1 / 11

Report outline

Report outline. 3 rd report of the WHO/IUATLD Global Project on Anti-TB drug resistance surveillance 77 settings or countries, representing 20% of new S+ cases in the world 35 in 1 st (1997), & 58 in 2 nd (2001) Two previous projects found:

dprieto
Download Presentation

Report outline

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. Report outline • 3rd report of the WHO/IUATLD Global Project on Anti-TB drug resistance surveillance • 77 settings or countries, representing 20% of new S+ cases in the world • 35 in 1st (1997), & 58 in 2nd (2001) • Two previous projects found: • drug-resistant TB was present in all settings surveyed • MDR TB was identified in most settings • Good TB control practices were associated with lower or decreasing levels of resistance

  2. Report results • Magnitude & trend of anti-TB drug resistance • New cases • Previously treated cases • Drug resistance & quality of TB control • Burden of MDR • Patterns & amplification (1994-2002)

  3. Magnitude of drug resistanceNew cases • Data available for 75 settings: 55,779 patients • Prevalence of resistance to at least one drug • 0% in some Western European countries to 57.1% in Kazakhstan: (median = 10.2%) • Median prevalences of resistance to specific drugs: • SM, 6.3%; INH, 5.9%; RMP, 1.4%; and EMB, 0.8%. • MDR (median = 1.1%) • 0% in 8 countries, 14.2% in Kazakhstan & Israel • The highest prevalences of MDR were observed in: • Tomsk Oblast (13.7%), Karakalpakstan (13.2%), Estonia (12.2%), Liaoning Province (10.4%), Lithuania (9.4%), Latvia (9.3%), Henan Province (7.8%), and Ecuador (6.6%) • Significant MDR increase in Tomsk & Poland

  4. Magnitude of drug resistancePreviously treated cases • Data available for 66 countries & settings • Number of cases tested • 1 in Malta and Iceland to 668 in Poland (median = 100 cases) • Several settings reported a small number of cases tested • Any resistance among previously treated cases • The median 18.4%. • No resistance in the Gambia, Iceland, Malta and Luxembourg (small number) • Extremely high in Kazakhstan & Karakalpakstan: 82.1% & 79.4% • MDR among previously treated cases • The median 7.0%. • No MDR in 10 countries • High in Kazakhstan (56.4%) & Oman (58.3%)

  5. Drug resistance & quality of TB control • Ecological analysis of determinants of drug resistance • Prevalence of TB, HIV, GDP, NHE, etc.. • The percentage of re-treatment cases is an indicator of programme performance • Multivariate analysis showed that this percentage was significantly associated with both MDR and any drug resistance.

  6. Burden of MDR • Estimated annual incidence of MDR cases in 69 settings. • The burden can be described: • prevalence • absolute number of cases • most importantly, capacity of country to address the problem • Kazakhstan and South Africa • more than 3000 MDR cases. • Henan and Hubei Provinces of China • 1000 cases each • Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and two oblasts in Russia • between 99 and 248 cases • Most Western and Central European countries • fewer than 10 cases each

  7. Patterns & amplification (1994-2002) • Analysis of 90,000 strains (1994-2002) confirmed that: • globally, more strains were resistant to INH than others • INH and SM resistance were more prevalent • Among previously treated cases, proportions of strains resistant to 3 or 4 drugs were significantly greater • This relationship holds globally and suggests amplification of resistance • It appears that INH and SM monoresistance are the main gateways to acquisition of additional resistance

  8. Conclusion • Drug-resistant TB was found in 74 of 77 settings • Drug-resistant TB, including MDR, in all regions • Prevalence of MDR-TB was exceptionally high in almost all former Soviet Union countries • Also high in China (Henan and Liaoning provinces), Ecuador and Israel • Percentage of re-treatment cases is an indicator of programme performance, and links with drug resistance

More Related