Surveillance of adverse events in the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis: first global report.

Sergey Borisov,Edvardas Danila,Andrei Maryandyshev,Margareth Dalcolmo,Skaidrius Miliauskas,Liga Kuksa,Selene Manga,Alena Skrahina,Saulius Diktanas,Luigi Ruffo Codecasa,Alena Aleksa,Judith Bruchfeld, Antoniya Koleva,Alberto Piubello,Zarir Farokh Udwadia,Onno W Akkerman,Evgeny Belilovski,Enrique Bernal,Martin J Boeree,Julen Cadiñanos Loidi,Qingshan Cai,Jose Joaquín Cebrian Gallardo,Masoud Dara,Edita Davidavičienė,Lina Davies Forsman, Jorge De Los Rios Jefe,Justin Denholm, Jacinta Drakšienė,Raquel Duarte, Seifeldin Eltaeb Elamin, Nadia Escobar Salinas,Maurizio Ferrarese, Aleksey Filippov,Ana Garcia,José-María García-García,Ieva Gaudiesiute, Blagovesta Gavazova,Regina Gayoso, Roscio Gomez Rosso,Vygantas Gruslys,Gina Gualano,Wouter Hoefsloot,Jerker Jonsson,Elena Khimova,Heinke Kunst,Rafael Laniado-Laborín,Yang Li,Cecile Magis-Escurra,Vinicio Manfrin,Valentina Marchese,Elena Martínez Robles,Alberto Matteelli,Jesica Mazza-Stalder,Charalampos Moschos,Marcela Munoz-Torrico, Hamdan Mustafa Hamdan, Birutė Nakčerienė, Lauren Nicod, Magnolia Nieto Marcos,Domingo Juan Palmero,Fabrizio Palmieri,Apostolos Papavasileiou,Marie-Christine Payen,Agostina Pontarelli,Sarai Quirós,Adrian Rendon,Laura Saderi, Agnese Šmite,Ivan Solovic,Mahamadou Bassirou Souleymane,Marina Tadolini,Martin van den Boom,Marisa Vescovo,Pietro Viggiani,Askar Yedilbayev,Rolandas Zablockis,Dmitry Zhurkin,Matteo Zignol,Dina Visca,Antonio Spanevello,Jose A Caminero,Jan-Willem Alffenaar,Simon Tiberi,Rosella Centis,Lia D'Ambrosio,Emanuele Pontali,Giovanni Sotgiu,Giovanni Battista Migliori

EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL(2019)

引用 155|浏览28
暂无评分
摘要
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that countries implement pharmacovigilance and collect information on active drug safety monitoring (aDSM) and management of adverse events. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the frequency and severity of adverse events to anti-tuberculosis (TB) drugs in a cohort of consecutive TB patients treated with new (i.e. bedaquiline, delamanid) and repurposed (i.e. clofazimine, linezolid) drugs, based on the WHO aDSM project. Adverse events were collected prospectively after attribution to a specific drug together with demographic, bacteriological, radiological and clinical information at diagnosis and during therapy. This interim analysis included patients who completed or were still on treatment at time of data collection. Globally, 45 centres from 26 countries/regions reported 658 patients (68.7% male, 4.4% HIV coinfected) treated as follows: 87.7% with bedaquiline, 18.4% with delamanid (6.1% with both), 81.5% with linezolid and 32.4% with clofazimine. Overall, 504 adverse event episodes were reported: 447 (88.7%) were classified as minor (grade 1-2) and 57 (11.3%) as serious (grade 3-5). The majority of the 57 serious adverse events reported by 55 patients (51 out of 57, 89.5%) ultimately resolved. Among patients reporting serious adverse events, some drugs held responsible were discontinued: bedaquiline in 0.35% (two out of 577), delamanid in 0.8% (one out of 121), linezolid in 1.9% (10 out of 536) and clofazimine in 1.4% (three out of 213) of patients. Serious adverse events were reported in 6.9% (nine out of 131) of patients treated with amikacin, 0.4% (one out of 221) with ethionamide/prothionamide, 2.8% (15 out of 536) with linezolid and 1.8% (eight out of 498) with cycloserine/terizidone. The aDSM study provided valuable information, but implementation needs scaling-up to support patient-centred care.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要