Component
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A
Excellent
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B
Good
|
C
Satisfactory
|
D
Poor
|
Evidence-base a
|
|
|
|
Level IV studies, or level I to III studies/SRs with a high risk of bias
|
Consistency b
|
All studies consistent
|
|
|
|
Clinical impact
|
|
|
|
Slight or restricted
|
Generalisability
|
|
|
Population(s) studied in body of evidence differ to target population for guideline but it is clinically sensible to apply this evidence to target population
|
|
Applicability
|
|
Applicable to Australian healthcare context with few caveats
|
|
|
SR = systematic review
a Level of evidence determined from the NHMRC evidence hierarchy (see Table ).
Source: Adapted from NHMRC (2009)
A study by Meyssonnier et al. (2014) reported the outcomes of a retrospective cohort of rifampicin mono-resistant TB patients in France. At the time of TB diagnosis 83% (25/30) received rifampicin-containing regimens (Table ). The remaining 5 patients did not receive rifampicin due to suspected resistance because of a previous treatment history or the first-line DST results from other countries or contacts. However, when DST results to first-line drugs were available in the study population, 3 patients did not have any modification of the rifampicin-containing regimen. Two of these patients were considered cured after 9 months of treatment and a 2-year follow-up (2 months of standard four-drug regimen and 7 months of rifampicin and isoniazid). The third patient died after 9 months of standard treatment, but also had a Kaposi sarcoma related to HIV co-infection. Of the patients receiving antibiotic treatment other than rifampicin, 13 (52%) received fluoroquinolone-containing regimens without aminoglycoside, 4 (16%) received amikacin-containing regimens without fluoroquinolone and 8 (32%) received both fluoroquinolones and amikacin.
Table Association between treatment characteristics and health outcomes among rifampicin-resistant TB patients
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