Comparing amikacin and kanamycin-induced hearing loss in MDR-TB treatment under programmatic conditions in a Namibian retrospective cohort
Abstract
Background
Amikacin and kanamycin
are mainly used for treating multidrug-resistant tuberculosis
(MDR-TB), especially in developing countries where the burden of
MDR-TB is highest. Their protracted use in MDR-TB treatment is
known to cause dose-dependent irreversible hearing loss,
requiring hearing aids, cochlear implants or rehabilitation.
Therapeutic drug monitoring and regular audiological assessments
may help to prevent or detect the onset of hearing loss, but
these services are not always available or affordable in many
developing countries. We aimed to compare the cumulative
incidence of hearing loss among patients treated for MDR-TB with
amikacin or kanamycin-based regimens, and to identify the
most-at-risk patients, based on the real-life clinical practice
experiences in Namibia.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective
cohort study of patients treated with amikacin or
kanamycin-based regimens in four public sector MDR-TB treatment
sites in Namibia between June 2004 and March 2014. Patients were
audiologically assessed as part of clinical care. The study
outcome was the occurrence of any hearing loss. Data were
manually extracted from patients’ treatment records. We
compared proportions using the Chi-square test; applied
stratified analysis and logistic regression to study the risk of
hearing loss and to identify the most-at-risk patients through
effect-modification analysis. A P-value < 0.05
was statistically significant.
Results
All 353 patients had normal
baseline hearing, 46 % were HIV co-infected. Cumulative
incidence of any hearing loss was 58 %, which was mostly
bilateral (83 %), and mild (32 %), moderate (23 %),
moderate-severe (16 %), severe (10 %), or profound (15 %).
Patients using amikacin had a greater risk of developing the
more severe forms of hearing loss than those using kanamycin
(adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 4.0, 95 % CI:
1.5–10.8). Patients co-infected with HIV
(OR = 3.4, 95 % CI: 1.1–10.6), males
(OR = 4.5, 95 %1.5–13.4) and those with
lower baseline body weight (40–59 kg,
OR = 2.8, 95 % CI: 1.1–6.8), were
most-at-risk of developing hearing loss.
Conclusion
Amikacin use in the
long-term MDR-TB treatment led to a higher risk of occurrence of
the more severe forms of hearing loss compared to kanamycin use.
Males, patients with low baseline body weight and those
co-infected with HIV were most-at-risk. MDR-TB treatment
programmes should consider replacing amikacin with kanamycin and
strengthen the routine renal, serum therapeutic drug levels and
audiometric monitoring in the most-at-risk patients treated with
aminoglycosides.
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Source:
BMC Pharmacology and Toxicology