Drivers and trajectories of resistance to new first-line drug regimens for tuberculosis.
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
New first-line drug regimens for treatment of tuberculosis (TB) are in clinical trials: emergence of resistance is a key concern. Because population-level data on resistance cannot be collected in advance, epidemiological models are important tools for understanding the drivers and dynamics of resistance before novel drug regimens are launched.We developed a transmission model of TB after launch of a new drug regimen, defining drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) as resistance to the new regimen. The model is characterized by (1) the probability of acquiring resistance during treatment, (2) the transmission fitness of DR-TB relative to drug-susceptible TB (DS-TB), and (3) the probability of treatment success for DR-TB versus DS-TB. We evaluate the effect of each factor on future DR-TB prevalence, defined as the proportion of incident TB that is drug-resistant.Probability of acquired resistance was the strongest predictor of the DR-TB proportion in the first 5 years after the launch of a new drug regimen. Over a longer term, however, the DR-TB proportion was driven by the resistant populations transmission fitness and treatment success rates. Regardless of uncertainty in acquisition probability and transmission fitness, high levels (>10%) of drug resistance were unlikely to emerge within 50 years if, among all cases of TB that were detected, 85% of those with DR-TB could be appropriately diagnosed as such and then successfully treated.Short-term surveillance cannot predict long-term drug resistance trends after launch of novel first-line TB regimens. Ensuring high treatment success of drug-resistant TB through early diagnosis and appropriate second-line therapy can mitigate many epidemiological uncertainties and may substantially slow the emergence of drug-resistant TB.
Date Issued
2014-08-30
ISSN
2328-8957
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Start Page
ofu073
Journal / Book Title
Open Forum Infect Dis
Volume
1
Issue
2
Copyright Statement
© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious DiseasesSocietyofAmerica.ThisisanOpenAccessarticledistributedundertheterms of the Creative Commons Attribution-No nCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd /4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com. DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofu073
Description
21.05.15 KB. OK to add published oa paper
Identifier
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25734143
ofu073
Coverage Spatial
United States