Tradeoffs in introduction policies for the TB drug bedaquiline: a model-based analysis
Abstract
Background
New drugs for the
treatment of tuberculosis (TB) are becoming available for the
first time in over 40 y. Optimal strategies for introducing
these drugs have not yet been established. The objective of this
study was to compare different strategies for introducing the
new TB drug bedaquiline based on patients’ resistance
patterns.
Methods and findings
We created a
Markov decision model to follow a hypothetical cohort of
multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB patients under different
bedaquiline use strategies. The explored strategies included
making bedaquiline available to all patients with MDR TB,
restricting bedaquiline usage to patients with MDR plus
additional resistance and withholding bedaquiline introduction
completely. We compared these strategies according to life
expectancy, risks of acquired resistance, and the expected
number and health outcomes of secondary cases.
For
our simulated cohort, the mean (2.5th, 97.5th percentile) life
expectancy from time of initiation of MDR TB treatment at age 30
was 36.0 y (33.5, 38.7) assuming all patients with MDR TB
received bedaquiline, 35.1 y (34.4, 35.8) assuming patients with
pre-extensively drug-resistant (PreXDR) and extensively
drug-resistant (XDR) TB received bedaquiline, and 34.9 y (34.6,
35.2) assuming only patients with XDR TB received bedaquiline.
Although providing bedaquiline to all MDR patients resulted in
the highest life expectancy for our initial cohort averaged
across all parameter sets, for parameter sets in which
bedaquiline conferred high risks of added mortality and only
small reductions in median time to culture conversion, the
optimal strategy would be to withhold use even from patients
with the most extensive resistance. Across all parameter sets,
the most liberal bedaquiline use strategies consistently
increased the risk of bedaquiline resistance but decreased the
risk of resistance to other MDR drugs. In almost all cases, more
liberal bedaquiline use strategies reduced the expected number
of secondary cases and resulting life years lost. The
generalizability of our results is limited by the lack of
available data about drug effects among individuals with HIV
co-infection, drug interactions, and other sources of
heterogeneity, as well as changing recommendations for MDR TB
treatment.
Conclusions
If mortality benefits
can be empirically verified, our results provide support for
expanding bedaquiline access to all patients with MDR TB. Such
expansion could improve patients’ health, protect
background MDR TB drugs, and decrease transmission, but would
likely result in greater resistance to bedaquiline.
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Source:
PLOS Medicine