Mycobacterium tuberculosis: Difference between revisions
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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* |
*''Mycobacterium tuberculosis'' causes '''tuberculosis''' |
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* |
*Most commonly '''pulmonary TB''' but extrapulmonary tuberculosis is possible (including adenitis, gastrointestinal TB, pericarditis, meningitis) |
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* |
*Standard treatment for susceptible TB is '''RIPE x2mo then RI x4mo''' |
||
== |
==Background== |
||
=== |
===Microbiology=== |
||
* Fastidious, aerobic [[Stain::acid-fast]] [[Cellular shape::bacillus]] |
|||
*Fastidious, aerobic [[Stain::acid-fast]] [[Cellular shape::bacillus]] |
|||
* Cell wall has high lipid content |
|||
*Cell wall has high lipid content |
|||
* Generation time is very long (15 to 20 hours) |
|||
*Generation time is very long (15 to 20 hours) |
|||
*''M. tuberculosis'' is a complex that comprises seven species: |
*''M. tuberculosis'' is a complex that comprises seven species: |
||
** |
**''M. tuberculosis'' sensu stricto: most common causative organism worldwide |
||
** |
**''M. africanum'': 50% of cases in West africa |
||
** |
**''M. canetti'': rare cause in Eastern African |
||
** |
**''M. bovis'': disease in cattle but can infect humans |
||
** |
**''M. caprae'': disease in cattle |
||
** |
**''M. microti'': disease in rodents |
||
** |
**''M. pinnipdeii'': disease in seals, with rare human infection |
||
=== |
===Epidemiology=== |
||
* Typically spread via airborne route |
|||
** Droplets are expelled during coughing, sneezing, or talking, and are suspended in the air |
|||
** They can remain for up to 30 minutes |
|||
** Killed by ultraviolet light |
|||
** Not transmitted via fomites |
|||
* About a third of the world is infected, mostly as latent tuberculosis |
|||
** This progresses to active tuberculosis at about 3 or 4% in the first year and 5% over the rest of their life |
|||
* Reinfection accounts for ~40% of active tuberculosis in endemic countries |
|||
* Highest rates in sub-Saharan Africa and south/southeast Asia |
|||
*Typically spread via airborne route |
|||
=== Risk Factors === |
|||
**Droplets are expelled during coughing, sneezing, or talking, and are suspended in the air |
|||
* Source factors, such as sputum smear positivity, cough, cavitations |
|||
**They can remain for up to 30 minutes |
|||
* Exposure duration, closeness of contact |
|||
**Killed by ultraviolet light |
|||
* Factors in the exposed person, such as immune compromise, HIV status |
|||
**Not transmitted via fomites |
|||
*About a third of the world is infected, mostly as latent tuberculosis |
|||
**This progresses to active tuberculosis at about 3 or 4% in the first year and 5% over the rest of their life |
|||
*Reinfection accounts for ~40% of active tuberculosis in endemic countries |
|||
*Highest rates in sub-Saharan Africa and south/southeast Asia |
|||
===Risk Factors=== |
|||
== Clinical Manifestations == |
|||
=== Classification === |
|||
* Primary vs. reactivation vs. reinfection |
|||
* Latent vs. active |
|||
*Source factors, such as sputum smear positivity, cough, cavitations |
|||
=== Primary tuberculosis === |
|||
*Exposure duration, closeness of contact |
|||
* Primary tuberculosis is usually asymptomatic |
|||
*Factors in the exposed person, such as immune compromise, HIV status |
|||
* Possible presentations include mild URTI with cough and/or fever |
|||
* May be seen on CXR as infiltrate in mid-lung zones with hilar adenopathy |
|||
* Ghon complex, especially in children |
|||
* May progress in children and the immunocompromised patients |
|||
* Immunological phenomena |
|||
** Erythema nodosum |
|||
** Phlyctenular conjunctivitis |
|||
** Erythema induratum |
|||
==Clinical Manifestations== |
|||
=== Pulmonary tuberculosis === |
|||
===Classification=== |
|||
* Most common presentation of active tuberculosis |
|||
* Refer to separate article on [[pulmonary tuberculosis]] |
|||
*Primary vs. reactivation vs. reinfection |
|||
=== Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis === |
|||
*Latent vs. active |
|||
* Pleural tuberculosis is most common extrapulmonary site |
|||
* [[Scrofula]] (cervical lymph node infection) next-most common |
|||
* [[Tuberculous meningitis]] |
|||
* [[Tuberculous pericarditis]] |
|||
* Renal tuberculosis |
|||
* Abdominal tuberculosis |
|||
* Gastrointestinal tuberculosis |
|||
* [[Cutaneous tuberculosis]] |
|||
=== |
===Primary tuberculosis=== |
||
* Refers to chronic latent infection contained within granulomas that may reactivate in the future |
|||
* Refer to [[Latent tuberculosis infection]] |
|||
*Primary tuberculosis is usually asymptomatic |
|||
=== Other === |
|||
*Possible presentations include mild URTI with cough and/or fever |
|||
* [[Neonatal tuberculosis]] |
|||
*May be seen on CXR as infiltrate in mid-lung zones with hilar adenopathy |
|||
*Ghon complex, especially in children |
|||
*May progress in children and the immunocompromised patients |
|||
*Immunological phenomena |
|||
**Erythema nodosum |
|||
**Phlyctenular conjunctivitis |
|||
**Erythema induratum |
|||
===Pulmonary tuberculosis=== |
|||
== Investigations == |
|||
* Radiography: chest x-ray with or without CT chest |
|||
** Primary TB: consolidation, lymphadenopathy, pleural effusion, Ghon complex |
|||
** Reactivation TB: patchy upper-lobe consolidation, cavitation, fibrosis, pleural disease |
|||
** Miliary TB: uniform 1-3 mm diameter diffuse nodules |
|||
*Most common presentation of active tuberculosis |
|||
== Diagnosis == |
|||
*Refer to separate article on [[pulmonary tuberculosis]] |
|||
* Latent tuberculosis testing |
|||
** Tuberculin skin test (TST) |
|||
** Interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) |
|||
* Serology or immunologic testing |
|||
** Urine lipoarabinomannan antigen |
|||
* Microbiology |
|||
** Samples can include routine or induced sputum (x3) or bronchoscopy, or tissue sample |
|||
** Spontaneous sputum should include at least one morning sputum, ideally, but can be done all in a row at least one hour apart if needed |
|||
** Acid-fast bacillus culture of sputum x3 is about 70% sensitive, and PCR (ANTB) x1 is about 75% sensitive |
|||
* Molecular testing |
|||
** PCR, including GeneXpert |
|||
===Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis=== |
|||
== Management == |
|||
* [[Pulmonary tuberculosis#Management|Management of pulmonary tuberculosis]] |
|||
* [[Drug-resistant tuberculosis#Management|Management of drug-resistant tuberculosis]] |
|||
*Pleural tuberculosis is most common extrapulmonary site |
|||
=== Antibiotics === |
|||
*[[Scrofula]] (cervical lymph node infection) next-most common |
|||
*[[Tuberculous meningitis]] |
|||
*[[Tuberculous pericarditis]] |
|||
*Renal tuberculosis |
|||
*Abdominal tuberculosis |
|||
*Gastrointestinal tuberculosis |
|||
*[[Cutaneous tuberculosis]] |
|||
===Latent tuberculosis=== |
|||
*Refers to chronic latent infection contained within granulomas that may reactivate in the future |
|||
*Refer to [[Latent tuberculosis infection]] |
|||
===Other=== |
|||
*[[Neonatal tuberculosis]] |
|||
==Investigations== |
|||
*Radiography: chest x-ray with or without CT chest |
|||
**Primary TB: consolidation, lymphadenopathy, pleural effusion, Ghon complex |
|||
**Reactivation TB: patchy upper-lobe consolidation, cavitation, fibrosis, pleural disease |
|||
**Miliary TB: uniform 1-3 mm diameter diffuse nodules |
|||
==Diagnosis== |
|||
*Latent tuberculosis testing |
|||
**Tuberculin skin test (TST) |
|||
**Interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) |
|||
*Serology or immunologic testing |
|||
**Urine lipoarabinomannan antigen |
|||
*Microbiology |
|||
**Samples can include routine or induced sputum (x3) or bronchoscopy, or tissue sample |
|||
**Spontaneous sputum should include at least one morning sputum, ideally, but can be done all in a row at least one hour apart if needed |
|||
**Acid-fast bacillus culture of sputum x3 is about 70% sensitive, and PCR (ANTB) x1 is about 75% sensitive |
|||
*Molecular testing |
|||
**PCR, including GeneXpert |
|||
==Management== |
|||
*[[Pulmonary tuberculosis#Management|Management of pulmonary tuberculosis]] |
|||
*[[Drug-resistant tuberculosis#Management|Management of drug-resistant tuberculosis]] |
|||
===Antibiotics=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
! |
!Drug!!Dose!!Side effects |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="3" | |
! colspan="3" |First-line medications |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Isoniazid]] |
||
| |
|5 mg/kg daily, max 300 mg daily, with pyridoxine 25 mg po daily |
||
| |
|Rash, hepatitis, neuropathy, CNS toxicity, anemia |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Rifampin]] |
||
| |
|10 mg/kg daily |
||
| |
|Drug interactions, rash, hepatitis, flu-like illness, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Pyrazinamide]] |
||
| |
|25 mg/kg daily, max 2 g daily |
||
| |
|Hepatitis, rash, arthralgia, gout |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Ethambutol]] |
||
| |
|20 mg/kg daily, max 1.2 g daily |
||
| |
|Optic/retrobulbar neuritis, rash |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="3" | |
! colspan="3" |Second-line medications |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Streptomycin]] |
||
| |
|15 mg/kg daily, max 1 g |
||
| rowspan="2" | |
| rowspan="2" |Auditory and vestibular toxicity, renal toxocity, avoid in pregnancy |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Amikacin]], [[Is treated by::kanamycin]], or [[Is treated by::capreomycin]] |
||
| |
|15 mg/kg daily, man 1 g |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Ethionamide]] |
||
| |
|250 mg BID to TID, max 1 g |
||
| |
|GI disturbance, hepatotoxicity, endocrine effects, neurotoxicity, avoid in pregnancy |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Para-amino salicylic acid]] |
||
| |
|4 g BID or TID, max 10 g |
||
| |
|GI disturbance, hepatic dysfunction, hypothyroidism, avoid in aspirin allergy |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Cycloserine]] |
||
| |
|250 mg BID to TID, max 1 g |
||
| |
|Avoid in epilepsy, psychiatric illness, and alcoholism |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Levofloxacin]] |
||
| |
|500 to 1000 mg po daily |
||
| rowspan="2" | |
| rowspan="2" |GI disturbance, headache, anxiety, tremor, long QT, avoid in pregnancy and children |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Moxifloxacin]] |
||
| |
|400 to 600 mg daily |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Rifabutin]] |
||
| |
|300 mg daily |
||
| |
|Hepatotoxicity, uveitis, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, drug interactions |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Clofazimine]] |
||
| |
|100 to 300 mg daily |
||
| |
|Skin discolouration, conjunctiva, cornea, body fluid discolouration, GI intolerance, photosensitivity |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="3" | |
! colspan="3" |Third-line medications |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Is treated by::Linezolid]] |
||
| |
|600 mg po daily |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Bedaquiline]] |
||
| |
|400 mg po daily for 2 weeks followed by 200 mg thrice weekly |
||
| |
|Arthralgias, dizziness, headache, hyperuriemia, insomnia, myalgia, nausea, prolonged ECG QT interval, pruritus, and vomiting |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Pretomanid]] |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|[[Delamanid]] |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="3" | |
! colspan="3" |Adjunctive therapies |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|Corticosteroids for patients with [[tuberculous meningitis]] or [[tuberculous pericarditis]] |
||
| |
|Prednisone 40 to 80 mg po daily for 6 to 12 weeks |
||
| |
| |
||
|} |
|} |
||
=== |
===Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS)=== |
||
===Drug-induced liver injury (DILI)=== |
|||
*Most common complication leading to treatment interruption, with a mortality of 6-12% if drugs are not stopped |
|||
*[[Pyrazinamide]], followed by [[isoniazid]], then [[rifampin]], are the most common causes of liver injury[[CiteRef::yee2003in]][[CiteRef::saukkonen2006an]] |
|||
*Most patients can have the same TB drugs reintroduced without recurrence of DILI, though recurrence can be delayed |
|||
*Procedure |
|||
**Hold if ALT >120 and symptoms, if ALT >200 even without symptoms, or bili >2x ULN |
|||
**Switch to second-line meds |
|||
**Reintroduce the original drugs once AST & ALT are <2x ULN |
|||
**Only rechallenge with pyrazinamide if it was a mild case |
|||
===Adherence to treatment=== |
|||
*Refer to [http://www.letstalktb.org/ Let's Talk TB] |
|||
== Prevention == |
|||
=== Vaccination === |
|||
* BCG vaccine given at or shortly after birth in many countries |
|||
=== Infection Prevention and Control === |
|||
* All cases of suspected tuberculosis should be placed in airborne isolation until three sputum smears are negative for tuberculosis, unless it is still suspected and no other diagnosis is made |
|||
=== Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) === |
|||
** Sputum samples minimum of 1 hour apart, and at least one early morning sample |
|||
* Most common complication leading to treatment interruption, with a mortality of 6-12% if drugs are not stopped |
|||
** Three induced sputa are preferable to one bronchoscopy |
|||
* [[Pyrazinamide]], followed by [[isoniazid]], then [[rifampin]], are the most common causes of liver injury[[CiteRef::yee2003in]][[CiteRef::saukkonen2006an]] |
|||
* For patients with smear-negative, culture-positive, drug-susceptible respiratory TB: |
|||
* Most patients can have the same TB drugs reintroduced without recurrence of DILI, though recurrence can be delayed |
|||
** Continue airborne precautions until clinical evidence of improvement and a minimum of 2 weeks of effective therapy |
|||
* Procedure |
|||
** Can be discharged home provided there is clinical improvement, drug-resistant TB is not suspected, and there is no contraindication for home isolation |
|||
** Hold if ALT >120 and symptoms, if ALT >200 even without symptoms, or bili >2x ULN |
|||
* For patient with smear-positive, culture-positive, drug-susceptible respiratory TB: |
|||
** Switch to second-line meds |
|||
** Continue airborne precautions as above, but additionally require three negative sputum ''smears'' to be negative before they are taken out of airborne isolation |
|||
** Reintroduce the original drugs once AST & ALT are <2x ULN |
|||
** Can be discharge home as above |
|||
** Only rechallenge with pyrazinamide if it was a mild case |
|||
* For patients with rifampin- or multidrug-resistant TB: |
|||
** Continue airborne precautions as above, but additionally require three negative sputum ''cultures'' to be negative before they are taken out of airborne isolation |
|||
* Conditions for home isolation |
|||
** |
|||
==Further Reading== |
|||
=== Adherence to treatment === |
|||
* Refer to [http://www.letstalktb.org/ Let's Talk TB] |
|||
*[https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/infectious-diseases/canadian-tuberculosis-standards-7th-edition.html Canadian Canadian Tuberculosis Standards, 7th Edition (2014)] |
|||
== Further Reading == |
|||
* [https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/infectious-diseases/canadian-tuberculosis-standards-7th-edition.html Canadian Canadian Tuberculosis Standards, 7th Edition (2014)] |
|||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Mycobacterium tuberculosis''}} |
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Mycobacterium tuberculosis''}} |
||
Revision as of 15:02, 29 August 2020
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes tuberculosis
- Most commonly pulmonary TB but extrapulmonary tuberculosis is possible (including adenitis, gastrointestinal TB, pericarditis, meningitis)
- Standard treatment for susceptible TB is RIPE x2mo then RI x4mo
Background
Microbiology
- Fastidious, aerobic acid-fast bacillus
- Cell wall has high lipid content
- Generation time is very long (15 to 20 hours)
- M. tuberculosis is a complex that comprises seven species:
- M. tuberculosis sensu stricto: most common causative organism worldwide
- M. africanum: 50% of cases in West africa
- M. canetti: rare cause in Eastern African
- M. bovis: disease in cattle but can infect humans
- M. caprae: disease in cattle
- M. microti: disease in rodents
- M. pinnipdeii: disease in seals, with rare human infection
Epidemiology
- Typically spread via airborne route
- Droplets are expelled during coughing, sneezing, or talking, and are suspended in the air
- They can remain for up to 30 minutes
- Killed by ultraviolet light
- Not transmitted via fomites
- About a third of the world is infected, mostly as latent tuberculosis
- This progresses to active tuberculosis at about 3 or 4% in the first year and 5% over the rest of their life
- Reinfection accounts for ~40% of active tuberculosis in endemic countries
- Highest rates in sub-Saharan Africa and south/southeast Asia
Risk Factors
- Source factors, such as sputum smear positivity, cough, cavitations
- Exposure duration, closeness of contact
- Factors in the exposed person, such as immune compromise, HIV status
Clinical Manifestations
Classification
- Primary vs. reactivation vs. reinfection
- Latent vs. active
Primary tuberculosis
- Primary tuberculosis is usually asymptomatic
- Possible presentations include mild URTI with cough and/or fever
- May be seen on CXR as infiltrate in mid-lung zones with hilar adenopathy
- Ghon complex, especially in children
- May progress in children and the immunocompromised patients
- Immunological phenomena
- Erythema nodosum
- Phlyctenular conjunctivitis
- Erythema induratum
Pulmonary tuberculosis
- Most common presentation of active tuberculosis
- Refer to separate article on pulmonary tuberculosis
Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis
- Pleural tuberculosis is most common extrapulmonary site
- Scrofula (cervical lymph node infection) next-most common
- Tuberculous meningitis
- Tuberculous pericarditis
- Renal tuberculosis
- Abdominal tuberculosis
- Gastrointestinal tuberculosis
- Cutaneous tuberculosis
Latent tuberculosis
- Refers to chronic latent infection contained within granulomas that may reactivate in the future
- Refer to Latent tuberculosis infection
Other
Investigations
- Radiography: chest x-ray with or without CT chest
- Primary TB: consolidation, lymphadenopathy, pleural effusion, Ghon complex
- Reactivation TB: patchy upper-lobe consolidation, cavitation, fibrosis, pleural disease
- Miliary TB: uniform 1-3 mm diameter diffuse nodules
Diagnosis
- Latent tuberculosis testing
- Tuberculin skin test (TST)
- Interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA)
- Serology or immunologic testing
- Urine lipoarabinomannan antigen
- Microbiology
- Samples can include routine or induced sputum (x3) or bronchoscopy, or tissue sample
- Spontaneous sputum should include at least one morning sputum, ideally, but can be done all in a row at least one hour apart if needed
- Acid-fast bacillus culture of sputum x3 is about 70% sensitive, and PCR (ANTB) x1 is about 75% sensitive
- Molecular testing
- PCR, including GeneXpert
Management
Antibiotics
| Drug | Dose | Side effects |
|---|---|---|
| First-line medications | ||
| Isoniazid | 5 mg/kg daily, max 300 mg daily, with pyridoxine 25 mg po daily | Rash, hepatitis, neuropathy, CNS toxicity, anemia |
| Rifampin | 10 mg/kg daily | Drug interactions, rash, hepatitis, flu-like illness, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia |
| Pyrazinamide | 25 mg/kg daily, max 2 g daily | Hepatitis, rash, arthralgia, gout |
| Ethambutol | 20 mg/kg daily, max 1.2 g daily | Optic/retrobulbar neuritis, rash |
| Second-line medications | ||
| Streptomycin | 15 mg/kg daily, max 1 g | Auditory and vestibular toxicity, renal toxocity, avoid in pregnancy |
| Amikacin, kanamycin, or capreomycin | 15 mg/kg daily, man 1 g | |
| Ethionamide | 250 mg BID to TID, max 1 g | GI disturbance, hepatotoxicity, endocrine effects, neurotoxicity, avoid in pregnancy |
| Para-amino salicylic acid | 4 g BID or TID, max 10 g | GI disturbance, hepatic dysfunction, hypothyroidism, avoid in aspirin allergy |
| Cycloserine | 250 mg BID to TID, max 1 g | Avoid in epilepsy, psychiatric illness, and alcoholism |
| Levofloxacin | 500 to 1000 mg po daily | GI disturbance, headache, anxiety, tremor, long QT, avoid in pregnancy and children |
| Moxifloxacin | 400 to 600 mg daily | |
| Rifabutin | 300 mg daily | Hepatotoxicity, uveitis, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, drug interactions |
| Clofazimine | 100 to 300 mg daily | Skin discolouration, conjunctiva, cornea, body fluid discolouration, GI intolerance, photosensitivity |
| Third-line medications | ||
| Linezolid | 600 mg po daily | |
| Bedaquiline | 400 mg po daily for 2 weeks followed by 200 mg thrice weekly | Arthralgias, dizziness, headache, hyperuriemia, insomnia, myalgia, nausea, prolonged ECG QT interval, pruritus, and vomiting |
| Pretomanid | ||
| Delamanid | ||
| Adjunctive therapies | ||
| Corticosteroids for patients with tuberculous meningitis or tuberculous pericarditis | Prednisone 40 to 80 mg po daily for 6 to 12 weeks | |
Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS)
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI)
- Most common complication leading to treatment interruption, with a mortality of 6-12% if drugs are not stopped
- Pyrazinamide, followed by isoniazid, then rifampin, are the most common causes of liver injury12
- Most patients can have the same TB drugs reintroduced without recurrence of DILI, though recurrence can be delayed
- Procedure
- Hold if ALT >120 and symptoms, if ALT >200 even without symptoms, or bili >2x ULN
- Switch to second-line meds
- Reintroduce the original drugs once AST & ALT are <2x ULN
- Only rechallenge with pyrazinamide if it was a mild case
Adherence to treatment
- Refer to Let's Talk TB
Prevention
Vaccination
- BCG vaccine given at or shortly after birth in many countries
Infection Prevention and Control
- All cases of suspected tuberculosis should be placed in airborne isolation until three sputum smears are negative for tuberculosis, unless it is still suspected and no other diagnosis is made
- Sputum samples minimum of 1 hour apart, and at least one early morning sample
- Three induced sputa are preferable to one bronchoscopy
- For patients with smear-negative, culture-positive, drug-susceptible respiratory TB:
- Continue airborne precautions until clinical evidence of improvement and a minimum of 2 weeks of effective therapy
- Can be discharged home provided there is clinical improvement, drug-resistant TB is not suspected, and there is no contraindication for home isolation
- For patient with smear-positive, culture-positive, drug-susceptible respiratory TB:
- Continue airborne precautions as above, but additionally require three negative sputum smears to be negative before they are taken out of airborne isolation
- Can be discharge home as above
- For patients with rifampin- or multidrug-resistant TB:
- Continue airborne precautions as above, but additionally require three negative sputum cultures to be negative before they are taken out of airborne isolation
- Conditions for home isolation
Further Reading
References
- ^ Daphne Yee, Chantal Valiquette, Marthe Pelletier, Isabelle Parisien, Isabelle Rocher, Dick Menzies. Incidence of Serious Side Effects from First-Line Antituberculosis Drugs among Patients Treated for Active Tuberculosis. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 2003;167(11):1472-1477. doi:10.1164/rccm.200206-626oc.