Surveillance of adverse events in the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis: A global feasibility study.

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2019-04-03

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Akkerman, Onno
Aleksa, Alena
Alffenaar, Jan-Willem
Al-Marzouqi, Nada Hassan
Arias-Guillén, Miguel
Belilovski, Evgeny
Bernal, Enrique
Boeree, Martin J
Borisov, Sergey E
Bruchfeld, Judith

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Abstract

The World Health Organization launched a global initiative, known as aDSM (active TB drug safety monitoring and management) to better describe the safety profile of new treatment regimens for drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) in real-world settings. However, comprehensive surveillance is difficult to implement in several countries. The aim of the aDSM project is to demonstrate the feasibility of implementing national aDSM registers and to describe the type and the frequency of adverse events (AEs) associated with exposure to the new anti-TB drugs. Following a pilot study carried out in 2016, official involvement of TB reference centres/countries into the project was sought and cases treated with bedaquiline- and/or delamanid-containing regimens were consecutively recruited. AEs were prospectively collected ensuring potential attribution of the AE to a specific drug based on its known safety profile. A total of 309 cases were fully reported from 41 centres in 27 countries (65% males; 268 treated with bedaquiline, 20 with delamanid, and 21 with both drugs) out of an estimated 781 cases the participating countries had committed to report by the first quarter of 2019.

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Antitubercular Agents
Diarylquinolines
Drug Therapy, Combination
Feasibility Studies
Female
Humans
Male
Nitroimidazoles
Oxazoles
Pilot Projects
Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
World Health Organization

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Keywords

Adverse events, Bedaquiline, Delamanid, MDR-TB, Monitoring, Tuberculosis

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