Journal of Microbiology, Immunology and Infection (Oct 2022)

Temporal trends of pharmacologic treatments for tuberculosis and multidrug resistant tuberculosis following dissemination of treatment guidelines in South Korea

  • Han Eol Jeong,
  • Junyeong Choi,
  • In-Sun Oh,
  • Hyunjin Son,
  • Seung Hun Jang,
  • Sun-Young Jung,
  • Ju-Young Shin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 55, no. 5
pp. 917 – 925

Abstract

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Background/Purpose(s): The World Health Organization (WHO) released treatment guidelines for multidrug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in 2008, with subsequent revisions in 2011; Korea disseminated corresponding guidelines in 2011 and 2014, respectively. Thus, we aimed to investigate the temporal trends of and the updated guideline's impact on the prescription patterns of anti-TB drugs. Methods: We conducted a time-series study using Korea's nationwide healthcare database (2007–2015), where patients with TB or MDR-TB were included. Only anti-TB drugs prescribed during the intensive phase of treatment for TB (two months) or MDR-TB (eight months) were assessed. We estimated the annual utilization of TB treatment regimens and the relative difference (RD) in the proportion of MDR-TB treatment medications between the following periods: before the first Korean guideline (June 2008 to March 2011); between the first and revised guidelines (April 2011 to July 2014); after the revised guideline (August 2014 to December 2015). Results: Of 3523 TB (mean age 54.1 years; male 56.8%) patients, treatment regimens for TB complied with guideline recommendations as >80% of patients received either quadruple (mean 66.8%) or triple (14.5%) therapy of first-line anti-TB drugs. Following the WHO's guideline update, prescription patterns changed accordingly among 111 MDR-TB (mean age 46.0 years; male 67.6%) patients, as use of pyrazinamide (RD +20.3%) and prothionamide (+11.5%) increased (recommended to be compulsory), and streptomycin (−43.1%) decreased (ototoxicity risks). Conclusions: Anti-TB drug prescription patterns for both TB and MDR-TB well reflected WHO's treatment guideline as well as corresponding domestic guidelines of South Korea.

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