Effectiveness of Intravenous Isoniazid and Ethambutol Administration in Patients with Tuberculosis Meningoencephalitis and HIV Infection
Loading...
Date
Editor(s)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background. The  aim  of  this    study  was  to  investigate  the  effectiveness  of  intravenous  isoniazid  (H)  and  ethambutol  
(E) administered in patients with new sputum positive drug-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) with tuberculous 
meningoencephalitis (TM) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection in the intensive phase of treatment.
Methods. Fifty-four  patients  with  TB/TM  and  HIV  co-infection  were  enrolled  for  this  study.  Group  1  comprised  of  
23  patients  treated  with  E  and  H  intravenously,  while  rifampicin  and  pyrazinamide  were  prescribed  orally.  Group  2 consisted  of  31  patients  treated  with  the  first-line  anti-TB  drugs  orally.  The  concentrations  of  H  and  E  in  blood  serum were detected using a chromatographic method. 
Results. A significant improvement in the clinical symptoms and X-ray signs in patients treated intravenously with H and E 
was observed and compared to group 2. The sputum Mycobacterium tuberculosis 
positivity was observed during the second 
month  of  the  treatment  in  25.0%  of  patients  from  group  1  and  76.1%  of  the  patients  from  the  control  group  (p=0.003).  In addition, nine patients (39.1%) died up to 6 months when H and E were prescribed intravenously compared with 22 (70.9%)in group 2 (p=0.023). 
Conclusion. In  TB/TM  with  HIV,  the  intravenous  H  and  E  treatment  was  more  effective  than  oral  H  and  E  treatment  at 2  months  of  intensive  treatment  in  sputum  conversion  as  well  as  in  clinical  improvement,  accompanied  by  significantly higher mean serum concentrations. In addition, the mortality rate was lower in intravenous H and E treatment compared to oral treatment.
Description
Citation
Effectiveness of Intravenous Isoniazid and Ethambutol Administration in Patients with Tuberculosis Meningoencephalitis and HIV Infection / D. Butov, Yu. Feshchenko, M. Kuzhko, M. Gumenuik, K. Yurko, A. Grygorova, A. Tkachenko, N. Nekrasova, T. Tlustova, V. Kikinchuk, A. Peshenko, T. Butova // Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases. – 2019. – № 4. – P. 1–8.
