prothionamide and HIV-Infections

prothionamide has been researched along with HIV-Infections* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for prothionamide and HIV-Infections

ArticleYear
Treatment outcomes of rifampin-sparing treatment in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis with rifampin-mono-resistance or rifampin adverse events: A retrospective cohort analysis.
    Respiratory medicine, 2017, Volume: 131

    Rifampin (RIF) mono-resistant tuberculosis (RMR-TB) is a rare disease. Current guidelines recommend that RMR-TB be treated as multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) but the evidence is scarce.. We conducted a retrospective cohort study on pulmonary TB patients to investigate the characteristics and outcomes of RMR-TB. The characteristics of RMR-TB were compared with those with adverse events to rifampin (RAE-TB).. Forty-four RMR-TB and 29 RAE-TB patients were enrolled. RMR-TB patients showed more alcohol use, prior history of TB, and radiologically severe disease, while RAE-TB patients were older and had more comorbidities and combined extrapulmonary TB. A fluoroquinolone (FQ) was the drug most commonly added (70.5%, RMR-TB; 82.8%, RAE-TB). Median treatment duration was 453 days in RMR-TB and 371 days in RAE-TB (p = 0.001) and treatment success rates were 87.2% (34/39) and 80.0% (20/25), respectively (p = 0.586). Subanalysis of the RMR-TB group by treatment regimen (standard regimen [n = 11], standard regimen + FQ [n = 12], MDR-TB regimen [n = 21]) revealed a higher rate of radiologically severe disease in the MDR-TB subgroup, with similar treatment success rates for the subgroups (85.7% [6/7]), 91.7% [11/12], and 85.0% [17/20], respectively) despite different durations of treatment (345, 405, and 528 days, respectively). Two recurrences (33.3% [2/6]) developed only in standard regimen subgroup, suggesting that standard regimen is not enough to treat RMR-TB patients.. The treatment outcome of RMR-TB with 1

    Topics: Adult; Age Distribution; Aged; Alcohol Drinking; Aminosalicylic Acid; Antitubercular Agents; Cohort Studies; Comorbidity; Cycloserine; Ethambutol; Female; Fluoroquinolones; HIV Infections; Humans; Isoniazid; Male; Middle Aged; Prothionamide; Pyrazinamide; Republic of Korea; Retrospective Studies; Rifampin; Severity of Illness Index; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary

2017
Clinical predictors of aminoglycoside-induced ototoxicity in drug-resistant Tuberculosis patients on intensive therapy.
    Auris, nasus, larynx, 2017, Volume: 44, Issue:4

    The study objectives were to determine the incidence of aminoglycoside-induced ototoxicity in institutionalized patients on intensive phase of therapy for drug-resistant Tuberculosis (DR Tb) and also to assess clinical factors which could predict the ototoxicity.. The study was a prospective analytical study among consecutive DR Tb patients who were admitted for intensive phase of therapy (of 4 months) at the DR-Tb center over a 12-month period. Patients were diagnosed as DR Tb using the Gene Xpert machine to confirm Rifampicin resistance. All eligible 70 out of 87 consenting patients were consecutively recruited into the study. Patients had baseline (admission) and serial pure tone audiometries (PTAs) performed at 4 weekly intervals until discharge after 4 months of admission. Audiometric confirmation of aminoglycoside-induced ototoxicity was done by comparing serial with baseline PTA.. Among the 70 patients the male:female ratio was 1.7:1. Nine patients (12.9%) were retroviral-positive, and 16 patients (22.9%) were confirmed to have ototoxicity by audiometric criteria. The duration of treatment when ototoxicity was detected in the patients ranged 4-17 (Mean±SD; 9.4±3.4) weeks. Ototoxicity was detected in the audiometric low frequency ranges in 7 (43.8%) and at the high frequencies in 4 (25.0%) of the patients. Univariate analyses of clinical parameters found that age, underlying diabetes mellitus, deranged baseline PTAv >25dB HL, BMI on admission and retroviral status were significantly associated, while sex and previous drug regimen failure were not associated with ototoxicity. Multivariate adjusted logistic regression analyses, controlling for sex, revealed age (OR=1.068, p=0.018), BMI on admission (OR=0.673, p=0.012) and retroviral positivity (OR=8.822, p=0.014) of patients could significantly predict aminoglycoside-induced ototoxicity.. Incidence of aminoglycoside-induced ototoxicity in DR Tb patients was 22.9%. The clinical predictors for ototoxicity were age, BMI on admission, and co-existing retroviral infection in the patients. Clinicians should consider these factors in making choices of aminoglycosides to be used during intensive phase of treatment with second line anti-Tuberculous therapy.

    Topics: Adult; Age Factors; Aminoglycosides; Antitubercular Agents; Audiometry, Pure-Tone; Body Mass Index; Coinfection; Comorbidity; Cycloserine; Diabetes Mellitus; Female; Hearing Loss; HIV Infections; Humans; Kanamycin; Levofloxacin; Male; Middle Aged; Nigeria; Prospective Studies; Prothionamide; Pyrazinamide; Risk Factors; Time Factors; Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant; Young Adult

2017