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Journal Article > Research

End of treatment and 12-month post-treatment outcomes in patients treated with all-oral regimens for rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis in Ukraine: a prospective cohort study

Fardhdiani V, Trush O, Lytvynenko N, Pylypchuk S, Terleeva Y, Malakyan K, Rupasinghe P, Wally Y, Duka M, Didyk VS, Siomak OV, Blyzniuk O, Furin J, Donchuk D, Laxmeshwar C, Isaakidis P
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Abstract

The World Health Organization has called for operational research on all-oral shorter regimens for rifampin-resistant and multidrug-resistant forms of tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB). We followed a cohort of patients in Zhytomyr, Ukraine for effectiveness, safety, tolerability and feasibility of bedaquiline & delamanid-based treatment regimens under programmatic conditions. This was a single-arm implementation study. All consenting persons with RR/MDR-TB were enrolled between 1 April 2019 and 31 May 2021 and followed up 12-months after treatment completion. We assessed quality of life and depression symptoms between start and end-of-treatment. We enrolled 300 patients. Overall, 212 (71%) patients were cured, 22 (7%) patients completed treatment, median time to culture conversion was 58 days (IQR:30–75), and 21% and 27% of patients had at least one serious or Grade 3/4 adverse event, respectively. The overall BREF-WHO/Quality of Life score improved between baseline and end-of-treatment, from average 52.64(std. dev:21.63) to 57.15(std. dev:21.43) while Patient Health Questionnaire-9(PHQ-9) score decreased from 6.67(std. dev:4.75) at baseline to 5.34(std. dev: 5.18) at end-of-treatment. Twelve months post-treatment 174/234(74%) were alive and recurrence-free, 17(7%) patients died, one (<1%) had recurrent TB, while 42 (18%) were lost from the post-treatment follow-up. All-oral short-term regimens showed high success under programmatic conditions in Ukraine, despite extreme implementation challenges during the COVID-pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war. Moreover, this was a cohort of patients with high levels of co-morbidities and substance use. A multidisciplinary, psychosocial support model might have contributed to satisfactory treatment outcomes, improved quality of life and decreased symptoms of depression among people living with RR/MDR-TB.

Countries
Ukraine
Subject Area
tuberculosis
DOI
10.1371/journal.pgph.0003983
Published Date
23-May-2025
PubMed ID
40408534
Languages
English
Journal
PLOS Global Public Health
Volume / Issue / Pages
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages e0003983
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