16 research outputs found

    Impact of adjuvant therapeutic surgery on the health-related quality of life of pulmonary tuberculosis patients

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    Altres ajuts: This study was funded by the Spanish Government-FEDER Funds through CV contracts CP13/00174, CPII14/00021 and PI16/01511 grant; the "CIBER Enfermedades Respiratorias" Network (CIBERES); the "Spanish Society of Pneumology and Thoracic Surgery" (SEPAR) through grant 16/023; and the "Agència de Gestió d'Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca" (AGAUR) through AD contract (2017 FI_B_00797).This study aimed to determine the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) and to assess its change after a therapeutic surgical procedure. In this scenario, the purpose was to elucidate and quantify the effect of various demographic, epidemiological, clinical, surgical and psychosocial details on this variable. A prospective cohort of 40 patients undergoing therapeutic surgery for pulmonary TB (Study of Human Tuberculosis Lesions (SH-TBL) cohort) was recruited in Tbilisi, Georgia, between 2016 and 2018. HRQoL was assessed by administering the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and a novel psychosocial questionnaire, the BCN-Q, both at baseline and at 6 months post-surgery. A statistically and clinically significant improvement in the SGRQ total score was observed at follow-up, although it did not reach the values found for the healthy population. The differences between time points were statistically significant for the following groups: women, age <40 years, body mass index ≥20 kg·m −2, nonsmokers, drug-susceptible and drug-resistant participants, both new and relapsed patients, early culture negativisation, cases with a single lesion, either lesions <35 mm or ≥35 mm, and lesion, lobe and lung resections. The analysis of BCN-Q together with the SGRQ showed that several of its items, such as marital status, living conditions, nutrition, employment, external support, certain attitudes towards the healthcare system, emotional burden and sleep troubles, can impact HRQoL. These results highlight the benefit of adjuvant therapeutic surgery for pulmonary TB in selected patients in terms of HRQoL and suggest that a comprehensive approach including demographic, epidemiological, clinical and psychosocial variables may more accurately predict TB evolution and prognosis. Adjuvant therapeutic surgery in selected pulmonary TB patients improves their health-related quality of life. Impact of psychosocial variables on HRQoL may be assessed using a newly developed questionnaire, namely BCN-Q

    Retrospective study of clinical and lesion characteristics of patients undergoing surgical treatment for Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Georgia

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    Altres ajuts: This work was supported by CIBER Enfermedades Respiratorias (CB06/06/0031); and the SEPAR trough Project 2016/023.Our aim was to retrospectively compare clinical data and characteristics of removed lesions of the cohort of patients undergoing therapeutical surgery for their tuberculosis. Demographic and epidemiological details, clinical data, data on the surgery performed, macroscopic characteristics of the TB lesions removed, and outcome were recorded retrospectively from the 137 patients who underwent therapeutical surgery for their TB in Tbilisi, Georgia during 2014 and 2015. Men represented 70% of the included patients, presented more comorbidities and underwent operation earlier in terms of days between diagnostic and surgery. Women underwent operation at younger ages, and in MDR/XDR-TB cases, showed higher percentages of sputum conversion at >2 months and of fresh necrosis in the surgical specimens, suggesting a worse evolution. Half of cases were MDR/XDR-TB cases. In spite of being considered microbiologically cured according to WHO, a non despricable percentage of cases showed viable bacilli in the surgical specimen. Even if no causality could be statistically demonstrated, differences could be encountered according to gender and drug susceptibility of the responsible strains. According to our results, host factors such as gender, type of necrosis found in the lesions, size of lesions and presence of viable bacilli in the surgical specimen, should be included in future studies on therapeutical surgery of TB. As most of studies are done in MDR/XDR-TB, more data on DS-TB operated cases are needed. Our results also highlight that, in spite of achieving the microbiologically cured status, sterilization might not occur, and thus new biomarkers and new methods to evaluate the healing process of TB patients are urgently needed and radiological assays should be taken into account

    Cost-effectiveness of bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid for treatment of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis in South Africa, Georgia and the Philippines

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    Objectives Patients with highly resistant tuberculosis have few treatment options. Bedaquiline, pretomanid and linezolid regimen (BPaL) is a new regimen shown to have favourable outcomes after six months. We present an economic evaluation of introducing BPaL against the extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) standard of care in three epidemiological settings. Design Cost-effectiveness analysis using Markov cohort model. Setting South Africa, Georgia and the Philippines. Participants XDR-TB and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) failure and treatment intolerant patients.InterventionsBPaL regimen. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: (1) Incremental cost per disability-adjusted life years averted by using BPaL against standard of care at the Global Drug Facility list price. (2) The potential maximum price at which the BPaL regimen could become cost neutral. Results BPaL for XDR-TB is likely to be cost saving in all study settings when pretomanid is priced at the Global Drug Facility list price. The magnitude of these savings depends on the prevalence of XDR-TB in the country and can amount, over 5 years, to approximately US3millioninSouthAfrica,US 3 million in South Africa, US 200 000 and US60000inGeorgiaandthePhilippines,respectively.InSouthAfrica,relatedfuturecostsofantiretroviraltreatment(ART)duetosurvivalofmorepatientsfollowingtreatmentwithBPaLreducedthemagnitudeofexpectedsavingstoapproximatelyUS 60 000 in Georgia and the Philippines, respectively. In South Africa, related future costs of antiretroviral treatment (ART) due to survival of more patients following treatment with BPaL reduced the magnitude of expected savings to approximately US 1 million. Overall, when BPaL is introduced to a wider population, including MDR-TB treatment failure and treatment intolerant, we observe increased savings and clinical benefits. The potential threshold price at which the probability of the introduction of BPaL becoming cost neutral begins to increase is higher in Georgia and the Philippines (US3650andUS 3650 and US 3800, respectively) compared with South Africa (US$ 500) including ART costs. Conclusions Our results estimate that BPaL can be a cost-saving addition to the local TB programmes in varied programmatic settings

    Genomic analyses of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from human lung resections reveal a high frequency of polyclonal infections

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    11 páginas, 5 figuras, 1 tablaPolyclonal infections occur when at least two unrelated strains of the same pathogen are detected in an individual. This has been linked to worse clinical outcomes in tuberculosis, as undetected strains with different antibiotic resistance profiles can lead to treatment failure. Here, we examine the amount of polyclonal infections in sputum and surgical resections from patients with tuberculosis in the country of Georgia. For this purpose, we sequence and analyse the genomes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from the samples, acquired through an observational clinical study (NCT02715271). Access to the lung enhanced the detection of multiple strains (40% of surgery cases) as opposed to just using a sputum sample (0-5% in the general population). We show that polyclonal infections often involve genetically distant strains and can be associated with reversion of the patient's drug susceptibility profile over time. In addition, we find different patterns of genetic diversity within lesions and across patients, including mutational signatures known to be associated with oxidative damage; this suggests that reactive oxygen species may be acting as a selective pressure in the granuloma environment. Our results support the idea that the magnitude of polyclonal infections in high-burden tuberculosis settings is underestimated when only testing sputum samples.The authors were supported by projects SAF2016-77346-R and PID2019-104477RB-I00 awarded to IC and the grant BES-2017-079656 awarded to MM by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and Ministry of Science, the ERC project 638553-TBACCELERATE awarded to IC, Spanish Government-FEDER Funds through CV contract CPII18/00031 and grant PI16/01511, and Generalitat Valencia Grant to I.C. (code PROMETEO/2020/012). The grant providers played no part in study design, data collection, and analysis, or the preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewe

    Development of the food supplement Nyaditum resae as a new tool to reduce the risk of tuberculosis development

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    Nyaditum resae (NR) is a galenic preparation of heat-killed Mycobacterium manresensis (hkMn). This is a new species that belongs to the Mycobacterium fortuitum complex, and it is present in drinking water—thus, regulatorily speaking, it is considered a food supplement. Preclinical studies in the murine model of active tuberculosis (TB) in the C3HeB/FeJ strain have demonstrated that daily administration of NR containing 103–106 hkMn for 14 days was able to stop the progression toward active TB [1]. The mechanism of action was linked to the induction of low dose tolerance and was related to the increase of Tuberculin Purified Protein Derivative (PPD) memory-specific Tregs (CD4+CD25+CD39+ cells) after ex vivo incubation of splenocytes for 7 days. This increase of Tregs was related to the increase of interleukin (IL)-10 in the spleen and in the reduction of IL-17 in the lungs, where there was also a reduction in bacillary load and the pathology caused by a reduction of neutrophiles' infiltration [2]. Two randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trials (CTs) have been conducted in humans. The NYADATREG study (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02076139; 2013–2014) was aimed to evaluate the safety and the immunogenicity of two concentrations of NR (containing 104 hkMn and 105 hkMn) versus placebo (all administered orally everyday for 14 days) in tuberculin-positive and tuberculin-negative volunteers (total n = 51). The results demonstrated an excellent safety record, with no differences between groups in terms of adverse effects. A significant increase in PPD-specific memory regulatory T cells was also detected in both NR groups [3]. The NYADAPETRICS study (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02581579) is evaluating the safety and immunogenicity of NR 105 hkMn (capsule format, orally) in the pediatric population. Currently, an efficacy study (randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled CT) is being conducted in Georgia. This NYADAGEORG trial includes close contacts of active TB cases with positive sputum not tributaries of chemoprophylaxis (<5-year-old children and HIV-positive individuals), which will receive NR (containing 105 hkMn) or placebo (orally, every day for 14 days). A total of 3300 participants will be recruited in four medical centers around Tbilissi. The participants are monitored by telephone for up to 2 years to evaluate the incidence of active TB. The hypothesis is that the NR group will exhibit a 40% reduction in expected TB incidence. Thus, the anticipated TB incidence will be 3% in the NR group versus 5% in the placebo group. The CT is projected to end by 2021 (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02897180). The administration of the food supplement NR appears to be a new, easy, safe, and reliable method for reducing the risk of developing active TB, and new CTs must be encouraged to discern the particular efficacy power according to different population characteristics

    Classifying recurrent Mycobacterium tuberculosis cases in Georgia using MIRU-VNTR typing.

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    INTRODUCTION:Recurrent tuberculosis (TB) is one of the main challenges in TB control. Genotyping based on Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Units-Variable Tandem Repeats (MIRU-VNTR) has been widely used to differentiate between relapse and reinfection, which are the two main causes of recurrent TB. There is a lack of data regarding the causes of TB recurrence in Georgia, and while differentiating between relapse and reinfection plays a key role in defining appropriate interventions, the required genotyping methodologies have not been implemented. The objective of this study was to implement MIRU-VNTR genotyping at the National Center for Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases (NCTBLD) and differentiate between relapse and reinfection in multidrug resistant (MDR-) TB patients from Tbilisi, Georgia. METHODS:Recurrent MDR tuberculosis cases from 2014-2016 diagnosed at NCTLD were included in the study when bacterial samples from both episodes were available. Genotyping based on the MIRU-VNTR 24 loci was implemented and used for differentiating between relapse and reinfection. Paired samples showing the same MIRU-VNTR pattern or one locus difference were classified as relapse, while two and more loci differences were treated as reinfection. Exact logistic regression was used to identify predictors of recurrence. RESULTS:Thirty two MDR-TB patients (64 samples) were included and MIRU-VNTR 24 typing was performed on the corresponding paired samples. Of the 32 patients, 25 (83.3%) were identified as relapse while 5 (16.7%) were due to re-infection. Patients with a history of incarceration were significantly associated with TB reinfection (p< 0.05). CONCLUSION:Recurrent TB in MDR patients in Georgia are mainly caused by relapse, raising concerns on the efficacy of the TB control program. An association between incarceration and reinfection likely reflects high levels of ongoing TB transmission in prisons, indicating the need for better TB infection control measures in these settings. Our results add to the rationale for implementing genotypic surveillance of TB more broadly to support TB control in Georgia

    Impact of adjuvant therapeutic surgery on the health-related quality of life of pulmonary tuberculosis patients

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    Altres ajuts: This study was funded by the Spanish Government-FEDER Funds through CV contracts CP13/00174, CPII14/00021 and PI16/01511 grant; the "CIBER Enfermedades Respiratorias" Network (CIBERES); the "Spanish Society of Pneumology and Thoracic Surgery" (SEPAR) through grant 16/023; and the "Agència de Gestió d'Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca" (AGAUR) through AD contract (2017 FI_B_00797).This study aimed to determine the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) and to assess its change after a therapeutic surgical procedure. In this scenario, the purpose was to elucidate and quantify the effect of various demographic, epidemiological, clinical, surgical and psychosocial details on this variable. A prospective cohort of 40 patients undergoing therapeutic surgery for pulmonary TB (Study of Human Tuberculosis Lesions (SH-TBL) cohort) was recruited in Tbilisi, Georgia, between 2016 and 2018. HRQoL was assessed by administering the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and a novel psychosocial questionnaire, the BCN-Q, both at baseline and at 6 months post-surgery. A statistically and clinically significant improvement in the SGRQ total score was observed at follow-up, although it did not reach the values found for the healthy population. The differences between time points were statistically significant for the following groups: women, age <40 years, body mass index ≥20 kg·m −2, nonsmokers, drug-susceptible and drug-resistant participants, both new and relapsed patients, early culture negativisation, cases with a single lesion, either lesions <35 mm or ≥35 mm, and lesion, lobe and lung resections. The analysis of BCN-Q together with the SGRQ showed that several of its items, such as marital status, living conditions, nutrition, employment, external support, certain attitudes towards the healthcare system, emotional burden and sleep troubles, can impact HRQoL. These results highlight the benefit of adjuvant therapeutic surgery for pulmonary TB in selected patients in terms of HRQoL and suggest that a comprehensive approach including demographic, epidemiological, clinical and psychosocial variables may more accurately predict TB evolution and prognosis. Adjuvant therapeutic surgery in selected pulmonary TB patients improves their health-related quality of life. Impact of psychosocial variables on HRQoL may be assessed using a newly developed questionnaire, namely BCN-Q

    Retrospective study of clinical and lesion characteristics of patients undergoing surgical treatment for Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Georgia

    No full text
    Objectives: Our aim was to retrospectively compare clinical data and characteristics of removed lesions of the cohort of patients undergoing therapeutical surgery for their tuberculosis. Design and methods: Demographic and epidemiological details, clinical data, data on the surgery performed, macroscopic characteristics of the TB lesions removed, and outcome were recorded retrospectively from the 137 patients who underwent therapeutical surgery for their TB in Tbilisi, Georgia during 2014 and 2015. Results: Men represented 70% of the included patients, presented more comorbidities and underwent operation earlier in terms of days between diagnostic and surgery. Women underwent operation at younger ages, and in MDR/XDR-TB cases, showed higher percentages of sputum conversion at >2 months and of fresh necrosis in the surgical specimens, suggesting a worse evolution. Half of cases were MDR/XDR-TB cases. In spite of being considered microbiologically cured according to WHO, a non despricable percentage of cases showed viable bacilli in the surgical specimen. Even if no causality could be statistically demonstrated, differences could be encountered according to gender and drug susceptibility of the responsible strains. Conclusions: According to our results, host factors such as gender, type of necrosis found in the lesions, size of lesions and presence of viable bacilli in the surgical specimen, should be included in future studies on therapeutical surgery of TB. As most of studies are done in MDR/XDR-TB, more data on DS-TB operated cases are needed. Our results also highlight that, in spite of achieving the microbiologically cured status, sterilization might not occur, and thus new biomarkers and new methods to evaluate the healing process of TB patients are urgently needed and radiological assays should be taken into account

    Six-Month Response to Delamanid Treatment in MDR TB Patients

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    Delamanid, recently available for the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB), has had limited use outside clinical trials. We present the early treatment results for 53 patients from 7 countries who received a delamanid-containing treatment for MDR TB. Results show good tolerability and treatment response at 6 months
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