TB antibacterial courses ineffective in minimizing antibiotic use
The current trials testing broad-spectrum antibiotics before treating tuberculosis are not aligned with protocols designed to minimize the use of antibiotics, according to a paper published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
Investigators from London conducted a review and meta-analysis
in order to organize available evidence on the diagnostic
performance of the trial of antibiotics for tuberculosis. They
wrote that there are suboptimal diagnostics for the infection
and broad-spectrum antibiotics are given to patients who test
negative but remain symptomatic, typically to try and identify
tuberculosis vs. a lower respiratory tract infection.
In those cases, those given these antibiotics with lower
respiratory tract infection cases improve and tuberculosis
patients do not. At least 26.5 million courses are prescribed
annually, investigators said, despite lacking evidence for such
a commonly used intervention.
The team searched the Medline, Embase, and Global Health
databases and found 8 eligible studies for inclusion published
through March 2019. The studies took place in 7 countries in
Africa, South America, and Asia and involved a total of 2786
participants between 1997-2016.
The investigators said 6 of the studies used mycobacterial
culture as the reference standard while 6 used penicillins for
the trial of antibiotics. However, that’s where the
similarities between the studies ended, the authors noted; the
treatment duration (5-14 days), number of antibacterial courses,
and definition of what constituted response to treatment
differed substantially among the studies.
Some studies asked for self-reports of improvement while others
were more rigorous including changes in cough, the amount of
sputum produced, and body temperature. The methods for measuring
response to treatment “largely subjective,”
investigators wrote. Other antibiotics included in the trials
were macrolides, tetracyclines, and cephalosporins.
The investigators observed that the pooled sensitivity of the
trial antibiotics was 67%, compared to the mycobacteriology
tests, they said. The pooled specificity was 73%. These numbers
fall “well below minimum recommendations for new
tuberculosis triage and diagnostic tests for adults.”
“As the medical community moves towards meeting End TB
goals, clinicians and those designing public health programs
need to be aware of how substantial the misclassification by
trial of antibiotics can be,” they continued, noting that
End TB calls for a major expansion of tuberculosis testing and
identifying underdiagnosed cases to save lives.
The strategy aims to target 40 million tuberculosis cases by
2022 by testing 1 billion people.
Upon further analysis, investigators wrote that pooled estimates
of sensitivity and specificity by study setting and reference
standard definition showed substantial heterogeneity but those
results should be interpreted with caution, they warned.
Neither disregarding the outliers nor adjusting the
investigators’ definitions did not significantly change
the pooled estimates of sensitivity or specificity.
There appeared to be a potential risk bias in at least 1 of the
4 domains of the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy
Studies (QUADAS) 2 tool, investigators said. At least 3 of the
QUADAS-2 domains yielded sensitivity. But in all of the studies,
they noted, patient selection process and the conducting of both
the index and reference tests matched the reviewers’
expectations.
“Broad-spectrum antibiotics will still be needed to treat
clinically suspected bacterial infection, with the crucial
evidence gap then being how different antibiotic strategies
affect clinical outcomes and antimicrobial resistance during
tuberculosis investigation, including among key subgroups such
as inpatients, people living with HIV, children, and
participants identified through tuberculosis screening
initiatives,” the study authors concluded.
“These studies should include trials of the safety of
antibiotic minimization protocols to support the rapid
generation of sufficient data to guide evidence-based,
patient-centered management of presumptive tuberculosis
patients, including key subgroups and populations for whom the
relative benefits and harms of antibiotics are likely to vary
from routine clinic adults—notably, young children, people
with HIV, people with diabetes, and tuberculosis screening
participants,” they concluded.
Source:
Contagion