Browsing by Author "Zimri, K."
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- ItemPresentation and outcome of culture-confirmed isoniazid-resistant rifampicin-susceptible tuberculosis in children(International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, 2016) Garcia-Prats, Anthony J.; Du Plessis, L.; Draper, H. R.; Burger, A.; Seddon, J. A.; Zimri, K.; Hesseling, Anneke C.; Schaaf, H. SimonSetting: Isoniazid-resistant rifampicin-susceptible (HRRS) tuberculosis (TB) is the most prevalent form of drug-resistant TB globally, and may be a risk factor for poor outcomes. HRRS-TB in children has been poorly described. Objective: To characterize the clinical presentation, treatment, and clinical and microbiological outcomes, and factors associated with poor outcomes among children with culture-confirmed HRRS-TB. Design: Retrospective hospital-based cohort study. Results: Of the 72 children included, median age 50.1 months (IQR 21.5-102.5), 42% were male. Forty-four (51%) had a potential source case; only 13 were confirmed HRRS-TB. Twelve of 66 tested (17%) were HIV-infected, and 36 of 60 (60%) with pulmonary TB had severe disease. Seventy had treatment data; median total duration was 11.3 months (IQR 9-12.3); 25 (36%) initiated treatment with a 3-drug intensive phase; 52 (74%) received a fluoroquinolone. Of 63 with known outcome, 55 (88%) had a favourable outcome; 1 died and 3 had treatment failure. Ten had positive follow-up cultures at ≥2 months after starting treatment (17% of all PTB and 27% of those with follow-up culture data); older age (p=0.008), previous TB treatment (p=0.023) and severe PTB (p=0.018) were associated with failure to culture-convert at ≥2 months. Conclusions: Although overall outcomes were good, prolonged culture positivity and cases of treatment failure emphasize the need for additional attention to clinical management of children with HRRS-TB.
- ItemWhy do child contacts of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis not come to the assessment clinic?(2012) Zimri, K.; Hesseling, A. C.; Godfrey-Faussett, P.; Schaaf, H. S.; Seddon, J. A.BACKGROUND: Local policy advises that children exposed to multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) should be assessed in a specialist clinic. Many children, however, are not brought for assessment. METHODS: Focus group discussion was used to design appropriate questionnaires. From 1 September 2011, the first 50 children referred to the specialist paediatric MDR-TB clinic, Cape Town, South Africa, and who attended their clinic appointment, were recruited. The first 50 children who were referred but who did not attend were concurrently identified, traced and recruited. Differences in group characteristics were compared. RESULTS: The median age of the children was 35 months: 48 (48%) were boys, 4 (4%) were human immunodeficiency virus infected and 47 (47%) were of coloured ethnicity. Factors significantly associated with non-attendance at the MDR-TB clinic were: Coloured ethnicity (OR 2.82, 95%CI 1.21–6.59, P = 0.01), the mother being the source case (OR 3.78, 95%CI 1.29–11.1, P = 0.02), having a smoker resident in the house (OR 2.37, 95%CI 1.01–5.57, P = 0.04), the time (P = 0.002) and cost (P = 0.03) required to get to the specialist clinic, and fear of infection whilst waiting to be seen (OR 2.45, 95%CI 1.07–5.60, P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: Reasons for non-attendance at paediatric MDR-TB clinic appointments are complex and are influenced by demographic, social, logistical and cultural factors.