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Anti Tuberculosis

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Title: Anti Tuberculosis


1
Anti Tuberculosis
  • Norah A A AL KHATHLAN MD

2
Pediatrics TB
  • Pediatrics TB
  • 1st line drugs.
  • 2nd line drugs.
  • Treatment Regimens
  • DOTS.
  • MDR_TB.

3
Pediatric TUBERCULOSIS
  • Tuberculosis (TB) is an airborne infection caused
    by the bacterium mycobacterium tuberculosis.
    Although TB primarily affects the lungs, other
    organs and tissues may be affected as well.

4
Pediatrics Tuberculosis
  • Diagnosis of tuberculosis in children is
    difficult and poses problems that are not present
    in adults. Children are less likely to have
    obvious symptoms of tuberculosis. In addition,
    sputum samples are difficult to collect from
    children. Culture and drug susceptibility results
    from tests of the adult source case often have to
    be relied upon for diagnosing and properly
    treating tuberculosis in a child.

5
Pediatrics Tuberculosis
  • Tuberculosis in infants and children younger than
    4 years of age is much more likely to spread
    throughout the body through the bloodstream. In
    addition, children are at much greater risk of
    developing tuberculous meningitis. For these
    reasons, prompt diagnosis and immediate treatment
    of tuberculosis are critical in pediatric cases.

6
Pediatrics Tuberculosis
  • In general, the same methods are used in treating
    tuberculosis in children as are used in treating
    tuberculosis in adults. The primary difference
    between treatment for adults and children is the
    use of ethambutol ,which is not routinely
    recommended for children under eight years old.

7
Pediatrics Tuberculosis
  • The best method to prevent cases of pediatric
    tuberculosis is to find, diagnose, and treat
    cases of active tuberculosis among adults.
    Children do not usually contract tuberculosis
    from other children or transmit it themselves.
    Adults are usually the ones who pass tuberculosis
    on to children

8
Pediatrics Tuberculosis
  • Improved contact investigations and use of
    directly observed therapy DOT should improve
    the success rate of finding and treating adult
    cases of tuberculosis and therefore reduce the
    number of cases of pediatric tuberculosis.

9
Pediatrics Tuberculosis1st Line Drugs
Drug Introd TB Admi. Toxic. Cost
INH 1952 Oral Low Low
RMP 1965 Oral Low Med
PZA 1970 Oral Low Med
SM 1944 IM Med High
EMB 1968 Oral Low Med
10
Pediatrics Tuberculosis2nd Line Drugs
Ethionmide 1966 Oral High Med
Kanamycin/ Amikacin 1957 IM Med High
cycloserine 1955 oral High High
Capromycin 1967 IM Med High
Thioacetazone 1950 Oral Med Low
P-amino Salicylic acid (PAS) 1946 Oral Med High
Ofloxacin 1987 oral Low High
11
Pediatrics TuberculosisTreatment Regimens
  • 9 months INH RIF daily for 2 months then twice
    weekly..old!!
  • 6 months of INH RIF with PZA for 1st 2 months
    100 cure rates
  • 9-12 months CNS Bone Joints
  • 6-12 months of 3 drugs in HIV pts
  • 9 months INH only for LATENT TB
  • Corticosteroids..special indications!

12
DOTS
  • Directly Observed Treatment
  • Short_Course
  • What is DOTS?
  • DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course)
  • IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE STRATEGY
  • STRATEGY
  • available for controlling the TB epidemic today

13
DOTS cont.
  • DOTS is ESSENTIAL AT LEAST DURING THE INTENSIVE
    PHASE OF TREATMENT (the first two months) to
    ensure that the drugs are taken in the right
    combinations and for the appropriate duration.
  • With direct observation of treatment, the patient
    doesn't bear the sole responsibility of adhering
    to treatment. Health care workers, public health
    officials, governments, and communities must all
    share the responsibility and provide support
    services patients need to continue and finish
    treatment.

14
DOTS cont.
  • Standardized Short-course Chemotherapy with
    Direct Observation of Drug Intake
  • Short-course chemotherapy refers to a
  • PROCESS TREATEMENT REGIMEN THAT LASTS SIX TO
    EIGHT MONTHS AND USES A COMBINATION OF POWERFUL
    ANTI-TB DRUGS.
  • Standardized regimens are based on whether the
    patient is classified as a new case or a
    previously treated case.

15
DOTS cont.
  • DOTS produces cure rates of up to 95 percent even
    in the poorest countries.

16
DOTS cont.
  • DOTS prevents new infections by curing infectious
    patients.
  • DOTS prevents the development of MDR-TB by
    ensuring the full course of treatment is
    followed.
  • A six-month supply of drugs for DOTS costs US 11
    per patient in some parts of the world. The World
    Bank has ranked the DOTS strategy as one of the
    "most cost-effective of all health
    interventions."

17
MDR_TB
  • MDR_TB refers to Multi drug-resistant
    tuberculosis which is a form of tuberculosis that
    is resistant to two or more of the primary drugs
    used for treatment .

18
MDR_TB cont.
  • Resistance to one or several forms of treatment
    occurs when the bacteria develops the ability to
    withstand antibiotic attack and relay that
    ability to their progeny. Since that entire
    strain of bacteria inherits this capacity to
    resist the effects of the various treatments,
    resistance can spread from one person to another.
    On an individual basis, however, inadequate
    treatment or improper use of the
    anti-tuberculosis medications remains an
    important cause of drug-resistant tuberculosis.

19
MDR_TB cont.
  • The diagnosis of MDR-TB is established with an
    isolate that is resistant to both INH and
    rifampin. Resistance may be
  • Initial (no known history of prior treatment)
  • Secondary (acquired on therapy or due to previous
    inadequate therapy).

20
MDR_TB cont.
  • A strain of MDR TB originally develops when a
    case of drug-susceptible tuberculosis is
    improperly or incompletely treated. This occurs
    when a physician does not prescribe proper
    treatment regimens or when a patient is unable to
    adhere to therapy. Improper treatment allows
    individual TB bacilli that have natural
    resistance to a drug to multiply. Eventually the
    majority of bacilli in the body are resistant.

21
MDR_TB cont.
  • Risk factors for initial resistance include
    exposure to a patient who has MDR-TB or being
    from a country or region with a high prevalence
    of resistance.
  • Symptoms and radiographic findings do not
    differentiate MDR-TB from fully susceptible TB.
  • Suspect MDR-TB if the patient is on DOT with 4
    first-line drugs (no diarrhea) and has no
    improvement in symptoms within 1-2 weeks.

22
MDR_TB cont.
  • Treatment for MDR TB involves drug therapy over
    many months or years. Despite the longer course
    of treatment, the cure rate decreases from over
    90 percent for nonresistant strains of TB to 50
    percent or less for MDR TB.
  • One should continue treatment for MDR-TB 18-24
    months after sputum culture conversion.
  • The drugs should be prescribed daily (no
    intermittent therapy) and the patient should
    always be on DOT.

23
MDR_TB cont.
  • Consult an expert on MDR-TB.
  • Costs may be quite high .
  • Treatment should include an injectable drug
    together with at least 3 or better still 4 more
    drugs to which the isolate is susceptible.

24
Is It MDR_TB Or is it NTM ?
  • Consider Non Tuberculous Mycobacterium NTM prior
    to assuming MDR_TB !
  • Chest CT maybe helpful
  • Positive smears with negative cultures
  • PCR may be of help
  • Treatment is slightly different

25
The worrying facts
  • The TB Epidemic must be stopped!
  • A third of the world's population is infected
    with the TB bacillus.
  • Someone is infected with tuberculosis every
    second.

26
The worrying facts
  • About 8 million people became sick with TB in
    1999.
  • Thirty million people could die from TB in the
    next 10 years
  • TB is the leading infectious killer of youth and
    adults.

27
The worrying facts
  • TB is a leading killer of women.
  • TB likely creates more orphans than any other
    infectious disease.

28
The worrying facts
  • TB is the leading infectious killer of people
    living with HIV/AIDS.
  • Every country is vulnerable to the consequences
    of poor TB treatment practices in other
    countries.
  • Estimates are based on reports made by
    countries to the World Health Organization and
    WHO incidence estimates. All numbers are based on
    most recent year of available data.
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