CASE REPORT
Interdisciplinary management of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in an HIV-infected patient: case report
 
More details
Hide details
 
Submission date: 2017-05-29
 
 
Acceptance date: 2017-10-04
 
 
Publication date: 2017-10-13
 
 
HIV & AIDS Review 2017;16(3):199-204
 
KEYWORDS
TOPICS
ABSTRACT
Although the incidence of new tuberculosis (TB) cases in the general population is decreasing every year, the frequency of multi-drug-resistant TB is rising, especially throughout Eastern Europe, with the risk of further spread to other European counties. Nowadays, in the era of easy international travel, individualised exposure and drug response patterns need to be reviewed. Even in countries with small numbers of resistant Mycobacteria cases, MDR or XDR-TB should be considered, especially when there is a poor response to antituberculotic therapy.
In the clinical practice, it is often necessary to include a surgical approach, with the excision of infectious tuberculomatous foci, supplementing tuberculostatic treatment. Treatment success is commonly dependent on such a combined approach. Such multidisciplinary care remains a significant and multi­faceted problem, especially in poorer countries.
In this paper, we present the case of a 46-year-old HIV-infected patient diagnosed with multi-drug-resistant, multiorgan TB. The patient, of Polish nationality, previously working in Norway, presented in 2011 as newly diagnosed HIV-1 infection with a suspicion of TB. On admission, the patient’s condition was severe with clinical features of wasting and symptoms of pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB infection. Standard treatment outcome was poor, with clinical response achieved only after confirmation of multidrug-resistant TB and optimisation of the therapy. Tuberculostatic treatment was supplemented with multiple surgical procedures, aimed at the diagnostics and allowing treatment of infectious foci. Therapy required complex management of two primary infections (HIV and TB) and multiple adverse-effects and coinfections that occurred during follow-up.
 
REFERENCES (17)
1.
Daniel TM. The history of tuberculosis. Respir Med 2006; 100: 1862-1870.
 
2.
Perelman MI, Strelzov VP. Surgery for pulmonary tuberculosis. World J Surg 1997; 21: 457-467.
 
3.
Treatement of tuberculosis guidlines, WHO, 4th ed. 2009. Available at: http://www.who.int/tb/publicat....
 
4.
World Health Organisation. Global tuberculosis report 2013. WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data.
 
5.
Guidelines on co-trimoxazole prophylaxis for HIV-related infections among children, adolescents and adults in resource-limited settings: recommendations for a public health approach. World Health Organization, Geneva 2006.
 
6.
Harries AD, Zachariah R, Lawn SD. Providing HIV care for co-infected tuberculosis patients: a perspective from sub-Saharan Africa. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 2009; 13: 6-16.
 
7.
Omura S, Nakaya M, Mori A, et al. M. A clinical review of 38 cases of cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis in Japan – the role of neck dissection. Auris Nasus Larynx 2016; 43: 672-676.
 
8.
Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis: emergency update 2008. World Health Organization, Geneva 2008 (WHO/HTM/TB/2008.402).
 
9.
Shenoi SV, Brooks RP, Barbour R, et al. Survival from XDR-TB is associated with modifiable clinical characteristics in rural South Africa. PLoS One 2012; 7: e31786.
 
10.
Garg RK, Somvanshi DS. Spinal tuberculosis: A review. J Spinal Cord Med 2011; 34: 440-454.
 
11.
Kienzl-Palma D, Prosch H. Extrathoracic manifestations of tuberculosis. Radiologe 2016; 56: 885-889.
 
12.
Singer EJ, Valdes-Sueiras M, Commins DL, et al. HIV stroke risk: evidence and implications. Ther Adv Chronic Dis 2013; 4: 61-70.
 
13.
Hegde SS, Ismail M, Rama K, et al. Recurrent Stroke as the First Manifestation in a Patient Infected with HIV – A Case Report. J AIDS Clin Res 2013; 4: 202.
 
14.
Kempker RR, Vashakidze S, Solomonia N, et al. Surgical treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis. Lancet Infect Dis 2012; 12: 157-166.
 
15.
Chalya PL, Mchembe MD, Mshana SE, et al. Clinicopathological profile and surgical treatment of abdominal tuberculosis: a single centre experience in northwestern Tanzania. BMC Infect Dis 2013; 13: 270.
 
16.
Vashakidze S, Gogishvili S, Nikolaishvili K, et al. Favorable Outcomes for Multi- and Extensively Drug Resistant Tuberculosis Patients Undergoing Surgery. Ann Thorac Surg 2013; 95: 1892-1898.
 
17.
Dheda K, Gumbo T, Maartens G, et al. The epidemiology, pathogenesis, transmission, diagnosis, and management of multidrug-resistant, extensively drug-resistant, and incurable tuberculosis. Lancet Respir Med 2017; 5: 291-360.
 
eISSN:1732-2707
ISSN:1730-1270
Journals System - logo
Scroll to top