Russia: New TB drugs having impact against resistance
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) says a new combination of drugs created to treat extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) is having a significant impact on a group of patients in the midst of a two-year treatment to cure their disease.
In 2013, an MSF team in Grozny noticed that a growing number of patients with multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) were not responding to second-line drugs, and there was no alternative medication available in the country to help them.
Drug Resistance
MDR-TB is resistant
to at least two of the best anti-TB drugs, isoniazid and
rifampicin. These drugs are considered first-line and are used
to treat all people with TB. XDR-TB is caused by strains of
MDR-TB that are also resistant to second-line drugs, including
at least one from the class of fluroquinolones, and at least one
of three injectable second-line drugs.
MSF approached
the Ministry of Health (MoH) with a proposal to tackle XDR-TB in
a new way, and in April 2014 began treating patients suffering
from XDR-TB with a combination of second-line TB drugs and a new
TB drug called bedaquiline. Four additional re-purposed drugs
recognized by the World Health Organization are also being used,
including clofazimine (commonly used for leprosy), linezolid,
amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, and imipenem/cilastatin (commonly
used for other infections). This combination of drugs has never
been used before in the Russian Federation.
New Treatment
To date, MSF has
initiated 51 patients on the new bedaquiline drug regimen. Over
the course of the two-year treatment each patient will receive a
different combination of drugs according to the severity of
their illness. The 28 patients who require imipenem/cilastin are
being treated in-hospital because they need a surgical procedure
to insert a catheter to administer the drug.
MSF is
now in the process of handing the management of its
drug-sensitive and multidrug-resistant TB patients back to the
MoH in order to focus its energies on XDR-TB patients. Dr.
Animesh Sinha says that the first outcomes look very promising:
“With the new regimen we have seen excellent results that
would have been unthinkable before.”
MSF has
also started treating patients suffering from both TB and
diabetes, as people who suffer from the latter can be more prone
to contracting TB. A total of 12 patients are currently enrolled
in the program.
"I've Been Sick for More than 15 Years—My Goal is to Be Cured"
Elena is a 35-year-old resident of Grozny, Chechen Republic,
in the Russian Federation. MSF diagnosed her with XDR-TB in
December 2013. Due to an absence of drugs for this form
of tuberculosis, she was put on standard treatment for MDR-TB.
With the introduction of the new drug regimen containing
bedaquiline, Elena began her new treatment in October of 2014.
Within two months her culture tests showed she was negative
for tuberculosis. She no longer has a cough or fever and has
gained about 22 pounds. Elena will continue this new regimen
until October 2016. Here, she describes her experience.
"In 2001, I started to feel weak and irritable.
After I started spitting blood I went to the hospital and was
diagnosed with tuberculosis. At the time there was a war on in
the Republic and so I couldn’t receive adequate treatment.
In 2002, I was able to travel to the city of Cheboksary, where I
underwent a full course of treatment and was declared cured and
discharged six months later. When I was first diagnosed with
tuberculosis I wasn’t worried because it was a curable
disease.
I had a relapse in 2004. In 2006, I had
another relapse and underwent treatment again and was in
relatively good health for five years. But from 2011 on, I
suffered more relapses.
When I was diagnosed with a
form of tuberculosis that is hard to cure I was very worried; I
was very upset. The doctors also found a lung cyst. I had
suicidal thoughts and I even asked for an injection to end my
suffering.
When I was put on this new drug regimen I
gained hope that I could be cured. I became cheerful and I want
to live. I know this treatment will help me, and if I stop it
nothing will help me. I’ve been sick for 15 years, I have
no personal life. My goal is to get cured!"
Source:
Médecins Sans Frontières