Background
To assess the validity of sputum culture conversion (SCC) on solid media at varying time points and the time to SCC as prognostic markers for end-of-treatment outcome in multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) patients.
Methods
Data on1,712 MDR-TB patients from two large cohort studies were analyzed. Measures of association were determined using random effects multivariable logistic regression. Predictive values were calculated using bivariate random-effects generalized linear mixed model.
Findings
Times to SCC and SCC status at 6 months were significantly associated with treatment success compared to failure or death. SCC status at 2 months was significantly associated with treatment success among patients without known HIV infection only. The overall association of SCC with a successful outcome was substantially stronger at 6 months (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]=14.07, 95% CI 10.05–19.71) than at 2 months (HIV-negative patients: aOR=4.12 [2.25–7.54]; HIV unknown: aOR=3.59 [1.96–6.58], HIV-positive: aOR=0.38 [0.12–1.18]). The 2-month SCC had low sensitivity (27%) and high specificity (90%) for predicting treatment success. Conversely, 6-month SCC status had high sensitivity (92%), but moderate specificity (58%). The maximum combined sensitivity and specificity for SCC was reached between the 6th and 10th month of treatment.
Interpretation
Time to SCC, SCC status at 6 months, and SCC status at 2 months among patients without known HIV infection can be considered proxy markers of end-of-treatment outcome in MDR-TB patients, but the overall association with treatment success is substantially stronger for 6-month compared to 2-month SCC.
Funding
USAID, the US CDC, the Division of Intramural Research of NIAID/NIH, and the Republic of Korea’s CDC.
Increasing drug resistance was associated in a logical stepwise manner with poor treatment outcomes. Acquired resistance was worse than initial resistance to the same drugs. Increasing numbers of effective drugs, specific drugs, and specific program characteristics were associated with better outcomes and less acquired resistance.
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