic]] [[Adverse effect (medicine)|adverse effects]] of [[anti-TB drugs]] may be more common among these patients, so regular [[follow-up]] is highly recommended.
:*Patients with the following conditions can receive the usual TB regimens provided that there is '''no clinical evidence''' of chronic liver disease: hepatitis virus carriage, a past history of acute hepatitis, current excessive alcohol consumption. However, hepatotoxic reactions to anti-TB drugs may be more common among these patients, therefore close follow up is highly recommended.


====Assessment of Treatment Response in New and Previously Treated Pulmonary TB====
====Assessment of Treatment Response in New and Previously Treated Pulmonary TB====
'''Definition of Treatment Response<sup>₳</sup>'''
'''Definition of Treatment Response<sup>₳</sup>'''
{| {{table}}
{| style="border: 0px; font-size: 90%; margin: 3px; width: 700px;" align="center"
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"; |'''Outcome'''
| style="width: 100px;background: #4479BA; text-align:center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| '''Outcome'''}}
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"; |'''Definition'''
| style="width: 500px;background: #4479BA; text-align:center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| '''Definition'''}}
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Cure''' || A patient whose positive sputum smear/positive culture at the beginning of the treatment convert into smear-negative/culture-negative in the last month of treatment and on at least one previous occasion.
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Cure'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A patient with positive sputum smear/positive culture at the beginning of the therapy that are converted into smear-negative/culture-negative in the last month of therapy and on at least one previous occasion.
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Treatment completed''' || A patient who '''completed''' treatment but who does not have a negative sputum smear or culture result in the last month of treatment and on at least one previous occasion<sup>b</sup> ( '''Two consecutive negative specimens''' )
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Treatment completed'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A patient who '''completed''' treatment but who does not have a negative sputum smear or culture result in the last month of therapy and on at least one previous occasion<sup>b</sup> ( '''Two consecutive negative specimens''' )
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Treatment failure''' || A patient whose sputum smear or culture is positive at 5 months or later during treatment or has a multidrug-resistant (MDR) strain at any point of time during the treatment, whether they are smear-negative or smear-positive.
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Treatment failure'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A patient with positive sputum smear or culture at 5 months or later during treatment course or has a multidrug-resistant (MDR) strain at any point of time during the course of treatment, whether they are smear-positive or smear-negative.
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Died''' || A patient who '''dies''' for any reason during the course of treatment.
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Died'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A patient who '''dies''' for any cause during the treatment course.
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Default''' || A patient whose treatment was '''interrupted''' for ≥ 2 months.
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Default'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A patient whose course of treatment was '''interrupted''' for ≥ 2 months.
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Transfer out''' || A patient who has been transferred to another recording and reporting unit and whose treatment outcome is'''unknown'''.
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Transfer out'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A patient who was transferred to another recording and reporting unit and whose outcome of treatment is '''unknown'''.
|-
|-
| align="center"|'''Treatment success''' || A sum of cured and completed treatment<sup>c</sup>
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #DCDCDC" |'''Treatment success'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |A sum of cured and completed treatment<sup>c</sup>
|-
| colspan="2" style="padding: 0 5px; width: 120px;background: #F5F5F5" |<small>
 
:A: These definitions can be applied to both pulmonary smear-positive and smear-negative patients, and also to patients with extrapulmonary disease.
:b: The sputum examination may not have been performed or the results may not be available.
:c: For smear- or culture-positive patients only.</small>
|}
|}
:₳:These definitions apply to pulmonary smear-positive and smear-negative patients, and to patients with extrapulmonary disease.
:b:The sputum examination may not have been done or the results may not be available.
:c: For smear- or culture-positive patients only.


===Identification and Management of Patients at Increased Risk of Treatment Failure and Relapse===  
===Identification and Management of Patients at Increased Risk of Treatment Failure and Relapse===  
Approximately 80% of patients with [[pulmonary]] tuberculosis caused by drug-susceptible organisms who are started on standard four-drug therapy will have negative sputum cultures at this time. Patients with positive cultures after 2 months of treatment should undergo careful evaluation to determine the cause.


The risk factors for high adverse outcomes (treatment failure, relapse} are:  
*Approximately 80% of patients with [[pulmonary]] tuberculosis caused by drug-susceptible organisms who are started on standard four-drug therapy will have negative sputum cultures at this time. Patients with positive cultures after 2 months of treatment should undergo a careful evaluation to determine the cause.
:*The presence of cavitation on the initial [[chest radiograph]] combined with having a positive [[sputum]] culture at the time the initial phase.
*The risk factors for adverse outcomes (treatment failure or relapse) include:
:*Nonadherence to medications (especially for patients not receiving DOT)
 
:*extensive cavitary disease at the time of diagnosis
:*The initial [[chest radiograph|chest X-ray]] showed [[cavitation]] in addition to having a positive [[sputum]] culture at the time of the initial phase.
:*Drug resistance (especially for patients receiving DOT)
:*[[Nonadherence]] to prescribed drugs (particularly for patients not receiving DOT)
:*Malabsorption of drugs,
:*Extensive [[Cavitary pneumonia causes|cavitary]] [[disease]] at the time of diagnosis
:*laboratory error
:*[[Drug resistance]] (especially for patients receiving DOT)
:*[[Malabsorption]] of drugs
:*Laboratory error
:*Biological variation in response
:*Biological variation in response


==Prevention of Adverse Effects of Drugs==
==Prevention of Adverse Effects of Drugs==
'''Isoniazid-induced [[peripheral neuropathy]]''' is manifested as:  
'''Isoniazid-induced [[peripheral neuropathy]]''' manifests as:  
:*[[Numbness]]
 
:*[[Tingling]] or burning sensation of the hands or feet  
:*[[Numbness]]
:*More commonly in pregnant women and in people with the following conditions: HIV infection, alcohol dependency, malnutrition, diabetes, chronic liver disease, renal failure.  
:*[[Tingling]] or [[Burning Feet Syndrome|burning]] of the [[Hand|hands]] or [[feet]]
Preventive treatment is recommended with [[Pyridoxine]], 10 mg/day with anti-TB drugs. Other guidelines recommend 25 mg/day.<ref name="-2003">{{Cite journal  |title = Treatment of tuberculosis. | journal = MMWR Recomm Rep | volume = 52 | issue = RR-11 | pages = 1-77 | month = Jun | year = 2003 | doi =  |PMID = 12836625 }}</ref>
:*This [[Adverse effect (medicine)|adverse effect]] is commonly occur in [[Pregnancy|pregnant]] women in addition to the following conditions: [[Diabetes mellitus|diabetes]], [[HIV AIDS|HIV infection]], [[chronic liver disease]], [[chronic renal failure]], [[malnutrition]], or [[alcohol]] [[abuse]].
 
*Adding [[Pyridoxine]] is recommended as a [[Preventive medicine|preventive]] treatment (10 mg/day with anti-TB drugs). Other guidelines recommend 25 mg/day.<ref name="-2003">{{Cite journal  |title = Treatment of tuberculosis. | journal = MMWR Recomm Rep | volume = 52 | issue = RR-11 | pages = 1-77 | month = Jun | year = 2003 | doi =  |PMID = 12836625 }}</ref>


==Symptom-Based Approach for Side-Effects of Anti-Tb Drugs==
==Symptom-Based Approach for Side-Effects of Anti-tuberculous Drugs==
====The Role of Drug-Susceptibility Testing (DST)====


====The role of DST in Management ====
*'''Initial Phase''':
'''Initial Phase''':
Ideally, DST is done for all patients at the start of treatment, so that the most appropriate therapy for each individual can be determined. However, the goal of universal access to DST has not yet been realized for most of the world’s TB patients. While countries are expanding laboratory capacity and implementing new rapid tests (see below), WHO recommends that sputum specimens for testing susceptibility to isoniazid and rifampicin be obtained from the following patient groups at the start of treatment:
• All previously treated patients (17, 21, 22). The highest levels of MDR are found in patients whose prior course of therapy has failed (6).
• All persons living with HIV who are diagnosed with active TB, especially if they live in areas of moderate or high MDR prevalence. It is essential to detect MDR as soon as possible in persons living with HIV, given their high risk of mortality.


'''Continuation Phase''':
:*[[Drug susceptibility testing|DST]] is performed for all [[Tuberculosis|TB]] patients at the initiation of treatment to determine most appropriate therapy for each patient. However, the target of universal access to [[Drug susceptibility testing|DST]] has not yet been recognized for most of the worldwide TB patients. Although countries are increasing laboratory capacity and implementing new rapid tests, [[World Health Organization|WHO]] recommends that [[sputum]] [[specimens]] for [[testing susceptibility]] to [[isoniazid]] and [[rifampicin]] be performed for the following patient groups at the start of treatment:
In settings where rapid molecular-based DST is available, the results of MDR can be confirmed or excluded within 1-2 days, it should guide the choice of regimen.
::*All previously treated patients. The highest levels of [[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]] are detected in patients whose previous course of treatment has failed.
In cases if DST is not available, the first-line drugs 2HRZES/1HRZE/5HRE if country-specific data show low or medium levels of MDR in these patients or if such data are not available
::*All individuals living with [[Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)|HIV]] plus they are diagnosed with active [[Tuberculosis|TB]], particularly if they live in areas of high [[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]] [[prevalence]]. It is necessary to identify [[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]] as soon as possible in patients living with [[Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)|HIV]] because of their high risk of [[Mortality rate|mortality]].


Remark: When DST results become available, regimens should be adjusted appropriately.
*'''Continuation Phase''':


The Global Plan to Stop TB 2006–2015 sets a target for open accessibility to DST for all previously treated patients at the beginning of treatment by 2015.
:*If rapid molecular-based [[Drug susceptibility testing|DST]] is available, the results of [[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]] can be confirmed or excluded within 1-2 days, hence it can guide the choice of [[treatment]] regimen.
:*If [[Drug susceptibility testing|DST]] is not available, the first-line drugs include 2HRZES/1HRZE/5HRE if country-specific data reports low or medium levels of [[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]] in its patients or if such data are not available
:*When [[Drug susceptibility testing|DST]] results become available, treatment regimens should be adjusted accordingly.


====Recommendations For New Patients====
====Recommendations For New Patients====
:*In new patients, if the specimen obtained at the end of the intensive phase '''2<sup>nd</sup> month''' is smear-positive, sputum smear microscopy should be obtained at the end of the third month (Strong/High grade of evidence).
:*In new patients, if the specimen obtained at the end of '''3<sup>rd</sup> month''' is smear-positive, sputum culture and drug susceptibility testing (DST) should be performed (Strong/High grade of evidence)
:*For smear-positive pulmonary TB patients treated with first-line drugs, sputum smear microscopy may be performed at completion of the intensive phase of treatment (Conditional/High or moderate grade of evidence).
:*Sputum should be collected after the '''1<sup>st</sup> dose''' of the intensive phase treatment at the end of the intensive phase is at'''2<sup>nd</sup> month''' in new patients and '''3<sup>rd</sup> month''' in previously treated patients receiving the 8-month regimen of first-line drugs. This recommendation also applies to smear-negative patients.
:*Sputum specimens should be collected for smear examination at each follow-up sputum check. They should be collected without interrupting treatment and transported to the laboratory as soon as possible.
:*Smear status at the end of the intensive phase is a poor predictor of which new patients will relapse.1 However, detection of a positive sputum smear remains important as a trigger for the patient assessment.
:*The proportion of sputum smear positive patients converted to negative at the end of the intensive phase is an indicator of TB program performance.


==Management of Treatment Interruption==
:*In new patients, if the [[specimen]] performed at the end of the intensive phase '''second month''' is smear-positive, sputum smear microscopy should be done at the end of the '''third month''' (strong/High grade of evidence).
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
:*In new patients, if the [[specimen]] performed at the end of '''third month''' is [[Smear test|smear]]-positive, [[sputum culture]] and [[drug susceptibility testing]] ([[Drug susceptibility testing|DST]]) should be done (strong/High grade of evidence)
:*For [[Smear test|smear]]-positive [[pulmonary TB]] patients treated with first-line drugs, [[Sputum culture|sputum]] smear [[microscopy]] may be performed at the completion of the intensive phase of treatment (conditional/High or moderate grade of evidence).
:*[[Sputum]] should be collected after the '''1<sup>st</sup> dose''' of the intensive phase treatment. The end of the intensive phase is defined as the end of the '''2<sup>nd</sup> month''' in new patients and the end of the '''3<sup>rd</sup> month''' in previously treated patients receiving the 8-month regimen of first-line agents. This recommendation also applies to smear-negative patients.
:*[[Sputum]] specimens must be collected for smear examination at every follow-up sputum check. They must be collected without interrupting the treatment course and transported to the laboratory urgently.
:*The status of [[sputum]] [[Smear test|smear]] at the end of the intensive phase is a poor predictor of [[relapse]]. However, identification of a positive [[sputum]] [[Smear test|smear]] is still an essential way of the patient [[Assessment and Plan|assessment]].
:*The number of [[Sputum culture|sputum]] [[Smear test|smear]]-positive patients converted to negative at the end of the intensive phase is considered a good indicator of [[Tuberculosis|TB]] program performance.


====Managing Side-Effects of Anti-TB Drugs<ref>{{Cite web  | last =  | first =  | title = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf|url = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf | publisher = | date = | accessdate = }}</ref>====
==Management of Treatment Interruption<ref name="CID-guidelines">Clinical Infectious Diseases. Official American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Practice Guidelines: Treatment of Drug-Susceptible Tuberculosis. (2016) http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/63/7/e147.full.pdf+html Accessed on October 14, 2016</ref>==
{| class="wikitable"
!Time Point of Interruption
!Details of Interruption
! colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Approach
|-
! rowspan="2" |During intensive phase
|*Lapse is <14 d in duration
| colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Lapse is <14 d in duration Continue treatment to complete planned total number of doses (as long as all doses are completed within 3 mo)


<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
{|
|-
|-
| valign=top |
|Lapse is ≥14 d in duration
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:60em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
| colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Restart treatment from the beginning
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center |'''Side-Effects'''
| align="center" style="background:#A5B2D6;"|'''Causative Drugs'''
| align="center" style="background:#A5B2D6;"|'''Management'''
|-
|-
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|<span style="color:red">'''Major Side Effects'''</span>
! rowspan="4" |During continuation phase
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Possible Drug'''
|Received ≥80% of doses and sputum was AFB smear negative on initial testing
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|<span style="color:red">'''Stop and Refer Urgently to Clinician '''</span>
| colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Additional therapy may not be necessary
 
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Skin Rash With Or Without Itching'''
|*Received ≥80% of doses and sputum was AFB smear positive on initial testing
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left| [[Streptomycin]], [[Isoniazid]], [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]]
| colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Continue the treatment until all doses are completed
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
 
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Deafness (no wax on otoscopy)'''
|Received <80% of doses and accumulative lapse is <3 mo in duration
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Streptomycin]]
| colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Continue therapy until all doses are completed (full course), unless consecutive lapse is >2 mo
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
If treatment regimen cannot be completed within the recommended time frame, restart therapy (ie, restart intensive phase then the continuation phase)
|-
 
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Dizziness (vertigo and nystagmus)'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Streptomycin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Jaundice  (other causes excluded), hepatitis'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Isoniazid]], [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Confusion/jaundice (drug-induced acute liver failure)'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|Most anti-TB drugs
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Visual impairment (other causes excluded)'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left| [[Ethambutol]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left| '''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Shock, purpura, acute renal failure'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Rifampicin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Decreased Urine Output'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Streptomycin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|<span style="color:#008000">'''Minor Side Effects'''</span>
|*Received <80% of doses and lapse is ≥3 mo in duration
! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|<span style="color:#008000">'''Possible Drug'''</span>
| colspan="2" style="width: 400px;" |Restart therapy with new intensive and continuation phases (ie, restart intensive phase then the continuation phase)


! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|<span style="color:#008000">'''Continue and Check the drug dosage'''</span>
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Anorexia, nausea, abdominal pain'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left| [[Isoniazid]], [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|Give drugs with small meals or before bedtime, swallow pills slowly with small sips of water. <br> If symptoms persist or worsen, or there is protracted vomiting or any sign of bleeding,<br> consider the side-effect to be major and refer to clinician urgently.
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Joint pains'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Pyrazinamide]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Aspirin]] or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, or paracetamol
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Burning, numbness or tingling sensation in the hands or feet'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Isoniazid]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Pyridoxine]] 50–75 mg daily
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Drowsiness'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Isoniazid]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Reassurance'''. Give drugs before bedtime
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Orange/red urine'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|[[Rifampicin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Reassurance''', Patients should be told when starting treatment that this may happen and is normal
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|'''Flu syndrome <sup>†</sup>'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|Intermittent dosing of [[Rifampicin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align=left|Change from intermittent to '''daily''' [[Rifampicin]]
|}
|}
|}
:† (fever, chills, malaise, headache, bone pain)
</div></div>
====Hepatitis and Anti-TB medications====
The management of Anti-TB induced hepatitis depends on:
:*Phase of the therapy (intensive or continuation phase)
:*Severity of the liver disease
:*Severity of the TB
:*Capacity to manage the side-effects of TB drugs
WHO Recommendation for Anti-TB drug induced hepatitis are:
:*If TB treatment has been stopped, Wait for liver function tests to normalize and resolution of the clinical symptoms (nausea, abdominal pain) before reintroducing the anti-TB drugs.
:*If the liver function tests is not available, it is advisable to wait for extra 2 weeks after resolution of jaundice and upper abdominal tenderness before restarting TB treatment.
:*If the signs and symptoms do not resolve and the liver disease is severe, the non-hepatotoxic regimen consisting of streptomycin, ethambutol and a fluoroquinolone should be started (or continued) for a total of 18-24 months.<ref name="-2003">{{Cite journal  | title = Treatment of tuberculosis.|journal = MMWR Recomm Rep | volume = 52 | issue = RR-11 | pages = 1-77 |month = Jun | year = 2003 | doi =  | PMID = 12836625 }}</ref>
:*Reintroducing one drug at a time is the optimal approach, especially if the patient’s hepatitis was severe.
:*Once drug-induced hepatitis has resolved, the drugs are reintroduced one at a time. But if symptoms recur or liver function tests become abnormal again as the drugs are reintroduced, the last drug added should be stopped.
:*Some advise starting with rifampicin because it is less likely than isoniazid or pyrazinamide to cause hepatotoxicity and is the most effective agent .<ref name="-2003">{{Cite journal  | title = Treatment of tuberculosis. | journal = MMWR Recomm Rep | volume = 52 | issue = RR-11 | pages = 1-77 | month = Jun | year = 2003 | doi =  | PMID = 12836625 }}</ref> <ref name="Saukkonen-2006">{{Cite journal  | last1 = Saukkonen | first1 = JJ.|last2 = Cohn | first2 = DL. | last3 = Jasmer | first3 = RM. | last4 = Schenker | first4 = S. | last5 = Jereb | first5 = JA. | last6 = Nolan | first6 = CM. | last7 = Peloquin | first7 = CA. | last8 = Gordin | first8 = FM. | last9 = Nunes | first9 = D. | title = An official ATS statement: hepatotoxicity of antituberculosis therapy. | journal = Am J Respir Crit Care Med | volume = 174 | issue = 8 | pages = 935-52 | month = Oct | year = 2006 | doi = 10.1164/rccm.200510-1666ST | PMID = 17021358 }}</ref> After 3–7 days, isoniazid may be reintroduced. In patients who have experienced jaundice but tolerate the reintroduction of rifampicin and isoniazid, it is advisable to avoid pyrazinamide.
=====Alternative regimens in Anti-TB induced Hepatitis=====
It depends on which drug is implicated as the cause of the hepatitis.
:*If rifampicin is implicated, a suggested regimen without rifampicin is '''2 months''' of [[Isoniazid]], [[Ethambutol]] and [[Streptomycin]]followed by '''10 months''' of [[Isoniazid]] and [[Ethambutol]].
:*If [[Isoniazid]] cannot be used, '''6-9 months''' of [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]] and [[Ethambutol]] can be considered.
:*If [[Pyrazinamide]] is discontinued before the patient has completed the intensive phase, the total duration of isoniazid and rifampicin therapy may be extended to '''9 months'''.<ref name="-2003">{{Cite journal  | title = Treatment of tuberculosis. | journal = MMWR Recomm Rep | volume = 52|issue = RR-11 | pages = 1-77 | month = Jun | year = 2003 | doi =  | PMID = 12836625 }}</ref>
:*If neither isoniazid nor rifampicin can be used, the non-hepatotoxic regimen consisting of [[Streptomycin]], [[ethambutol]] and a[[fluoroquinolone]] should be continued for a total of '''18-24 months'''.
:*Hepatitis during the intensive phase of TB treatment with isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide and ethambutol: once hepatitis has resolved, restart the same drugs '''EXCEPT''' <u>replace</u> pyrazinamide with streptomycin to '''complete the 2-month course''' of initial therapy, followed by[[Rifampicin]] and [[Isoniazid]] for the 6-month continuation phase.
:*Hepatitis during the continuation phase: once hepatitis has resolved, '''restart''' [[Isoniazid]] and [[Rifampicin]] to '''complete the 4-month continuation'''phase of therapy.
==Treatment Failure==
Failure to response to anti-TB drugs means;
:*Smear or culture-positivity at the fifth month or later.
:*Detection of MDR-TB at any point of therapy.


Treatment failure necessitate to step-wise approach to identify the causes of failure which could be due to<ref>{{Cite web  | last =  | first =  |title = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf |url = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf | publisher =  |date =  | accessdate = }}</ref>:
==Managing Side-Effects of Anti-TB Drugs<ref>{{Cite web  | last =  | first =  | title = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf|url = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf | publisher =  | date =  | accessdate = }}</ref>==
:*Poor supervision of the initial phase.
:*Poor patient adherence.
:*Poor quality of anti-TB drugs.
:*Inappropriate doses of anti-TB drugs {below than recommended range).
:*Slow resolution due to extensive cavitation and a heavy initial bacillary load.
:*Co-morbid conditions that interfere either with adherence or with response.
:*MDR M. tuberculosis with no response to the first-line treatment.
:*Non-viable bacteria remain visible by microscopy.
 
==Treatment of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis==
WHO has recommended the following for the susceptibility and response monitoring of MDR-TB Treatment:
:*Rapid drug susceptibility testing (DST) of isoniazid and rifampicin or of rifampicin alone is recommended over conventional testing or no testing at the time of diagnosis of TB(subject to available resources
:*The use of '''sputum smear microscopy and culture''' rather than sputum smear microscopy alone is recommended for the monitoring of patients with MDR-TB during treatment
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
====General principles for Designing MDR-TB Treatment Regimens====
 
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
{|
{|
|-
|-
| valign=top |
| valign="top" |
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:60em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
{| style="border: 0px; font-size: 90%; margin: 3px; width: 700px;" align="center"
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|General principles for Designing MDR -TB Treatment Regimens}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; background: #4479BA" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| Side-Effects}}
|-
! style="background:#4479BA;" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| Causative Drugs}}
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Principle 1: Use At Least 4 Drugs Certain To Be Effective}}''
! style="background:#4479BA; width: 300px" align="center" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| Management}}
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | The more factors are present, the more likely the drug to be effective<br> ▸ '''''Resistance to these drugs is known from surveys to be rare in similar patients.'''''<br> ▸ '''''DST results show susceptibility to drugs for which there is good laboratory reliability: Injectable agents and Fluoroquinolones.'''''<br> ▸ '''''The drug is not commonly used in the area.'''''<br> ▸ '''''No prior history of treatment failure with the drug.'''''<br> ▸ '''''No known close contacts with resistance to the drug.'''''
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Principle 2: Do Not Use Drugs For Which There Is The Possibility Of Cross-Resistance}}''
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''Many antituberculosis agents exhibit cross-resistance both within and across drug classes'''''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Principle 3: Eliminate Drugs That Are Not Safe}}''
| colspan="3" style="padding: 0 5px; background: #4479BA" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| Severe Side-Effects}}
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''Quality of the drug is unknown.''''' <br>  ▸ '''''Known severe allergy or unmanageable intolerance; high risk of severe adverse drug effects such as renal failure, deafness, hepatitis, depression and/or psychosis.)'''''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Skin Rash With Or Without Itching'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Streptomycin]], [[Isoniazid]], [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Principle 4: Include Drugs Groups 1–5 In a  Herarchical Order Based On Potency}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Deafness (no wax on otoscopy)'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Streptomycin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''Use any of the first-line oral agents (Group 1) that are likely to be effective.''''' <br>  ▸ '''''Use an effective aminoglycoside or polypeptide by injection (Group 2)''''' <br>  ▸ '''''Use a fluoroquinolone (Group 3).''''' <br>  ▸ '''''Use the remaining Group 4 drugs to complete a regimen of at least four effective drugs.''''' <br> ▸ '''''For regimens with fewer than four effective drugs, consider adding two (Group 5) drugs. The total number of drugs will depend on the degree of uncertainty, and regimens often contain five to seven.'''''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Dizziness (vertigo and nystagmus)'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Streptomycin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
|}
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Jaundice  (other causes excluded), hepatitis'''
|}
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Isoniazid]], [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]]
 
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
</div></div>
 
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
====Drugs Groups for Treatment of MDR-TB====
 
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
:*Anti-TB drugs are grouped according to efficacy, experience of use and drug class.
:*All the first-line anti-TB drugs are in (Group 1), except streptomycin, which is classified with the other injectable agents in (Group 2).
:*All the drugs in Groups 2–5 (except streptomycin) are second-line, or reserve, drugs.
:*The features of the cross-resistance means that resistance mutations (in M. tuberculosis bacteria) to one anti-TB drug may confer resistance to some or all of the members of the drug family of the same group and less commonly to other members of different drug groups (1).
{|
|-
|-
| valign=top |
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Confusion/jaundice (drug-induced acute liver failure)'''
{| style="margin: 0 0 0em 0em; border: 1px solid #696969; float: left; width:35em" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0";
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |Most anti-TB drugs
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #A5B2D6" align=center | ''{{fontcolor|#000000|Drugs Groups for MDR-TB}}''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Group 1: First-line oral agents}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Visual impairment (other causes excluded)'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Ethambutol]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''[[pyrazinamide]]  (Z)'''''<br>  ▸'''''[[Ethambutol]] (E)'''''<br> ▸ '''''[[Rifabutin]]  (Rfb)'''''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Shock, purpura, acute renal failure'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Rifampicin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Group 2: Injectable Agents}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Decreased Urine Output'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Streptomycin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Stop anti-TB drugs'''
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''[[Kanamycin]]  (Km)''''' <br>  ▸ '''''[[Amikacin]]  (Am)''''' <br>▸ '''''[[Capreomycin]]  (Cm)'''''  <br>  ▸ '''''[[Streptomycin]]  (S)'''''
| colspan="3" style="padding: 0 5px; background: #4479BA" |{{fontcolor|#FFF| Minor Side-Effects}}
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Group 3: Fluoroquinolones}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Anorexia, nausea, abdominal pain'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Isoniazid]], [[Rifampicin]], [[Pyrazinamide]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |Give drugs with small meals or before bedtime, swallow pills slowly with small sips of water. <br> If symptoms persist or worsen, or there is protracted vomiting or any sign of bleeding,<br> consider the side-effect to be major and refer to clinician urgently.
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''[[Levofloxacin]] (Lfx)''''' <br>  ▸ '''''[[Moxifloxacin]](Mfx)'''''<br>  ▸ '''''[[Ofloxacin]] (Ofx)'''''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Joint pains'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Pyrazinamide]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Aspirin]] or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, or paracetamol
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Group 4: Oral Bacteriostatic Second-Line Agents}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Burning, numbness or tingling sensation in the hands or feet'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Isoniazid]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Pyridoxine]] 50–75 mg daily
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | '''''[[Para-amino salicylic acid]] (PAS)''''' <br> ▸'''''[[Cycloserine]] (Cs)''''' <br>  ▸ '''''[[Terizidone]] (Trd)''''' <br>  ▸ '''''[[Ethionamide]] (Eto)''''' <br> ▸ '''''[[Protionamide]](Pto)'''''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Drowsiness'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Isoniazid]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Reassurance'''. Give drugs before bedtime
|-
|-
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 95%; background: #F8F8FF" align=left | ''{{fontcolor|#6C7B8B|Group 5: Agents with Unclear Role in Treatment of Drug Resistant-TB}}''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Orange/red urine'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |[[Rifampicin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Reassurance''', Patients should be told when starting treatment that this may happen and is normal
|-
|-
| rowspan="1" style="font-size: 95%; padding: 0 5px; background: #DCDCDC" | ▸ '''''[[Clofazimine]] (Cfz)''''' <br>  ▸ '''''[[Linezolid]](Lzd'''''<br>  ▸ '''''[[Amoxicillin-clavulanate potassium|Amoxicillin/clavulanate]] (Amx/Clv)''''' <br> ▸ '''''[[Thioacetazone]] (Thz)''''' <br>  ▸'''''[[Imipenem/cilastatin]] (Ipm/Cln)'''''<br> '''''high-dose [[Isoniazid]] (high-dose H) <sup>‡</sup>''''' <br>  ▸ '''''[[Clarithromycin]](Clr)'''''
! style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |'''Flu-like syndrome <sup></sup>'''
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |Intermittent dosing of [[Rifampicin]]
| style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" align="left" |Change from intermittent to '''daily''' [[Rifampicin]]
|-
|-
| colspan="3" style="padding: 0 5px; font-size: 100%; background: #f0f0f0" |<small>† Fever, chills, malaise, headache, bone pain</small>
|}
|}
|}
|}


</div></div>
==Treatment Failure==
 
==WHO Guidelines for second-line Anti-TB Regimens for MDR==
:* In the treatment of patients with MDR-TB, a [[Fluoroquinolone]] should be used (strong recommendation,very low quality evidence).
:* In the treatment of patients with MDR-TB, a [[Ethionamide]] (or prothionamide) should be used (strong recommendation, very low quality evidence).
:* In the treatment of patients with MDR-TB, a later-generation fluoroquinolone rather than an earlier-generation fluoroquinolone should be used (conditional recommendation,very low quality evidence).
:* In the treatment of patients with MDR-TB, four second-line antituberculosis drugs likely to be effective (including a parenteral agent), as well as pyrazinamide, should be included in the intensive phase3 (conditional recommendation,very low quality evidence).
:* In the treatment of patients with MDR-TB, regimens should include '''at least''' pyrazinamide, a fluoroquinolone, a parenteral agent, ethionamide (or  prothionamide), and either cycloserine or PAS (p-aminosalicylic acid) if cycloserine cannot be used (conditional recommendation,very low quality evidence).
 
'''Major changes in recommendation for second-line Anti-TB Regimens for MDR''':
:*Include at least four second-line Anti-TB drugs likely to be effective as well as pyrazinamide during the intensive phase of treatment.
:*'''No evidence''' found to support the use of more than four second-line anti-tuberculosis drugs in patients with extensive disease. Increasing the number of second-line drugs in a regimen is permissible if the effectiveness of some of the drugs is uncertain.
:*Ethambutol may be used but is '''not''' included among the drugs making up the '''standard regimen'''.
:*Group 5 drugs may be used but are '''not''' included among the drugs making up the '''standard regimen'''.
 
===Treatment in Special Situations=== 
====HIV Co-infection====
Recommendations for the treatment of tuberculosis in [[HIV]]-infected adults:
The recommended treatment of TB disease in HIV-infected adults (when the disease is caused by organisms that are known or presumed to be susceptible to first-line drugs) is a 6-month regimen consisting of:
*For the first 2 months: An initial phase of [[isoniazid]] (INH), a [[rifamycin]], [[pyrazinamide]] (PZA), and [[ethambutol]] (EMB).
*For the last 4 months: A continuation phase of INH and a rifamycin.
*Patients with advanced HIV (CD4 counts < 100/µl) should be treated with daily or three-times-weekly therapy in both the initial and the continuation phases.
*Twice weekly therapy may be considered in patients with less-advanced immunosuppression (CD4 counts ≥ 100/µl).
*Once-weekly INH/rifapentine in the continuation phase should not be used in any HIV-infected patient.
 
Recommendations for the treatment of tuberculosis in [[HIV]]-infected adults are, with a few exceptions, the same as those for HIV-uninfected adults. The [[INH]]--[[rifapentine]] once weekly continuation phase is contraindicated in HIV-infected patients because of an unacceptably high rate of relapse, frequently with organisms that have acquired resistance to [[rifamycin]]s. The development of acquired [[rifampin]] [[drug resistance|resistance]] has also been noted among HIV-infected patients with advanced [[immunosuppression]] treated with twice weekly rifampin- or [[rifabutin]]-based regimens. Consequently, patients with [[CD4]]+ cell counts <100/µl should receive daily or three times weekly treatment. DOT and other adherence-promoting strategies are especially important for patients with HIV-related tuberculosis.
 
Management of HIV-related tuberculosis is complex and requires expertise in the management of both HIV disease and tuberculosis. Because HIV-infected patients are often taking numerous medications, some of which interact with antituberculosis medications, it is strongly encouraged that experts in the treatment of HIV-related tuberculosis be consulted. A particular concern is the interaction of [[rifamycin]]s with [[antiretroviral agent]]s and other antiinfective drugs. [[Rifampin]] can be used for the treatment of tuberculosis with certain combinations of antiretroviral agents. [[Rifabutin]], which has fewer problematic drug interactions, may also be used in place of rifampin and appears to be equally effective although the doses of rifabutin and antiretroviral agents may require adjustment. As new antiretroviral agents and more pharmacokinetic data become available, these recommendations are likely to be modified.
 
On occasion, patients with HIV-related tuberculosis may experience a temporary exacerbation of symptoms, signs, or radiographic manifestations of tuberculosis while receiving antituberculosis treatment. This clinical or radiographic worsening (paradoxical reaction) occurs in HIV-infected patients with active tuberculosis and is thought to be the result of immune reconstitution as a consequence of effective [[antiretroviral therapy]]. Symptoms and signs may include high [[fever]]s, [[lymphadenopathy]], expanding [[central nervous system]] lesions, and worsening of [[chest radiographic]] findings. The diagnosis of a paradoxical reaction should be made only after a thorough evaluation has excluded other [[etiologies]], particularly tuberculosis treatment failure. [[Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agent]]s may be useful for symptomatic relief. For severe paradoxical reactions, [[prednisone]] (1--2 mg/kg per day for 1--2 weeks, then in gradually decreasing doses) may be used, although there are no data from controlled trials to support this approach.
 
{{details|HIV coinfection with tuberculosis}}


====Children====
*Failure to respond to anti-TB drugs means;
Because of the high risk of disseminated tuberculosis in infants and children younger than 4 years of age, treatment should be started as soon as the diagnosis of tuberculosis is suspected. In general, the regimens recommended for adults are also the regimens of choice for infants, children, and adolescents with tuberculosis, with the exception that [[ethambutol]] is not used routinely in children. Because there is a lower bacillary burden in childhood-type tuberculosis there is less concern with the development of acquired [[drug resistance]]. However, children and adolescents may develop "adult-type" tuberculosis with upper lobe infiltration, cavitation, and [[sputum]] production. In such situations an initial phase of four drugs should be given until susceptibility is proven. When clinical or epidemiologic circumstances suggest an increased probability of [[INH]] resistance, [[EMB]] can be used safely at a dose of 15--20 mg/kg per day, even in children too young for routine eye testing. [[Streptomycin]], [[kanamycin]], or [[amikacin]] also can be used as the fourth drug, when necessary.


Most studies of treatment in children have used 6 months of [[INH]] and [[RIF]] supplemented during the first 2 months with [[PZA]]. This three-drug combination has a success rate of greater than 95% and an [[adverse drug reaction]] rate of less than 2%. Most treatment studies of intermittent dosing in children have used daily drug administration for the first 2 weeks to 2 months. DOT should always be used in treating children.  
:*[[Smear test|Smear]] or [[Culture media|culture]] are still positive at the fifth month or later.
:*[[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]]-TB is detected at any point of treatment.


Because it is difficult to isolate ''M. tuberculosis'' from a child with pulmonary tuberculosis, it is frequently necessary to rely on the results of drug susceptibility tests of the organisms isolated from the presumed source case to guide the choice of drugs for the child. In cases of suspected drug-resistant tuberculosis in a child or when a source case isolate is not available, specimens for [[microbiological]] evaluation should be obtained via early morning [[gastric]] [[aspiration]], [[bronchoalveolar lavage]], or [[biopsy]].  
*Treatment failure necessitate to step-wise approach to identify the causes of failure which could be due to any of the following features<ref>{{Cite web  | last =  | first =  |title = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf |url = http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf | publisher =  |date =  | accessdate = }}</ref>


In general, extrapulmonary tuberculosis in children can be treated with the same regimens as [[pulmonary]] disease. Exceptions are disseminated tuberculosis and tuberculous meningitis, for which there are inadequate data to support 6-month therapy; thus 9--12 months of treatment is recommended.
:*Poor supervision of the initial phase
:*Poor patient adherence
:*Poor quality of anti-TB drugs
:*Inappropriate doses of anti-TB medications (below than recommended range)
:*Slow resolution due to progressive [[cavitation]] and a initial heavy [[Mycobacterium|mycobacterial]] load
:*[[Co-morbidities]] that interfere with the response or adherence to treatment
:*[[Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis|MDR]] [[Mycobacterium tuberculosis|M. tuberculosis]] with no response to the first-line treatment
:*Non-viable [[Mycobacterium|mycobacteria]] remain visible by [[microscopy]]


The optimal treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis in children and adolescents with [[HIV]] infection is unknown. The [[American Academy of Pediatrics]] recommends that initial therapy should always include at least three drugs, and the total duration of therapy should be at least 9 months, although there are no data to support this recommendation.
==Treatment Regimen==


====Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis====  
:*1. '''Standard regimens for new patients''' <ref>{{cite book | title = Treatment of tuberculosis guidelines | publisher = World Health Organization | location = Geneva | year = 2010 | isbn = 9789241547833 }}</ref>
The basic principles that underlie the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis also apply to extrapulmonary forms of the disease. Although relatively few studies have examined treatment of extrapulmonary tuberculosis, increasing evidence suggests that 6- to 9-month regimens that include [[INH]] and [[RIF]] are effective. Thus, a 6-month course of therapy is recommended for treating tuberculosis involving any site with the exception of the meninges, for which a 9- 12-month regimen is recommended. Prolongation of therapy also should be considered for patients with tuberculosis in any site that is slow to respond. The addition of [[corticosteroid]]s is recommended for patients with tuberculous pericarditis and tuberculous meningitis.
::*1.1. '''Adult'''
:::*1.1.1. '''Initial phase'''
::::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg PO (5 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg PO (10 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 2 g PO (25 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks {{and}} [[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO (15 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks
::::*Alternative regimen (1): [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (10 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 2 g/day PO for 2 weeks (25 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day), followed by [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (10 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 2 g/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks {{and}} [[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
::::*Alternative regimen (2): [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (10 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 2g/day PO thrice weekly for 8 week (25 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Ethambutol]] 1.6 g PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
:::*1.1.2 '''Continuation phase'''
::::*Preferred regimen (1): [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg PO (5 mg/kg/day) qd {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg PO (10 mg/kg/day) qd for 18 weeks
::::*Preferred regimen (2): [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg PO twice weekly (5 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO twice weekly (10 mg/kg/day) for 18 weeks
::::*Alternative regimen (1): [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
::::*Alternative regimen (2): [[Isoniazid]] 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 600 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)


====Tuberculous Pericarditis====
::*1.2 '''Pediatric'''
With the use of antituberculosis chemotherapy, survival rate in tuberculous pericarditis has improved dramatically. Mortality rate in preantibiotic era was 80-90%<ref>Harvey AM, Whitehill MR. Tuberculous pericarditis. Medicine. 1937; 16: 45–94</ref>. At present it is 8-17%<ref name="pmid472922">{{cite journal| author=Desai HN| title=Tuberculous pericarditis. A review of 100 cases. | journal=S Afr Med J | year= 1979 | volume= 55 | issue= 22 | pages= 877-80 | pmid=472922 | doi= | pmc= | url= }} </ref><ref name="pmid7185934">{{cite journal| author=Bhan GL| title=Tuberculous pericarditis. | journal=J Infect | year= 1980 | volume= 2 | issue= 4 | pages= 360-4 | pmid=7185934 | doi= | pmc= | url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&tool=sumsearch.org/cite&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=7185934  }} </ref> and 17-34% if associated with [[HIV]]<ref name="pmid10908256">{{cite journal| author=Hakim JG, Ternouth I, Mushangi E, Siziya S, Robertson V, Malin A| title=Double blind randomised placebo controlled trial of adjunctive prednisolone in the treatment of effusive tuberculous pericarditis in HIV seropositive patients. | journal=Heart | year= 2000 | volume= 84 | issue= 2 | pages= 183-8 | pmid=10908256 | doi= | pmc=PMC1760932 | url= }} </ref>. A 2 months course of [[isoniazid]], [[pyrazinamide]], [[rifampicin]], and [[ethambutol]] followed by 4 months course of [[isoniazid]] and [[rifampicin]] is shown to be effective<ref name="pmid2106816">{{cite journal| author=Cohn DL, Catlin BJ, Peterson KL, Judson FN, Sbarbaro JA| title=A 62-dose, 6-month therapy for pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis. A twice-weekly, directly observed, and cost-effective regimen. | journal=Ann Intern Med | year= 1990 | volume= 112 | issue= 6 | pages= 407-15 | pmid=2106816 | doi= | pmc= | url= }} </ref>. Short course chemotherapy is beneficial in [[HIV]] infected patients<ref name="pmid7862181">{{cite journal| author=Perriëns JH, St Louis ME, Mukadi YB, Brown C, Prignot J, Pouthier F et al.| title=Pulmonary tuberculosis in HIV-infected patients in Zaire. A controlled trial of treatment for either 6 or 12 months. | journal=N Engl J Med | year= 1995 | volume= 332 | issue= 12 | pages= 779-84 | pmid=7862181 | doi=10.1056/NEJM199503233321204 | pmc= | url= }} </ref>.
:::*1.2.1 '''Initial phase'''
::::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 10 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 300 mg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 15 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 600 mg/day) {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 35 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 2 g/day) {{and}} [[Ethambutol]] 20 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 1.6 g/day), each for 8 weeks
:::*1.2.2 '''Continuation phase'''
::::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 10 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 300 mg/day) {{and}} [[Rifampicin]] 15 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 600 mg/day), each drug daily for 18 weeks


American Thoracic Society, CDC, and Infectious Diseases Society of America recommends use of [[corticosteroids]] ([[prednisone]]) as adjunctive therapy for tuberculous pericarditis during the first 11 weeks of [[TB#treatment|antituberculosis therapy]]<ref name="pmid12836625">{{cite journal| author=American Thoracic Society. CDC. Infectious Diseases Society of America| title=Treatment of tuberculosis. | journal=MMWR Recomm Rep | year= 2003 | volume= 52 | issue= RR-11 | pages= 1-77 | pmid=12836625 | doi= | pmc= | url= }} </ref>. Following are the dosage recommendations:
:*2. '''RR-TB or MDR-TB Tuberculosis'''<ref name="WHO_update-Guideline"> WHO treatment guidelines for drug- resistant tuberculosis
*Adults: Prednisone 60 mg/day (or the equivalent dose of prednisolone) given for 4 weeks, followed by 30 mg/day for 4 weeks, 15 mg/day for 2 weeks, and finally 5 mg/day for week 11 (the final week)
2016 update. http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/250125/1/9789241549639-eng.pdf?ua=1Accessed on October 14, 2016</ref>
*Children: Doses should be proportionate to their weight, beginning with about 1 mg/kg body weight and decreasing the dose as described for adults.
::*2.1 '''Adult'''
:::*Preferred regimen: At least 5 agents combination
::::*Agent 1: [[Pyrazinamide]] 20–30 mg/kg
::::*Agent 2: [[Levofloxacin]] 500-1000 mg {{or}} [[Moxifloxacin]] 400 mg {{or}} [[Gatifloxacin]] 400mg
::::*Agent 3: [[Amikacin]] 7.5-10 mg/kg {{or}} [[Capreomycin]] 15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Kanamycin]] 15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Streptomycin]] 12–18 mg/kg
::::*Agent 4: [Ethionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg {{or}} [[Protionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg {{or}} [[Cycloserine]] 10-15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Terizidone]] 10-20 mg/kg {{or}} [[Clofazimine]] 100mg
::::*Agent 5: [[Bedaquiline]] 200-400mg {{or}} [[Delamanid]]
::::*Agent 6: Para-aminosalicylic acid 150 mg/kg/day q8-12h {{or}} [[Imipenem]]/[[Cilastatin]]<nowiki> 250mg/250mg-750mg/750mg {{or} </nowiki>[[Meropenem]] 20-40mg/kg {{or}} [[Amoxicillin clavulanate]] 500mg-125mg {{or}} [[Thioacetazone]] 150mg
::::*Note: [[Pyrazinamide]] and four core second-line TB medicines (one chosen from Group A, one from Group B, and at least two from Group C2)
::::*Note: If the minimum number of effective TB medicines cannot be composed as given above, an agent from Group D2 and other agents from Group D3 may be added to bring the total to five


{{details|Tuberculous pericarditis}}
::*2.2 '''Pediatric'''
:::*Preferred regimen: At least 5 agents combination
::::*Agent 1: [[Pyrazinamide]] 20-30 mg/kg (Maximum: 600 mg)
::::*Agent 2 (Group A): [[Levofloxacin]] 7.5-10mg/kg {{or}} [[Moxifloxacin]] 7.5-10mg/kg {{or}} [[Gatifloxacin]] 10 mg/kg (maximum 600 mg)
::::*Agent 3 (Group B): [[Amikacin]] 7.5-10 mg/kg {{or}} [[Capreomycin]] 15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Kanamycin]] 15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Streptomycin]] 12–18 mg/kg
::::*Agent 4 (Group C): [Ethionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg/day q12h (Maximum: 1000 mg){{or}} [[Protionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg {{or}} [[Cycloserine]] 10-15 mg/kg  (Maximum: 1000 mg) {{or}} [[Terizidone]] 10-20 mg/kg Maximum: 1000 mg) {{or}} [[Clofazimine]] 100mg
::::*Agent 5: (Group D3): Para-aminosalicylic acid 150 mg/kg/day q8-12h(Maximum: 12,000 mg) {{or}} [[Imipenem]]/[[Cilastatin]]<nowiki> 250mg/250mg-750mg/750mg {{or} </nowiki>[[Meropenem]] 20-40mg/kg {{or}} [[Amoxicillin clavulanate]] 500mg-125mg {{or}} [[Thioacetazone]] 50mg
::::*Note: [[Pyrazinamide]] and four core second-line TB medicines (one chosen from Group A, one from Group B, and at least two from Group C2)
::::*Note: If the minimum number of effective TB medicines cannot be composed as given above, an agent from Group D2 and other agents from Group D3 may be added to bring the total to five


====Culture-Negative Pulmonary Tuberculosis and Radiographic Evidence of Prior Pulmonary Tuberculosis====
:*3. '''XDR Tuberculosis''' <ref>{{cite web | title = WHO| url =http://www.who.int/tb/challenges/mdr/programmatic_guidelines_for_mdrtb/en/}}</ref>
Failure to isolate ''M. tuberculosis'' from persons suspected of having [[pulmonary]] tuberculosis on the basis of clinical features and [[chest radiographic]] examination does not exclude a diagnosis of active tuberculosis. Alternative diagnoses should be considered carefully and further appropriate diagnostic studies undertaken in persons with apparent culture-negative tuberculosis. The general approach to management is shown in Figure 2. A diagnosis of tuberculosis can be strongly inferred by the clinical and radiographic response to antituberculosis treatment. Careful reevaluation should be performed after 2 months of therapy to determine whether there has been a response attributable to antituberculosis treatment. If either clinical or radiographic improvement is noted and no other [[etiology]] is identified, treatment should be continued for active tuberculosis. Treatment regimens in this circumstance include one of the standard 6-month chemotherapy regimens or [[INH]], [[RIF]], [[PZA]], and [[EMB]] for 2 months followed by INH and RIF for an additional 2 months (4 months total). However, [[HIV]]-infected patients with culture-negative pulmonary tuberculosis should be treated for a minimum of 6 months.
::*3.1 '''Adult'''
:::*Preferred regimen: 3 agents combination
::::*Agent 1: [[Pyrazinamide]] 20–30 mg/kg {{or}} [[Ethambutol]] 15–25 mg/kg {{or}} [[Rifabutin]] 5 mg/kg
::::*Agent 2: [[Ethionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg {{or}} [[Protionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg {{or}} [[Cycloserine]] 10-15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Terizidone]] 10-20 kg/mg {{or}} Para-[[aminosalicylic acid]] 8-12 g/day q8-12h
::::*Agent 3: [[Clofazimine]] 50 mg/d AND 300 mg once a month {{or}} [[Amoxicillin]]/clavulanate 500 mg/125 mg q12h {{or}} [[Linezolid]] 300-600 mg {{or}} [[Imipenem]] 500mg q6h {{or}} [[Clarithromycin]] 500-1000 mg q12h {{or}} [[Thioacetazone]] 2.5 mg/kg {{or}} [[Isoniazid]] (high-dose) 16–20 mg/kg


Persons with a positive [[tuberculin skin test]] who have [[radiographic]] evidence of prior tuberculosis (e.g., upper lobe fibronodular infiltrations) but who have not received adequate therapy are at increased risk for the subsequent development of tuberculosis. Unless previous radiographs are available showing that the abnormality is stable, it is recommended that [[sputum]] examination (using sputum induction if necessary) be performed to assess the possibility of active tuberculosis being present. Also, if the patient has symptoms of tuberculosis related to an extrapulmonary site, an appropriate evaluation should be undertaken. Once active tuberculosis has been excluded (i.e., by negative cultures and a stable chest radiograph), the treatment regimens are those used for latent tuberculosis infection: [[INH ]]for 9 months, [[RIF]] (with or without INH) for 4 months, or RIF and [[PZA]] for 2 months (for patients who are unlikely to complete a longer course and who can be monitored closely).
::*3.2 '''Pediatric'''
:::*Preferred regimen: 3 agents combination
::::*Agent 1: [[Pyrazinamide]] 20-30 mg/kg (Maximum: 600 mg) {{or}} [[Ethambutol]] 15 mg/kg {{or}} [[Rifabutin]] 5 mg/kg
::::*Agent 2: [[Ethionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg (Maximum: 1000 mg) {{or}} [[Protionamide]] 15-20 mg/kg (Maximum: 1000 mg) {{or}} [[Cycloserine]] 10-20 mg/kg (Maximum: 1000 mg) {{or}} [[Terizidone]] 10-20 mg/kg (Maximum: 1000 mg) {{or}} Para-[[aminosalicylic acid]] 150 mg/kg/day q8-12h
::::*Agent 3: [[Clofazimine]] 50 mg/d AND 300 mg once a month {{or}} [[Amoxicillin]]/clavulanate {{or}} [[Linezolid]] 300-600 mg {{or}} [[Imipenem]] 500mg q6h {{or}} [[Clarithromycin]] 500-1000 mg q12h {{or}} [[Thioacetazone]] 2.5 mg/kg {{or}} [[Isoniazid]] (high-dose) 16–20 mg/kg


====Renal Insufficiency and End-Stage Renal Disease====
===Ocular tuberculosis===
For patients undergoing [[hemodialysis]], administration of all drugs after [[dialysis]] is preferred to facilitate DOT and to avoid premature removal of drugs such as [[PZA]] and [[cycloserine]]. To avoid toxicity it is important to monitor serum drug concentrations in persons with [[renal failure]] who are taking cycloserine or [[EMB]]. There is little information concerning the effects of peritoneal dialysis on clearance of antituberculosis drugs.


====Liver Disease====
*'''1. Pathogen-directed antimicrobial therapy'''<ref>{{Cite journal| doi = 10.1164/rccm.167.4.603| issn = 1073-449X| volume = 167| issue = 4| pages = 603–662| last1 = Blumberg| first1 = Henry M.| last2 = Burman| first2 = William J.| last3 = Chaisson| first3 = Richard E.| last4 = Daley| first4 = Charles L.| last5 = Etkind| first5 = Sue C.| last6 = Friedman| first6 = Lloyd N.| last7 = Fujiwara| first7 = Paula| last8 = Grzemska| first8 = Malgosia| last9 = Hopewell| first9 = Philip C.| last10 = Iseman| first10 = Michael D.| last11 = Jasmer| first11 = Robert M.| last12 = Koppaka| first12 = Venkatarama| last13 = Menzies| first13 = Richard I.| last14 = O'Brien| first14 = Richard J.| last15 = Reves| first15 = Randall R.| last16 = Reichman| first16 = Lee B.| last17 = Simone| first17 = Patricia M.| last18 = Starke| first18 = Jeffrey R.| last19 = Vernon| first19 = Andrew A.| last20 = American Thoracic Society, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Infectious Diseases Society| title = American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America: treatment of tuberculosis| journal = American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine| date = 2003-02-15| pmid = 12588714}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| issn = 1057-5987| volume = 52| issue = RR-11| pages = 1–77| last1 = American Thoracic Society| last2 = CDC| last3 = Infectious Diseases Society of America| title = Treatment of tuberculosis| journal = MMWR. Recommendations and reports: Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Recommendations and reports / Centers for Disease Control| date = 2003-06-20| pmid = 12836625}}</ref>
[[INH]], [[RIF]], and [[PZA]] all can cause hepatitis that may result in additional [[liver]] damage in patients with preexisting liver disease. However, because of the effectiveness of these drugs (particularly INH and RIF), they should be used if at all possible, even in the presence of preexisting liver disease. If serum [[AST]] is more than three times normal before the initiation of treatment (and the abnormalities are not thought to be caused by tuberculosis), several treatment options exist. One option is to treat with RIF, EMB, and PZA for 6 months, avoiding INH. A second option is to treat with INH and RIF for 9 months, supplemented by EMB until INH and RIF susceptibility are demonstrated, thereby avoiding PZA. For patients with severe liver disease a regimen with only one hepatotoxic agent, generally RIF plus EMB, could be given for 12 months, preferably with another agent, such as a [[fluoroquinolone]], for the first 2 months; however, there are no data to support this recommendation.


In all patients with preexisting liver disease, frequent clinical and laboratory monitoring should be performed to detect drug-induced [[hepatic]] injury.
:*1. '''Adult patients'''
::*1.1 '''Intensive phase'''
:::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 5 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 2 months {{and}} [[Rifampin]] 10 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 2 months {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 15–30 mg/kg (max: 2 g) PO qd for 2 months {{and}} [[Ethambutol]] 15-20 mg/kg (max: 1 g) PO qd for 2 months
::*1.2 '''Continuation phase'''
:::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 5 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 4 months {{and}} [[Rifampin]] 10 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 4 months
:*2. '''Pediatric patients'''
::*2.1 '''Intensive phase'''
:::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 10-15 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 2 months {{and}} [[Rifampin]] 10-20 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 2 months {{and}} [[Pyrazinamide]] 15-30 mg/kg (max: 2 g) PO qd for 2 months {{and}} [[Ethambutol]]
::*2.2 '''Continuation phase'''
:::*Preferred regimen: [[Isoniazid]] 10–15 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 4 months {{and}} [[Rifampin]] 10–20 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 4 months
:*Note (1): [[Ethambutol]] may be administered at a dose of 15-20 mg/kg (max: 1 g) PO qd for 2 months but is generally avoided because of potential ocular toxicity.<ref>{{cite book | last = Bennett | first = John | title = Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of infectious diseases | publisher = Elsevier/Saunders | location = Philadelphia, PA | year = 2015 | isbn = 978-1455748013 }}</ref>
:*Note (2): A short course of systemic corticosteroids may be necessary initially if there is sight-threatening inflammation.


====Pregnancy and Breastfeeding====
Because of the risk of tuberculosis to the [[fetus]], treatment of tuberculosis in [[pregnant]] women should be initiated whenever the probability of maternal disease is moderate to high. The initial treatment regimen should consist of [[INH]], [[RIF]], and [[EMB]]. Although all of these drugs cross the [[placenta]], they do not appear to have teratogenic effects. [[Streptomycin]] is the only antituberculosis drug documented to have harmful effects on the human fetus ([[congenital deafness]]) and should not be used. Although detailed teratogenicity data are not available, [[PZA]] can probably be used safely during pregnancy and is recommended by the [[World Health Organization]] (WHO) and the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (IUATLD). If PZA is not included in the initial treatment regimen, the minimum duration of therapy is 9 months.


[[Breastfeeding]] should not be discouraged for women being treated with the first-line antituberculosis agents because the small concentrations of these drugs in breast milk do not produce toxicity in the nursing newborn. Conversely, drugs in breast milk should not be considered to serve as effective treatment for tuberculosis or for latent tuberculosis infection in a nursing infant. [[Pyridoxine]] supplementation (25 mg/day) is recommended for all women taking [[INH]] who are either pregnant or breastfeeding. The amount of pyridoxine in [[multivitamin]]s is variable but generally less than the needed amount.
====Contraindicated medications====
 
{{MedCondContrAbs|MedCond =Active tuberculosis|BCG vaccine}}
===Treatment of Tuberculosis in Low-Income Countries: Recommendations of the WHO and Guidelines from the IUATLD===
The rise in HIV infections and the neglect of TB control programs have enabled a resurgence of tuberculosis.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Iademarco MF, Castro KG |title=Epidemiology of tuberculosis |journal=Seminars in respiratory infections |volume=18 |issue=4 |pages=225-40 |year=2003 |pmid=14679472}}</ref> The emergence of [[Antibiotic resistance|drug-resistant]] strains has also contributed to this new epidemic with, from 2000 to 2004, 20% of TB cases being resistant to standard treatments and 2% resistant to [[Tuberculosis treatment#Treatment of MDR-TB|second-line drugs]].<ref name="MMWR2006">{{cite journal |title=Emergence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis with extensive resistance to second-line drugs&mdash;worldwide, 2000&ndash;2004 |journal=MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep |volume=55 |issue=11 |pages=301-5 |year=2006 |url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5511a2.htm | pmid = 16557213}}</ref> TB incidence varies widely, even in neighboring countries, apparently because of differences in health care systems.<ref name=Sobero_2006>{{cite journal |author=Sobero R, Peabody J |title=Tuberculosis control in Bolivia, Chile, Colombia and Peru: why does incidence vary so much between neighbors? |journal=Int J Tuberc Lung Dis |volume=10 |issue=11 |pages=1292–5 |year=2006 | pmid = 17131791}}</ref> The [[World Health Organization]] declared TB a global health emergency in 1993, and the [[Stop TB Partnership]] developed a [[Global Plan to Stop Tuberculosis]] aiming to save 14 million lives between 2006 and 2015.<ref>[[World Health Organization]] (WHO). [http://www.stoptb.org/globalplan/ Stop TB Partnership.] Retrieved on 3 October 2006.</ref>
 
To place the current guidelines in an international context it is necessary to have an understanding of the approaches to treatment of tuberculosis in high-incidence, low-income countries. It is important to recognize that the [[American Thoracic Society]]/[[CDC]]/[[Infectious Diseases Society of America]] (ATS/CDC/IDSA) recommendations cannot be assumed to be applicable under all [[epidemiologic]] and economic circumstances. The incidence of tuberculosis and the resources with which to confront the disease to an important extent determine the approaches used. Given the increasing proportion of patients in low-incidence countries who were born in high-incidence countries, it is also important for persons managing these cases to be familiar with the approaches used in the countries of origin.
 
The major international recommendations and guidelines for treating tuberculosis are those of the [[WHO]] and of the IUATLD. The WHO document was developed by an expert committee whereas the IUATLD document is a distillation of IUATLD practice, validated in the field.
 
The [[WHO]] and IUATLD documents target, in general, countries in which [[mycobacterial]] culture, drug susceptibility testing, [[radiographic]] facilities, and second-line drugs are not widely available as a routine. A number of differences exist between these new ATS/CDC/IDSA recommendations, and the current tuberculosis treatment recommendations of the WHO and guidelines of the IUATLD. Both international sets of recommendations are built around a national case management strategy called "DOTS", the acronym for "Directly Observed Therapy, Short course", in which direct observation of therapy (DOT) is only one of five key elements. The five components of DOTS are 1) government commitment to sustained tuberculosis control activities, 2) case detection by [[sputum]] smear microscopy among symptomatic patients self-reporting to health services, 3) a standardized treatment regimen of 6-8 months for at least all confirmed sputum smear-positive cases, with DOT for at least the initial 2 months, 4) a regular, uninterrupted supply of all essential antituberculosis drugs, and 5) a standardized recording and reporting system that enables assessment of treatment results for each patient and of the tuberculosis control program overall.
====A Number of Other Differences Exist as Well====  
 
The [[WHO]] and the IUATLD recommend diagnosis and classification of tuberculosis cases and assessment of response based on [[sputum]] [[AFB]] smears. Culture and susceptibility testing for new patients is not recommended because of cost, limited applicability, and lack of facilities.
[[Chest radiography]] is recommended by both the [[WHO]] and IUATLD only for patients with negative sputum smears and is not recommended at all for follow-up.
Both 6- and 8-month treatment regimens are recommended by the WHO. The IUATLD recommends an 8-month regimen with [[thioacetazone]] in the continuation phase for [[HIV]]-negative patients. For patients suspected of having or known to have HIV infection, [[ethambutol]] is substituted for thioacetazone
The WHO and the IUATLD recommend a standardized 8-month regimen for patients who have relapsed, had interrupted treatment, or have failed treatment. Patients who have failed supervised retreatment are considered "chronic" cases and are highly likely to have tuberculosis caused by [[MDR]] organisms. Susceptibility testing and a tailored regimen using second-line drugs based on the test results are recommended by the WHO, if testing and second-line drugs are available. The IUATLD recommendations do not address the issue.
Neither baseline nor follow-up biochemical testing is recommended by the WHO and the IUATLD. It is recommended that patients be taught to recognize the symptoms associated with drug toxicity and to report them promptly.
 
===New Advances in Pharmacotherapy===
A new drug, called Bedalaquine, was recently approved by the FDA in December 2012, to treat multi-drug resistant tuberculosis<ref>{{cite journal|author=Matteelli A, Carvalho AC, Dooley KE, Kritski A |title=TMC207: the first compound of a new class of potent anti-tuberculosis drugs|journal=Future Microbiol |volume=5 |issue=6 |pages=849–58 |year=2010 |month=June |pmid=20521931 |pmc=2921705 |doi=10.2217/fmb.10.50 |url=}}</ref>. About 12 million people worldwide had tuberculosis in 2011, and about 630,000 had multidrug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. Bedaquiline affects the[[proton pump]] for [[ATP synthase]], which is unlike the [[quinolone]]s, whose target is [[DNA gyrase]] <ref name="Kotz">{{cite journal | author = Kotz  J | title = Targeting tuberculosis | journal = Nature Chemical Biology | volume = | issue = | pages =  | year = 2005  | month = June | pmid = |doi = 10.1038/nchembio002 | url =  }}</ref>. It was formally approved for use by the U.S. [[Food and Drug Administration]] (FDA) for use in[[tuberculosis]] (TB) treatment- but it is to be used normally only in cases of [[multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis]], and in an even more resistant category, [[extensively drug resistant tuberculosis]]. Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis is defined as tuberculosis cases that do not respond to at least two of the four primary (first-line) antibiotics, developed mostly in the 1950s and 1960s, that are used to treat tuberculosis. The drug has been given a black-box warning for [[Cardiac_dysrhythmia|arrhythmias]] which may cause [[cardiac arrest]] <ref>http://news.msn.com/science-technology/fda-approves-1st-new-tuberculosis-drug-in-40-years-1?</ref>.
 
In addition, a novel, 3-drug, anti-TB regimen (PaMZ) consisting of the chemical entity, nitroimidazooxazine, PA-824 (Pa), the fluoroquinolone, moxifloxacin (M), and the first-line TB drug, pyrazinamide (Z), has shown recent promise in the treatment of tuberculosis. The results of a recent phase II clinical trial published in the Lancet, showed that the three drug regimen killed more than 99% of TB bacteria within 2 weeks of treatment.
 
===A Research Agenda for Tuberculosis Treatment===
New antituberculosis drugs are needed for three main reasons: 1) to shorten or otherwise simplify treatment of tuberculosis caused by drug-susceptible organisms, 2) to improve treatment of [[drug-resistant]] tuberculosis, and 3) to provide more efficient and effective treatment of latent tuberculosis infection. No truly novel compounds that are likely to have a significant impact on tuberculosis treatment are close to [[clinical trial]]s. However, further work to optimize the effectiveness of once-a-week [[rifapentine]] regimens using higher doses of the drug and using rifapentine in combination with [[moxifloxacin]] is warranted, on the basis of experimental data.
 
New categories of drugs that have shown promise for use in treating tuberculosis include the nitroimidazopyrans and the [[oxazolidinone]]s. Experimental data also suggest that a drug to inhibit an enzyme, [[isocitrate lyase]], thought to be necessary for maintaining the latent state, might be useful for treatment of latent tuberculosis infection.
 
A number of other interventions that might lead to improved treatment outcome have been suggested, although none has undergone rigorous clinical testing. These include various drug delivery systems, cytokine inhibitors, administration of protective [[cytokine]]s such as [[interferon]]-g and [[interleukin-2]], and [[nutritional supplement]]s, especially [[vitamin A]] and [[zinc]].
 
Research is also needed to identify factors that are predictive of a greater or lesser risk of relapse to determine optimal length of treatment. Identification of such factors would enable more efficient targeting of resources to supervise treatment. In addition, identification of behavioral factors that identify patients at greater or lesser likelihood of being adherent to therapy would also enable more efficient use of DOT.


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}
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Latest revision as of 03:29, 28 March 2021

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Charmaine Patel, M.D. [2]; Ahmed Zaghw, M.D. [3]; Ammu Susheela, M.D. [4]; Sara Mehrsefat, M.D. [5]

Overview

The treatment of tuberculosis with anti-TB drugs is divided mainly into two phases; the initiation phase and maintenance phase. If there is a high likelihood of infection, start anti-TB treatment the patient even if the AFB stain is negative, while waiting for the culture results. The patient should come back in few weeks. Patients usually feel better a few weeks post-treatment. Patients have to be monitored for side effects and treatment failure. In addition, all TB cases are tested for drug resistance in the U.S.

Deciding To Initiate Treatment

  • The decision to initiate combination anti-tuberculous therapy is made according to the following:
Factors to be considered in deciding to initiate treatment empirically for active tuberculosis (TB) ( prior to microbiologic confirmation)[1]

Drugs Used in the Treatment of Tuberculosis

Groups Drugs
Group 1:
First-line oral drugs
Group 2:
Injectable drugs
Group 3: Fluoroquinolones
Group 4:
Oral bacteriostatic second-line drugs
Group 5:
Agents with unclear role in treatment of drug resistant-TB
Adapted from WHO 2013 Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines – 4th ed.[2]

Standard Treatment Regimens

Empirical Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy
  • In developing endemic countries and in cases with high clinical suspicion of tuberculous pericarditis, it is recommended to start with empiric antituberculous treatment before establishing a definitive diagnosis. In the clinical settings where the diagnosis cannot be confirmed according to bacteriology, histology, or pericardial fluid analysis, clinical response to antituberculous treatment can be suggestive of a diagnosis of tuberculous pericarditis.[3]
  • In developed countries where TB is not endemic, antituberculous treatment should not be started empirically without a definitive diagnosis.[4]

Standard Regimens for New Patients

Adults

  ▸  Preferred regimen

  ▸  Alternate regimen 1

  ▸  Alternate regimen 2

Children

  ▸  Preferred regimen

Preferred Regimen - Adults
Intensive phase
(Administer each drug daily for 8 weeks)
Isoniazid 300 mg PO (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg PO (10 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Pyrazinamide 2 g PO (25 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Ethambutol 1.6 g PO (15 mg/kg/day)
Continuation phase
(Administer each drug for 18 weeks)
Isoniazid 300 mg daily PO (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg daily PO (10 mg/kg/day)
OR
Isoniazid 300 mg PO twice weekly (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO twice weekly (10 mg/kg/day)
Alternate Regimen 1 - Adults
Intensive phase
Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Pyrazinamide 2 g/day PO for 2 weeks (25 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Ethambutol 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
FOLLOWED BY
Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Pyrazinamide 2 g/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks
PLUS
Ethambutol 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
Continuation phase
Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
Alternate Regimen 2 - Adults
'Intensive phase
Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg/day P.O thrice weekly for 8 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Pyrazinamide 2g/day PO thrice weekly for 8 week (25 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Ethambutol 1.6 g PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
Continuation phase
Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
Preferred Regimen-Children
Intensive phase
(Administer each drug daily for 8 weeks)
Isoniazid 10 mg/kg PO (Max: 300 mg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 15 mg/kg PO (Max: 600 mg/day)
PLUS
Pyrazinamide 35 mg/kg PO (Max: 2 g/day)
PLUS
Ethambutol 20 mg/kg PO (Max: 1.6 g/day)
Continuation phase
(Administer each drug daily for 18 weeks)
Isoniazid 10 mg/kg PO (Max: 300 mg/day)
PLUS
Rifampicin 15 mg/kg PO (Max: 600 mg/day )
Table adapted from WHO 2013 Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines – 4th ed.[2]

Standard Regimens for Previously Treated Patients

The previously treated patients should receive the 8-months regimen with first-line drugs.

Standard regimens for previously treated patients
Rapid molecular-based method
▸ Drug Susceptibility Testing (DST) results available in 1–2 days confirm or exclude MDR to guide the choice of regimen
Conventional method
High likelihood of MDR: Empirical MDR regimen
Low likelihood of MDR: 2HRZES / HRZE / 5HRE

(H = isoniazid, R= rifampicin, Z = pyrazinamide, E = ethambutol, S = streptomycin)
Regimen should be modified once DST results are available up to 2–3 months after the start of treatment.

Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis Treatment

The principles underlying the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis can also be applied to extrapulmonary disease. Increasing evidence, including randomized controlled trials, reports that 6–9 month isoniazid and rifampicin containing regimens are effective for most of extrapulmonary sites of disease.[5]

Type of Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis Treatment
Lymph Node Tuberculosis
  • 6-month regimen is adequate for initial treatment
  • Therapeutic lymph node excision is not indicated
  • Incision and drainage in case of cervical lymphadenitis (associated with prolonged wound discharge and scarring)
  • Aspiration was reported to be useful (for large fluctuant lymph nodes that appear to be about to drain spontaneously)
Bone, Joint, and Spinal Tuberculosis
Pericardial Tuberculosis
  • A 6-month regimen is adequate
  • Adjunctive corticosteroids therapy is no longer recommended. However, selective use of [corticosteroids]] in patients who are at the highest risk for inflammatory complications may be possible in the following conditions:
Pleural Tuberculosis
  • A standard 6-month regimen
  • No evidence to suggest the routine use of adjunctive corticosteroids
  • Tuberculous empyema (occurs when a cavity ruptures into the pleural space), management includes:
    • Drainage (often requiring a surgical procedure)
    • Antituberculous chemotherapy
    • The optimal duration of therapy is not defined
Tuberculous Meningitis
  • Adult
    • INH, PZA, RIF, and EMB in an initial 2-month phase. INH and RIF continued for another 7–10 months
  • Children
  • Optimal duration of chemotherapy is not defined
  • Lumbar punctures may be performed to monitor changes in the cerebrospinal fluid cell during the treatment course
  • Adjunctive corticosteroids is tapered over 6–8 weeks
Disseminated Tuberculosis (miliary tuberculosis)
  • Standard daily 6-month regimen is adequate
  • The role of adjunct corticosteroid treatment in patients with miliary tuberculosis has not been established
Genitourinary Tuberculosis
  • Standard daily 6-month regimen is adequate
  • In cases of Ureteral obstruction
    • Procedures to relieve the obstruction are indicated.
  • In cases of hydronephrosis and renal failure due to obstruction
  • In cases of poorly functioning or nonfunctioning kidney (especially if hypertension or continuous flank pain is present)
    • Nephrectomy is considered
  • In cases of large tubo-ovarian abscesses
    • Surgery may be indicated
Abdominal Tuberculosis
  • Standard daily 6-month regimen is adequate
  • Adjunctive corticosteroids therapy is not recommended

Monitoring during treatment

Directly observed treatment, short-course (DOTS) strategy

5 components of DOTS strategy
Government committed to sustained TB control and activities
Case detection by sputum smear microscopy among symptomatic patients self reporting to health services
Standardized treatment, with supervision and patient support
An effective drug supply and management system
Monitoring and evaluation system, and impact measurement

Monitoring the Patients and Baseline Evaluations

Assessment of Treatment Response in New and Previously Treated Pulmonary TB

Definition of Treatment Response

Outcome Definition
Cure A patient with positive sputum smear/positive culture at the beginning of the therapy that are converted into smear-negative/culture-negative in the last month of therapy and on at least one previous occasion.
Treatment completed A patient who completed treatment but who does not have a negative sputum smear or culture result in the last month of therapy and on at least one previous occasionb ( Two consecutive negative specimens )
Treatment failure A patient with positive sputum smear or culture at 5 months or later during treatment course or has a multidrug-resistant (MDR) strain at any point of time during the course of treatment, whether they are smear-positive or smear-negative.
Died A patient who dies for any cause during the treatment course.
Default A patient whose course of treatment was interrupted for ≥ 2 months.
Transfer out A patient who was transferred to another recording and reporting unit and whose outcome of treatment is unknown.
Treatment success A sum of cured and completed treatmentc
A: These definitions can be applied to both pulmonary smear-positive and smear-negative patients, and also to patients with extrapulmonary disease.
b: The sputum examination may not have been performed or the results may not be available.
c: For smear- or culture-positive patients only.

Identification and Management of Patients at Increased Risk of Treatment Failure and Relapse

  • Approximately 80% of patients with pulmonary tuberculosis caused by drug-susceptible organisms who are started on standard four-drug therapy will have negative sputum cultures at this time. Patients with positive cultures after 2 months of treatment should undergo a careful evaluation to determine the cause.
  • The risk factors for adverse outcomes (treatment failure or relapse) include:

Prevention of Adverse Effects of Drugs

Isoniazid-induced peripheral neuropathy manifests as:

  • Adding Pyridoxine is recommended as a preventive treatment (10 mg/day with anti-TB drugs). Other guidelines recommend 25 mg/day.[6]

Symptom-Based Approach for Side-Effects of Anti-tuberculous Drugs

The Role of Drug-Susceptibility Testing (DST)

  • Initial Phase:
  • DST is performed for all TB patients at the initiation of treatment to determine most appropriate therapy for each patient. However, the target of universal access to DST has not yet been recognized for most of the worldwide TB patients. Although countries are increasing laboratory capacity and implementing new rapid tests, WHO recommends that sputum specimens for testing susceptibility to isoniazid and rifampicin be performed for the following patient groups at the start of treatment:
  • All previously treated patients. The highest levels of MDR are detected in patients whose previous course of treatment has failed.
  • All individuals living with HIV plus they are diagnosed with active TB, particularly if they live in areas of high MDR prevalence. It is necessary to identify MDR as soon as possible in patients living with HIV because of their high risk of mortality.
  • Continuation Phase:
  • If rapid molecular-based DST is available, the results of MDR can be confirmed or excluded within 1-2 days, hence it can guide the choice of treatment regimen.
  • If DST is not available, the first-line drugs include 2HRZES/1HRZE/5HRE if country-specific data reports low or medium levels of MDR in its patients or if such data are not available
  • When DST results become available, treatment regimens should be adjusted accordingly.

Recommendations For New Patients

  • In new patients, if the specimen performed at the end of the intensive phase second month is smear-positive, sputum smear microscopy should be done at the end of the third month (strong/High grade of evidence).
  • In new patients, if the specimen performed at the end of third month is smear-positive, sputum culture and drug susceptibility testing (DST) should be done (strong/High grade of evidence)
  • For smear-positive pulmonary TB patients treated with first-line drugs, sputum smear microscopy may be performed at the completion of the intensive phase of treatment (conditional/High or moderate grade of evidence).
  • Sputum should be collected after the 1st dose of the intensive phase treatment. The end of the intensive phase is defined as the end of the 2nd month in new patients and the end of the 3rd month in previously treated patients receiving the 8-month regimen of first-line agents. This recommendation also applies to smear-negative patients.
  • Sputum specimens must be collected for smear examination at every follow-up sputum check. They must be collected without interrupting the treatment course and transported to the laboratory urgently.
  • The status of sputum smear at the end of the intensive phase is a poor predictor of relapse. However, identification of a positive sputum smear is still an essential way of the patient assessment.
  • The number of sputum smear-positive patients converted to negative at the end of the intensive phase is considered a good indicator of TB program performance.

Management of Treatment Interruption[1]

Time Point of Interruption Details of Interruption Approach
During intensive phase *Lapse is <14 d in duration Lapse is <14 d in duration Continue treatment to complete planned total number of doses (as long as all doses are completed within 3 mo)
Lapse is ≥14 d in duration Restart treatment from the beginning
During continuation phase Received ≥80% of doses and sputum was AFB smear negative on initial testing Additional therapy may not be necessary
*Received ≥80% of doses and sputum was AFB smear positive on initial testing Continue the treatment until all doses are completed
Received <80% of doses and accumulative lapse is <3 mo in duration Continue therapy until all doses are completed (full course), unless consecutive lapse is >2 mo

If treatment regimen cannot be completed within the recommended time frame, restart therapy (ie, restart intensive phase then the continuation phase)

*Received <80% of doses and lapse is ≥3 mo in duration Restart therapy with new intensive and continuation phases (ie, restart intensive phase then the continuation phase)

Managing Side-Effects of Anti-TB Drugs[7]

Side-Effects Causative Drugs Management
Severe Side-Effects
Skin Rash With Or Without Itching Streptomycin, Isoniazid, Rifampicin, Pyrazinamide Stop anti-TB drugs
Deafness (no wax on otoscopy) Streptomycin Stop anti-TB drugs
Dizziness (vertigo and nystagmus) Streptomycin Stop anti-TB drugs
Jaundice (other causes excluded), hepatitis Isoniazid, Rifampicin, Pyrazinamide Stop anti-TB drugs
Confusion/jaundice (drug-induced acute liver failure) Most anti-TB drugs Stop anti-TB drugs
Visual impairment (other causes excluded) Ethambutol Stop anti-TB drugs
Shock, purpura, acute renal failure Rifampicin Stop anti-TB drugs
Decreased Urine Output Streptomycin Stop anti-TB drugs
Minor Side-Effects
Anorexia, nausea, abdominal pain Isoniazid, Rifampicin, Pyrazinamide Give drugs with small meals or before bedtime, swallow pills slowly with small sips of water.
If symptoms persist or worsen, or there is protracted vomiting or any sign of bleeding,
consider the side-effect to be major and refer to clinician urgently.
Joint pains Pyrazinamide Aspirin or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, or paracetamol
Burning, numbness or tingling sensation in the hands or feet Isoniazid Pyridoxine 50–75 mg daily
Drowsiness Isoniazid Reassurance. Give drugs before bedtime
Orange/red urine Rifampicin Reassurance, Patients should be told when starting treatment that this may happen and is normal
Flu-like syndrome Intermittent dosing of Rifampicin Change from intermittent to daily Rifampicin
† Fever, chills, malaise, headache, bone pain

Treatment Failure

  • Failure to respond to anti-TB drugs means;
  • Smear or culture are still positive at the fifth month or later.
  • MDR-TB is detected at any point of treatment.
  • Treatment failure necessitate to step-wise approach to identify the causes of failure which could be due to any of the following features[8]
  • Poor supervision of the initial phase
  • Poor patient adherence
  • Poor quality of anti-TB drugs
  • Inappropriate doses of anti-TB medications (below than recommended range)
  • Slow resolution due to progressive cavitation and a initial heavy mycobacterial load
  • Co-morbidities that interfere with the response or adherence to treatment
  • MDR M. tuberculosis with no response to the first-line treatment
  • Non-viable mycobacteria remain visible by microscopy

Treatment Regimen

  • 1. Standard regimens for new patients [9]
  • 1.1. Adult
  • 1.1.1. Initial phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 300 mg PO (5 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks AND Rifampicin 600 mg PO (10 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks AND Pyrazinamide 2 g PO (25 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks AND Ethambutol 1.6 g PO (15 mg/kg/day) qd for 8 weeks
  • Alternative regimen (1): Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) AND Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO for 2 weeks (10 mg/kg/day) AND Pyrazinamide 2 g/day PO for 2 weeks (25 mg/kg/day) AND Ethambutol 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day), followed by Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) AND Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks (10 mg/kg/day) AND Pyrazinamide 2 g/day PO twice weekly for 6 weeks AND Ethambutol 1.6 g PO for 2 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
  • Alternative regimen (2): Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) AND Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (10 mg/kg/day) AND Pyrazinamide 2g/day PO thrice weekly for 8 week (25 mg/kg/day) AND Ethambutol 1.6 g PO thrice weekly for 8 weeks (15 mg/kg/day)
  • 1.1.2 Continuation phase
  • Preferred regimen (1): Isoniazid 300 mg PO (5 mg/kg/day) qd AND Rifampicin 600 mg PO (10 mg/kg/day) qd for 18 weeks
  • Preferred regimen (2): Isoniazid 300 mg PO twice weekly (5 mg/kg/day) AND Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO twice weekly (10 mg/kg/day) for 18 weeks
  • Alternative regimen (1): Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) AND Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO biweekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
  • Alternative regimen (2): Isoniazid 300 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (5 mg/kg/day) AND Rifampicin 600 mg/day PO thrice weekly for 18 weeks (10 mg/kg/day)
  • 1.2 Pediatric
  • 1.2.1 Initial phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 10 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 300 mg/day) AND Rifampicin 15 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 600 mg/day) AND Pyrazinamide 35 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 2 g/day) AND Ethambutol 20 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 1.6 g/day), each for 8 weeks
  • 1.2.2 Continuation phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 10 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 300 mg/day) AND Rifampicin 15 mg/kg PO (Maximum, 600 mg/day), each drug daily for 18 weeks
  • 2. RR-TB or MDR-TB Tuberculosis[10]
  • 2.1 Adult
  • Preferred regimen: At least 5 agents combination
  • 2.2 Pediatric
  • Preferred regimen: At least 5 agents combination
  • 3. XDR Tuberculosis [11]
  • 3.1 Adult
  • Preferred regimen: 3 agents combination
  • 3.2 Pediatric
  • Preferred regimen: 3 agents combination

Ocular tuberculosis

  • 1. Pathogen-directed antimicrobial therapy[12][13]
  • 1. Adult patients
  • 1.1 Intensive phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 5 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 2 months AND Rifampin 10 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 2 months AND Pyrazinamide 15–30 mg/kg (max: 2 g) PO qd for 2 months AND Ethambutol 15-20 mg/kg (max: 1 g) PO qd for 2 months
  • 1.2 Continuation phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 5 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 4 months AND Rifampin 10 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 4 months
  • 2. Pediatric patients
  • 2.1 Intensive phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 10-15 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 2 months AND Rifampin 10-20 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 2 months AND Pyrazinamide 15-30 mg/kg (max: 2 g) PO qd for 2 months AND Ethambutol
  • 2.2 Continuation phase
  • Preferred regimen: Isoniazid 10–15 mg/kg (max: 300 mg) PO qd for 4 months AND Rifampin 10–20 mg/kg (max: 600 mg) PO qd for 4 months
  • Note (1): Ethambutol may be administered at a dose of 15-20 mg/kg (max: 1 g) PO qd for 2 months but is generally avoided because of potential ocular toxicity.[14]
  • Note (2): A short course of systemic corticosteroids may be necessary initially if there is sight-threatening inflammation.


Contraindicated medications

Active tuberculosis is considered an absolute contraindication to the use of the following medications:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Clinical Infectious Diseases. Official American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Practice Guidelines: Treatment of Drug-Susceptible Tuberculosis. (2016) http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/63/7/e147.full.pdf+html Accessed on October 14, 2016
  2. 2.0 2.1 "2013 WHO Treatment of Tuberculosis: Guidelines for National Programmes (4th Edition)".
  3. Mayosi, BM.; Burgess, LJ.; Doubell, AF. (2005). "Tuberculous pericarditis". Circulation. 112 (23): 3608–16. doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.543066. PMID 16330703. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. Soler-Soler, J.; Sagristà-Sauleda, J.; Permanyer-Miralda, G. (2001). "Management of pericardial effusion". Heart. 86 (2): 235–40. PMID 11454853. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. Clinical Infectious Diseases. Official American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America Clinical Practice Guidelines: Treatment of Drug-Susceptible Tuberculosis. (2016) http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/63/7/e147.full.pdf+html Accessed on October 14, 2016
  6. "Treatment of tuberculosis". MMWR Recomm Rep. 52 (RR-11): 1–77. 2003. PMID 12836625. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  7. "http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf" (PDF). External link in |title= (help)
  8. "http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2004/9241546034.pdf" (PDF). External link in |title= (help)
  9. Treatment of tuberculosis guidelines. Geneva: World Health Organization. 2010. ISBN 9789241547833.
  10. WHO treatment guidelines for drug- resistant tuberculosis 2016 update. http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/250125/1/9789241549639-eng.pdf?ua=1Accessed on October 14, 2016
  11. "WHO".
  12. Blumberg, Henry M.; Burman, William J.; Chaisson, Richard E.; Daley, Charles L.; Etkind, Sue C.; Friedman, Lloyd N.; Fujiwara, Paula; Grzemska, Malgosia; Hopewell, Philip C.; Iseman, Michael D.; Jasmer, Robert M.; Koppaka, Venkatarama; Menzies, Richard I.; O'Brien, Richard J.; Reves, Randall R.; Reichman, Lee B.; Simone, Patricia M.; Starke, Jeffrey R.; Vernon, Andrew A.; American Thoracic Society, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Infectious Diseases Society (2003-02-15). "American Thoracic Society/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Infectious Diseases Society of America: treatment of tuberculosis". American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 167 (4): 603–662. doi:10.1164/rccm.167.4.603. ISSN 1073-449X. PMID 12588714.
  13. American Thoracic Society; CDC; Infectious Diseases Society of America (2003-06-20). "Treatment of tuberculosis". MMWR. Recommendations and reports: Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Recommendations and reports / Centers for Disease Control. 52 (RR-11): 1–77. ISSN 1057-5987. PMID 12836625.
  14. Bennett, John (2015). Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's principles and practice of infectious diseases. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier/Saunders. ISBN 978-1455748013.

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