“Totally Drug-Resistant” Tuberculosis Is A Misnomer, Scientists Say

The “totally drug-resistant” tuberculosis reportedly emerging in India is actually an advanced stage of drug-resistant TB, which researchers called totally drug-resistant for lack of a better term.

AsianScientist (Jan. 23, 2012) – The “totally drug-resistant” tuberculosis (TDR-TB) reportedly emerging in India is actually an advanced stage of drug-resistant TB, which researchers called totally drug-resistant for lack of a better term.

“Whilst waiting for the WHO [World Health Organization] to define this advanced stage of resistance, TDR is a good descriptor,” Zarir Udwadia, a doctor from PD Hinduja National Hospital and Medical Research Center in Mumbai, India, told IRIN.

Udwadia and colleagues reported in late December on the first cases of what they called TDR-TB in four patients who did not respond to 12 drugs used to treat TB, based on lab tests.

Drug-resistant TB develops when patients do not complete the recommended six-month antibiotics treatment correctly or take sub-standard drugs, which then increases treatment time and costs.

Three of the four patients in Mumbai studied had “received erratic, unsupervised second-line drugs, added individually and in incorrect doses” from multiple doctors trying to cure their multidrug resistance, noted the researchers.

WHO recognizes two groups of drug-resistant TB: multidrug-resistant (MDR-TB) occurs when patients do not respond to the two most effective first-line anti-TB drugs – isoniazid and rifampicin; and extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB), where second-line treatments such as fluoroquinolone and anti-TB injectable drugs also fail.

“In reality it is not clear what ‘total’ really means – hardly ever do labs test against all drugs,” Paul Nunn, a TB expert with WHO’s TB control department, who has led the agency’s global response to XDR-TB since 2006, told IRIN.

WHO has issued treatment guidelines for 14 drugs – six that were not tested by the Indian labs – for TB cases that do not respond to the four “first-line” drugs.

In a January 13 briefing note, WHO explained how the lack of international standards on lab testing to determine sensitivity to some anti-TB drugs made it difficult to rule out a cure. While a strain of TB may not respond to a drug in a lab, it may do so in an infected person, said Nunn.

In addition, as new anti-TB drugs are still under development, their effectiveness against the reportedly totally drug-resistant strains cannot yet be proven, said WHO.

WHO is convening a meeting of TB experts in March to consider whether a new TB definition is needed.

“If ‘totally drug-resistant’ TB defines a subset of XDR-TB with different characteristics to other XDR-TB cases, particularly with respect to the outcome of such cases, then an internationally recognized definition may be needed,” noted WHO in its recent post.

Medical literature has recorded 21 cases labeled TDR-TB in Germany, Italy, Iran, and now India. By the end of 2010, 69 countries reported to WHO at least one case of XDR-TB, with China and India accounting for almost half the world’s estimated number of MDR-TB cases.

In 2010, 16 of the 36 countries with a high burden of TB or MDR-TB did not have at least one laboratory capable of performing TB culture and drug susceptibility testing per five million people.

——

Source: IRIN.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

IRIN was launched in 1995, in response to the gap in humanitarian reporting exposed by the Rwandan genocide and its aftermath. It is an editorially independent, non-profit project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), funded entirely by voluntary contributions from governments and other institutions. http://www.irinnews.org/

Related Stories from Asian Scientist