(Press-News.org) The European Respiratory Journal is today (04 August 2011) publishing the updated guidelines of the World Health Organization (WHO) that aim to help manage drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB).
The new document 'The WHO guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis: 2011 update' focuses on priority areas for healthcare professionals in the diagnosis, treatment and care of drug-resistant TB. It also calls for more research to guide the management of the condition.
TB is a pandemic that killed 1.7 million people in 2009, excluding those who died when affected by AIDS, having TB as final cause of death. The disease is caused by infection with the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and destroys patients' lung tissue. The infection can then spread through the air as patients cough up bacteria which can be inhaled by others.
Drug-resistant and multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB)* are forms of TB that have become resistant to anti-TB drugs, making the condition more difficult to treat. Major weaknesses in the health care systems are behind the creation of resistance to anti-TB drugs.
These guidelines are the result of a systematic review of the best evidence available in the scientific literature analysed by top experts in the field convened by WHO.
While there have been no radical changes in the recommendations from the previous guidelines published in 2008, the process of developing the document has highlighted important gaps in TB research. The low quality evidence on treatment composition, duration and management of the condition suggests that systems could be further optimised in future. Hence, the authors are calling for more research to help improve our understanding of disease management, including controlled trials to determine the best length and combination of current drugs which increase the chances of successful outcome for MDR-TB patients.
The guidelines cover key aspects of the management of TB including diagnosis, treatment, monitoring and cost-effectiveness of different models of care. They aim to guide countries, in particular those in lower income settings, to make early diagnosis and strengthen patient care.
There are 11 key recommendations for action to be taken by clinicians and public health decision makers. These include the following:
A wider use of rapid drug susceptibility testing for isoniazid and rifampicin or rifampicin alone upon patient diagnosis with TB and before treatment initiation
This strategy can identify patients who have drug-resistant TB earlier and thus institute appropriate treatment as rapidly as possible. The new guidelines show that this is the most cost-effective strategy and can also help to avoid unnecessary deaths.
The best care system is one focused on ambulatory models of care, in which patients are treated outside of hospital, rather than systems which focus on the hospitalisation of patients.
The overall cost-effectiveness of care for a drug-resistant TB patient can be improved using an ambulatory model of care. In addition, ambulatory care is expected to bear other benefits to the patient such as by reducing travel, social isolation and risk of reinfection.
Patients with MDR-TB should receive an intensive phase of treatment lasting for at least 8 months' duration. Patients who have not been treated with second-line drugs for tuberculosis in the past should undergo 20 months of treatment.
The recommended minimum duration of treatment with injectable drugs has been extended by 2 months from the previous guidelines as evidence shows that this increases the likelihood of treatment success. Most patients can expect to receive treatment for this length of time but the duration may be modified depending on clinical and bacteriological response.
Director of the WHO Stop TB Department, Dr Mario Raviglione, said of the new guidelines: "The updated WHO programme guidelines on MDR-TB are an essential resource for healthcare professionals with a responsibility for TB patient care. WHO has produced this latest version to reflect important developments in TB, developments that will have a beneficial impact on clinical and operational outcomes."
Head of the Respiratory Infections Assembly at the European Respiratory Society, Professor GB Migliori, said: "The new evidence-based WHO guidelines are a milestone clinicians and public health specialists were waiting anxiously to guide their interventions. They resulted from an unprecedented collaboration among the top global experts and national programme managers who accepted to share data to inform the guidelines."
INFORMATION: END
U.S. production of ethanol for fuel has been rising quickly, topping 13 billion gallons in 2010. With the usual rail, truck and barge transport methods under potential strain, existing gas pipelines might be an efficient alternative for moving this renewable fuel around the country. But researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) caution that ethanol, and especially the bacteria sometimes found in it, can dramatically degrade pipelines.
At a conference this week,* NIST researchers presented new experimental evidence that bacteria that feed ...
Gram for gram, novel carbon nanofiber-filled coatings devised by researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Texas A&M University outperformed conventional flame retardants used in the polyurethane foam of upholstered furniture and mattresses by at least 160 percent and perhaps by as much as 1,130 percent.
The impressive test results, reported in the journal Polymer,* suggest that significant fire-safety advantages can be gained by coating polyurethane foam (PUF) with a club-sandwich-like arrangement of thin layers containing carbon ...
DNA, a molecule famous for storing the genetic blueprints for all living things, can do other things as well. In a new paper,* researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) describe how tailored single strands of DNA can be used to purify the highly desired "armchair" form of carbon nanotubes. Armchair-form single wall carbon nanotubes are needed to make "quantum wires" for low-loss, long distance electricity transmission and wiring.
Single-wall carbon nanotubes are usually about a nanometer in diameter, but they can be millions of nanometers ...
Scheduling umpire crews in Major League Baseball (MLB) can be a daunting task. However, Tallys Yunes, assistant professor of management science at the University of Miami School of Business Administration and his collaborators have created a novel solution. The team developed an efficient method to generate high-quality schedules for the MLB.
The study is titled "Scheduling Major League Baseball Umpires and the Traveling Umpire Problem" published online ahead of print by the journal Interfaces, a popular outlet for practitioners in the field of Operations Research.
...
Research led by the Warwick Crop Centre in the School of Life Sciences at the University of Warwick has developed a unique collection of information about the disease resistance of 96 of the world's onion varieties. It will be a crucial resource for commercial growers and seed producers trying to combat one of the most difficult diseases affecting onion crops. This work may also have benefits in terms of and reduced fertiliser consumption and enhanced drought tolerance.
The work on onions in this research funded by Defra (The Department for Environment, Food and Rural ...
Researchers at Emory and Georgia Tech have developed a method for predicting which areas of the coronary arteries will develop more atherosclerotic plaque over time, based on intracoronary ultrasound and blood flow measurements.
The method could help doctors identify "vulnerable plaque," unstable plaque that is likely to cause a heart attack or stroke. It involves calculating shear stress, or how hard the blood tugs on the walls of the arteries, based on the geometry of the arteries and how fast the blood is moving.
The results were posted online this week in the journal ...
New research raises troubling concerns about the use of aggressive drug therapies to treat a wide range of diseases such as MRSA, C. difficile, malaria, and even cancer.
"The universally accepted strategy of aggressive medication to kill all targeted disease pathogens has the problematic consequence of giving any drug-resistant disease pathogens that are present the greatest possible evolutionary advantage," says Troy Day, one of the paper's co-authors and Canada Research Chair in Mathematical Biology at Queen's.
The researchers note that while the first aim of a drug ...
Measuring the levels of a natural body chemical may allow doctors to reduce the duration of antibiotic use and improve the health outcomes of critically ill patients.
"Infection is a common and expensive complication of critical illness and we're trying to find ways to improve the outcomes of sick, elderly patients and, at the same time, reduce health care costs," says Daren Heyland, a professor of Medicine at Queen's, director of the Clinical Evaluation Research Unit at Kingston General Hospital, and scientific director of the Technology Evaluation in the Elderly Network.
Prolonged ...
New Rochelle, NY, August 3, 2011—Positive activity interventions (PAIs) offer a safe, low-cost, and self-administered approach to managing depression and may offer hope to individuals with depressive disorders who do not respond or have access to adequate medical therapy, according to a comprehensive review article in The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. The article, "Delivering Happiness: Translating Positive Psychology Intervention Research for Treating Major and Minor Depressive Disorders" ...
In the months after the April 16, 2007, shootings at Virginia Tech, two professors administered a survey to assess posttraumatic stress among students. The findings have been published in the July 18, 2011 issue of the Journal of Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy, published by the American Psychological Association.
According to researchers Michael Hughes, professor of sociology in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences, and Russell T. Jones, professor of psychology in the College of Science, 15.4 percent of Virginia Tech students experienced ...