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Adjunctive Salvage Therapy with Inhaled Aminoglycosides for Patients with Persistent Smear-Positive Pulmonary Tuberculosis
Author(s) -
Leonard Sacks,
Stella Pendle,
Dragana Orlovic,
Marc André,
Mirjana Popara,
George A. Moore,
L. Thonell,
Selwyn J. Hurwitz
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/317524
Subject(s) - medicine , sputum , tuberculosis , sputum culture , refractory (planetary science) , mycobacterium tuberculosis , drug resistance , population , directly observed therapy , pharmacotherapy , surgery , microbiology and biotechnology , pathology , physics , environmental health , astrobiology , biology
A proportion of patients with drug-resistant and drug-susceptible tuberculosis (TB) have sputum that is smear and culture positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis for a prolonged period of time, despite conventional therapy. Among such patients with refractory TB, an unblinded, observational study was undertaken that used conventional TB therapy and adjunctive aerosol aminoglycosides. Patients with persistent smear- and culture-positive sputum for M. tuberculosis (despite > or =2 months of optimal systemic therapy) were selected for adjunctive treatment via inhalation with aminoglycosides, and microbiological responses were monitored. Thirteen of 19 patients converted to smear negativity during the study: 6 of 7 with drug-susceptible TB and 7 of 12 with drug-resistant TB. Among patients with drug-susceptible TB, the median time to sputum conversion was 23 days, a shorter time than for a population of historical control patients. Recurrent infection was not observed. Adjunctive aerosol aminoglycosides may expedite sterilization of sputum among certain patients with refractory TB and diminish the risk of transmission.

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