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Extreme Drug Resistant TB and the Work Place Dr Jennifer Coetzee Ampath Page 1 Outline • The “ABC” of TB drug resistance – Current anti-TB drugs available – What is MDR? – What is XDR? – How does TB drug resistance develop? • Epidemiology of XDR TB • XDR TB in the work place? • Prevention and management of TB transmission in the occupational setting Page 2 Anti TB Drugs Currently Available • • • • • • 1st Line Drugs: INH Rifampicin PZA Ethambutol Streptomycin • • • • • • • • 2nd Line Drugs Capreomycin Kanamycin Ethionamide PAS Cycloserine Quinolones Thiacetazone Page 3 The ABC of TB Drug Resistance • MDR TB: Resistance to INH and Rifampicin • XDR TB: MDR TB that is also resistant to quinolones (e.g. ciprofloxacin) and one other of 2nd line injectable drug • Thus Extreme Drug resistance • Laboratory diagnosis based on susceptibility testing • Cure rate for MDR TB +/- 50% • XDR TB 64% more likely to die than if MDR TB Page 4 How does TB drug resistance develop? • Spontaneous and random mutations in the bacterial • chromosome: –INH - 1 X 106 organisms –Rif - 1 x 108 –EMB - 1 x 106 –Strep - 1 x 105 • Probability of spontaneous mutants being simultaneously resistant to 2 or more drugs is product of individual frequencies… • INH + Rif = 106 + 108 = 1014 Page 5 MDR: Global Perspective • 50 million people infected worldwide • Low prevalence of MDR: – well functioning TBCP with DOTS, low prevalence of TB, resource rich • High prevalence of MDR TB: – high TB rates, poor countries, limited medication available • MDR rates estimated to be 3 - 4% • Primary MDR: 1 - 3% • Acquired: 7 - 17% Page 6 Implications of MDR TB • 100 X more expensive to treat • Duration of Rx up to 24 months – Patient hospitalised for 4 - 6 months • • • • • • Extensive laboratory monitoring required Side effects of 2nd line drugs significant Inconvenient routes of administration >30% default rate Treatment failure > 10% if optimally Mx Mortality rate: – 30 - 40% if HIV uninfected – 70 - 80% if HIV infected Page 7 XDR TB • Hot off the press • Term coined in March 2006 • Report published in MMWR 24/03/06 • 350 cases worldwide between 2000 and 2004 • Primarily in South Korea, Eastern Europe and western Asia • 74 cases in USA Page 8 Current Situation XDR • USA: 4% of MDR cases meet criteria for XDR • Latvia: 19% of MDR cases considered XDR • Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Britain: – XDR TB increased from 3% of drug resistant cases to 11% (2000 to 2004) • Pandemic threat! Page 9 RSA: The Tugela Ferry Event • In Tugela Ferry HIV/TB co-infected patients, responding to ARV but not to ATT, were identified early 2005 • This prompted culture and susceptibility testing • Infection with highly resistant M.tuberculosis Page 10 South African Situation (Tugela Ferry) Surveillance at District Hospital: 1428 Patients with sputum sent 921 Culture-Negative 475 (34%) Culture-Positive for M.tb Lancet 2006, 368:1575-1580 Page 11 475 patients Culture-Positive for M.tb 290 Susceptible or Resistant but not MDR 185 (39%) Resistant to Isoniazid & Rifampin (MDR TB) 30 (6%) Resistant to all tested drugs (XDR TB) Prof. W. Sturm Page 12 Overall Data for the Area • • • • • 52 of 53 people with XDR TB died 44 were co-infected with HIV Average survival was 16 days after sputum collection 55% of the patients were primary XDR! At least 2 HCWs were infected, died. A further 4 were suspected to have contracted XDR TB • Strain resistant to all 7 anti-TB drugs available in SA • Impact of 5.5 million people infected with HIV/AIDS Page 13 Susceptibility Pattern • • • • • Isoniazide Rifampicin Pyrazinamide Ethambutol Streptomycin R R R R R • • • • • • Kanamycin/amikacin Ciprofloxacin/ofloxacin Ethionamide Cycloserine Capreomycin PAS R R S ? S ? Page 14 XDR TB and the Work Place • Health care workers from KZN only published proven transmission of XDR TB to have occurred to date • Recent case of patient with XDR TB on aeroplane in US • Outbreaks of MDR TB has been well described • No evidence to suggest that MDR or XDR TB is more easily transmitted than drug susceptible TB Page 15 Principles of TB Transmission • Inhalation of microscopic, aerosolised particles containing TB bacilli • Vast majority: particles elaborated by coughing, sneezing or singing • Alveolar deposition thought to be essential – Tiny enough to drift with inspired air rather than impact on mucous membranes • Droplet nuclei of 0.5-5 µm usually vectors of infection • Patients with extensive pulmonary TB pose greatest risk • Study form Alabama, gradient of skin-test reactivity of contacts: – HHCs to smear (+) cases: 46% – Non-HHCs to smear (+) cases: 34% – HHCs to smear (-), culture (+) cases: 28% – Non-HHCs to smear (-), culture (+) cases: 24% Page 16 Environmental Factors That Increase the Risk of Transmission of TB • Exposure to TB in small, enclosed spaces • Inadequate local or general ventilation that results in insufficient dilution or removal of infectious nuclei • Recirculation of air containing infectious droplet nuclei • Inadequate cleaning and disinfection of medical equipment • Improper procedure for handling specimens Page 17 Risk for Health-Care Associated Transmission of TB • Transmission and outbreaks well described • Magnitude of risk varies by: – Setting – Occupational group – Prevalence of TB in the community – Patient population – Effectiveness of TB infection-control measures Page 18 Outbreaks in Health-Care Settings • Multiple outbreaks involved transmission of MDR TB strains to both patients and HCWs – Majority of patients and HCWs were HIV infected • Also outbreaks described in outpatient settings • Factors contributing to outbreaks: – Delayed diagnosis of TB disease – Delayed initiation and inadequate airborne precautions – Inadequate precautions for cough-inducing and aerosolgenerating procedures – Lack of adequate respiratory protection Page 19 Principles of Management of TB Contacts • Earliest possible identification of index cases – Rapid laboratory detection of MDR TB if indicated • Duration / time-line of exposure often unknown • Baseline CXR, symptom screening • Diagnosis of latent TB infection – Role of blood assays, incl. TB Spot, Quantiferon Gold – Skin testing? • Counseling, HIV testing imperative – Risk of reactivation disease • Treatment of latent TB infection • If exposed to MDR/XDR TB, to be referred to infectious disease specialist. Optimal therapy unknown. Page 20 Conclusion “After 25 years working in TB treatment, I’m extremely concerned - we see very little progress, and there seems to be complacency in general about TB” Dr Karin Weyer, August 2006 Page 21