MX of Paediatric TB
MX of Paediatric TB
MX of Paediatric TB
13
CHAPTER
Soumya Swaminathan
Diagnosis of Paediatric TB
The difficulty in obtaining sputum, non-specific radiographic findings and the
paucibacillary nature of the disease often makes the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) in
children difficult. Clinicians should suspect pulmonary TB in children presenting with:
Fever and /or cough for more than three weeks, with or without;
History of contact with a suspected or diagnosed case of active TB disease within the
last two years.
The evaluation of some of the many available scoring systems have shown them to have
high sensitivity but low specificity, which may lead to over-diagnosis and unnecessary
treatment of non-TB patients. Currently, the use such scoring systems for the diagnosis of
patients it is not recommended . Further research needs to be undertaken to evaluate the
utility of scoring charts in the Indian context.
Further screening of TB suspects should be done by:
Bacteriological Testing: Sputum examination should be done wherever possible. Gastric
lavage may be used when sputum is not available. Multiple samples should be tested by
both smear and culture, if facilities are available.
Radiology: Chest x-ray should be taken in upright position PA view. Radiological lesions
are not confirmatory for tuberculosis, as there are no pathognomonic radiological signs of
TB. However, x-ray findings suggestive of TB include mediastinal/hilar lymphadenitis
with or without parenchymal lesions, pleural effusion, miliary and fibrocaseous pictures.
Persistent pneumonia beyond four weeks in a symptomatic child in spite of antibiotic therapy,
suggests probable TB.
PCR: The sensitivity of PCR is variable and may be as low as 20 percent in gastric
aspirate samples; the sensitivity can be increased by using two or more probes. However,
routine use of PCR is not recommended at present.
119
Serology: Due to many variable factors in the host, mycobacterium and environment,
serology is not useful in childhood TB. The sensitivity, specificity as well as predictive
value of commercially available serological tests such as ELISA for TB, do not justify
their use in our setting at present.
Children who do not fulfil the diagnostic criteria but need further evaluation should be
referred to a paediatrician. A high index of suspicion must be maintained when the child is
aged < 1 year, there is a recent history of measles/whooping cough, immunocompromised
state and steroid therapy. Significant superficial lymphadenopathy should be looked for as
it is present in > 40-50 percent of patients.
A diagnostic algorithm for Paediatric Pulmonary TB is given in Figure 1.
Figure 1
120
13
Treatment of Paediatric TB
Principles of Short-Course Chemotherapy (SCC)
The biological characteristics of the tubercle bacilli (lag phase, size and types of bacterial
populations, easy development of resistance when exposed to a single drug, presence of
natural drug-resistant mutants) determine the principles of short-course treatment for
tuberculosis.
A combination of at least three to four drugs should be used in the initial intensive phase
(two months). The drugs are Isoniazid (H), Rifampicin (R), Pyrazinamide (Z), and either
Streptomycin (S) or Ethambutol (E). This combination ensures rapid killing of all
populations of bacilli.
The minimum duration of treatment is six months when Rifampicin is used throughout
and Pyrazinamide is used in the initial intensive phase. If only two drugs are used, the
duration of treatment has to be at least nine months.
The drugs should preferably be given together and administered as a single dose.
The advantages of SCC are:
I. It has a faster and more powerful bactericidal and sterilising action so that even if the
patient defaults after the first few months of therapy, they are likely to be cured.
II. The patient is exposed to potentially toxic drugs for shorter periods of time.
III.The regimens are less expensive and more cost-effective than traditional therapy.
IV.More time and resources can be allotted to ensuring adherence.
Various studies in adults have shown that, with a combination of Rifampicin, Isoniazid
and Pyrazinamide with either Streptomycin or Ethambutol, about 90 percent of patients
become culture-negative by the end of two months (bactericidal effect of the regimen).
Continuing the treatment with Rifampicin and Isoniazid for a further four months results
in almost 100 percent of patients with drug sensitive organisms becoming culture-negative,
and bacteriological relapse occurring in only about 5 percent of patients (sterilising effect
of the regimen). If Rifampicin is not administered in the second phase, the total duration of
treatment has to be at least eight months. Table 1 shows the results of SCC studies in
children. In all these trials, the overall success rate was greater than 95 percent for complete
cure and 99 percent for significant improvement. The incidence of clinically significant
adverse reactions was less than 2 percent. Several studies included a significant number of
children with moderate to severe malnutrition, and these children generally did well. Several
of these studies again demonstrated that over half of the children continued to have
abnormalities in the chest radiograph at the end of six months of therapy, but the radiographic
picture continued to improve after the completion of therapy when medications were
discontinued after six months. At a consensus meeting of TB experts and paediatricians
held in August 2003 in Delhi, it was therefore recommended that children with tuberculosis
be treated using the regimens available in the RNTCP.
121
Author, Country
and Year
Diagnostic Criteria
No. of
children
Regimen
Results
Clinical and
radiological
175
81 percent treatment
completion 1 relapse
89
117
2RHZ2/4RH2
6RHZ
sss
Treatment outcome
and adherence
equivalent 1 relapse
USA, 2002
Te Water Naude et.
al. S.Africa, 2000
Varudkar
India, 1985
Clinical and
radiological
100
40
45
2HRE /4HE
2 HZE / 4 HE 6 HRE3
0 failures,
0 relapses
Biddulph
Clinical and
bacteriological
639
2 SHRZ / 4 HR2
2 HRZ2 /4 HR2
12 (2 percent) died
7 (1 percent)relapses
5/7 relapses in poorly
adherent patients.
Clinical and
bacteriological
37
39
2 HRZ / 4HR2
9 HR
Clinical and
bacteriological
Clinical, radiological
and bacteriological
68
69
2 HRZ3 / 4RH2
3 (2 percent) died
0 failures 3 relapses
In addition, the consensus meeting recommended that some modifications in the type of
patients under each treatment category be made (Table 2), keeping in mind the different
diagnostic criteria used in children, namely:
Category of
treatment
Type of patients
Category I
Category II
Category III
Intensive phase
Continuation phase
2H3R3Z3E3
4H3R3
2S3H3R3Z3E3+
Sputum smear-positive relapse
Sputum smear-positive treatment failure
1H3R3Z3E3
Sputum smear-positive treatment after default
Others
5H3R3E3
4H3R3
2H3R3Z3
122
13
Chemoprophylaxis
Asymptomatic children under six years of age, exposed to an adult with infectious (smearpositive) TB, will be given six months of daily Isoniazid (5 mg per kg) chemoprophylaxis.
123
the infecting strain of M. tuberculosis is susceptible are given. Exact treatment regimens
can be tailored to the specific pattern of drug resistance, if known. If not, at least three
drugs to which the patient has not been exposed earlier should be given. Resistance to
Isoniazid or Streptomycin alone can usually be managed with any of the standard fourdrug regimens with good results. However, when resistance to both Isoniazid and Rifampicin
is present (i.e. multi-drug resistant TB), the management is more complicated and requires
the use of second line drugs. The duration of therapy is usually extended to nine to 12
months if either Isoniazid or Rifampicin can be used, and to at least 18-24 months if resistance
to both drugs is present. Occasionally, surgical resection of a diseased lung or lobe is
required.
124
13
References
1.
2.
3.
Grosset, J.H.: Present status of chemotherapy for tuberculosis. Rev Infect Dis 1989;11:S
342-347.
4.
5.
Jindani, A., Aber, V.R., Edwards, V.A., Mitchison, D.A.: The early bactericidal activity of
drugs in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis. Am Rev Respir Dis1980; 212:939-44.
6.
7.
Ramachandran, P., Kripasankar, A.S., Duraipandian, M.: Short Course Chemotherapy for
pulmonary tuberculosis in children. Indian J Tub 1998; 45: 83-87.
8.
Al Dossary, F.S., Ong, L.T., Correa, A.G., Starke, J.R.: Treatment of childhood
tuberculosis with a six month directly observed regimen of only two weeks of daily
therapy. Paediatric Infect. Dis J 2002; 21:91-7.
9.
Te Water Naude, J.M., Donald, P.R., Hussey, G.D., et al.: Twice-weekly vs daily
chemotherapy for childhood TB. Paediatric Infect. Dis J 200; 19:405-0.
10. Varudkar, B.L.: Short-course chemotherapy for tuberculosis in children. Indian J Pediatr
1985; 52: 593-7.
11.
Biddulph, J.: Short-course chemotherapy for childhood tuberculosis. Pediatr Infect Dis J
1990; 9: 794-801.
12. Kumar, L., Dhand, R., Singh, P.D., Rao, K.L.N., Katariya, S.: A randomised trial of fully
intermittent and daily followed by intermittent short-course chemotherapy for childhood
tuberculosis. Pediatr Inf Dis J 1990; 9: 802-806.
13. Starke, J.R.: Multidrug therapy for tuberculosis in children. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1990;
9:785-93.
14. American Thoracic Society. Treatment of tuberculosis and tuberculosis infection in adults
and children. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1994;144:1359-74.
15. Paramasivan, C.N.: An overview on drug resistance tuberculosis in India. Indian J Tub;
1998:45:73-81.
16. Jawahar, M.S., Sivasubramaniam, S., Vijayan, V.K.: Short-course chemotherapy for
tuberculosis lymphadenitis in children. Br Med J 1990; 301: 359-62.
17. Ramachandran, P., Duraipandian, M., Nagarajan, R., Prabhakar, R., Ramakrishnan, C.V.,
Tripathy, S.P.: Three chemotherapy studies of tuberculosis meningitis in children. Tubercle
1986; 67: 17-29.
18. Jacobs, R.F., Sunakorn, P.: Tuberculous meningitis in children: An evaluation of
chemotheraputic regimens. Am Rev Respir Dis 1990; 141(S): A337.
19. Donald, P.R., Schoeman, S.F., Van, ZYL LE, De Villiers, J.N., Pretorius, M., Springer, P.:
Intensive short course chemotherapy in the management of tuberculous meningitis. Int J
Tuberc Lung Dis 1998; 2(9); 704-711.
125
20. Iseman, M.D.: Treatment of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis. N Engl J Med 1993; 329: 784.
21. Smith, M.H.D.: The role of adrenal steroids in the treatment of tuberculosis. Paediatrics 1958; 22: 774776.
22. Grigis, N.I., Fariz, Z., Kilpatrick, M.E., et al.: Dexamethasone adjunctive treatment for tuberculous
meningitis. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1991;10: 79-82.
23. Central TB Division (CTD), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India. RNTCP. TB
in Children. Consensus Guidelines of Paediatricians, TB Experts and TB Control Programme
Managers. New Delhi: CTD, 2004.
126