1 / 27

The Challenges of Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) Tuberculosis Investigation and Follow-up

The Challenges of Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) Tuberculosis Investigation and Follow-up. Aaron Aitchsion, PHN Middlesex-London Health Unit. What’s Involved in a TB investigation?. 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime

ronia
Download Presentation

The Challenges of Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) Tuberculosis Investigation and Follow-up

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Challenges of Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) Tuberculosis Investigation and Follow-up Aaron Aitchsion, PHN Middlesex-London Health Unit

  2. What’s Involved in a TB investigation? 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime 4. Establish period of infectivity 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts”

  3. What’s challenging in a TB investigation? • Communication • language barriers • risk • Cross Jurisdictional referrals • Stigma • iPHIS

  4. What’s challenging in a MDR-TB investigation? MDR-TB is a result of a breakdown in: 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime 4. Establish period of infectivity 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” • Treatment of the case • Prophylaxis of those exposed to the case • Stigma The Media

  5. Settlement House for new immigrants Family of 14 ESL School Family Home

  6. Identifying the case • Father flagged for Immigration Medical Surveillance for Inactive TB • Interview: smoker’s cough + previous treatment for lung infection (denied TB diagnosis) • Administered TB skin test  Sent for Chest x-ray

  7. Cavitating lesion + lived in top 23 high-burden countries Clinical Case 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime 4. Establish period of infectivity 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts”

  8. Isolating the case • Language barrier (interpreter exposures) • Strain on family • son’s interpretation = shoot the messenger • new to country and lose head of household • Admitted to negative pressure • Obtain sputum for laboratory analysis • Wait for results

  9. Treatment 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - standard four drug therapy 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime 4. Establish period of infectivity 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - standard four drug therapy 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - acute care 4. Establish period of infectivity 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts”

  10. Infectivity 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - standard four drug therapy 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - acute care 4. Establish period of infectivity - cough present since arrival to Canada 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - standard four drug therapy 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - acute care 4. Establish period of infectivity - cough present since arrival to Canada 5. Determine degree of infectiousness - smear = numerous (highly infectious) 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts”

  11. Resistant to INH and Rifampin Infectivity 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - standard four drug therapy 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - acute care 4. Establish period of infectivity - cough present since arrival to Canada 5. Determine degree of infectiousness - smear = numerous (highly infectious) 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” 2nd line drugs West Park Treatment facility

  12. Challenges in determining contacts? • Transmission factors related the case • Transmission factors related to shared air space • Transmission risk factors related to exposed person Case was smear (numerous) Previous treatment failure Huge cavity on CXR Denial of diagnosis Symptomatic (cough) Over 6 years old Transmission factors = high

  13. Family Home Less shared space High risk for previous infection Common volume of air Re-circulated air Ultraviolet radiation? Small classrooms Contact 5 days a week High risk for previous infection

  14. Issues with Contact Tracing 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - 2nd line drugs 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - West Park 4. Establish period of infectivity - cough present since arrival to Canada 5. Determine degree of infectiousness - highly infectious 6. Establish “contacts” - family / airplane / settlement house / ESL School 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - 2nd line drugs 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - West Park 4. Establish period of infectivity - cough present since arrival to Canada 5. Determine degree of infectiousness - highly infectious 6. Establish “contacts” - family / airplane / settlement house / ESL School 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts”

  15. Our Plan of Action • Multiple teleconferences with experts from around the world • Greater than 1 hour of face-to-face contact Rx PZA and ETBI for 6 months • Moxifloxacin substituted for PZA or ETBI if side effects developed • CXR’s at 0, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24 months

  16. The research says… • Fraser et al Int Jouranl of TB (2006). • Systemic review of comparative studies of people treated and not treated of LTBI following MDR-TB exposure • Presented combinations of PZA/ETBI, PZA and a quinolone, ETBI and a quinolone, Quinolone alone • Serious adverse effects can affect adherence causing prolonged treatment, further development of resistance and relapse. The balance of benefits and detriments is far from clear and should be addressed in a randomized controlled trial.

  17. Our Plan of Action • Baseline and monthly blood tests (CBC, BUN, creatinine, uric acid, HIV, Hepatitis screening and LFT’s) • Opthalmologic assessment with dilation at 0, 3, and 6 months with Ishihara color tests performed monthly • Twice monthly symptom and side effect review

  18. TBST Offer INH Referred flight manifest to PHAC TBST PZA + ETBI TBST PZA + ETBI

  19. Many TBST+ Majority complete INH Unknown Multiple TB Clinics 33 TBST+ 19 of 33 complete PZA/ETBI Entire family TBST+ 1 secondary case 3 of 12 complete PZA/ETBI

  20. The Clinic Challenges • At least 7 different languages • Minimal literacy in mother tongue • Cultural taboos of TB and gender • Index family persecution (moved) • New immigrant population mobility • Risk factors for TB already • Healthcare issues unrelated to TB

  21. The Family results… • Index case + 1 secondary case (not MDR) • 12/12 TBST (+) (further evidence of infectiousness) • 3/12 completed prophylaxis • Family re-located due to stigma (media) • Index case remains defiant of TB diagnosis

  22. The “other” results… • Many interpreters TBSTed with 3 positive and several previously positive • Only one offered MDR prophylaxis and did not complete (INH for others) • Only one settlement house contact offered MDR prophylaxis – completed (INH for others)

  23. The Side Effects • Elevated liver enzymes (abdominal pain) • Headache • Fatigue • Alterations in mood • Yeast infections • Joint aches

  24. In Conclusion... 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime - 2nd line drugs 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime - West Park 4. Establish period of infectivity - cough present since arrival to Canada 5. Determine degree of infectiousness - highly infectious 6. Establish “contacts” - family / airplane / settlement house / ESL School 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” - clinics 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” - INH and PZA/ETBI (Moxi)

  25. All TB Investigations are challenging... 1. Isolate the case 2. Establish a treatment regime 3. Establish compliance with treatment regime 4. Establish period of infectivity 5. Determine degree of infectiousness 6. Establish “contacts” 7. Co-ordinate follow-up of “contacts” 8. Offer prophylaxis to “contacts” • Communication • Cross Jurisdictional referrals • Stigma • iPHIS

  26. Questions?

More Related