Pediatric tuberculosis and drug resistance.
10.3345/kjp.2009.52.5.529
- Author:
Yae Jean KIM
1
Author Information
1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. yaejeankim@skku.edu
- Publication Type:Review
- Keywords:
Children;
Tuberculosis;
Drug resistance;
MDR;
XDR
- MeSH:
Adult;
Aged;
Child;
Drug Resistance;
Humans;
Isoniazid;
Korea;
Tuberculosis;
Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
- From:Korean Journal of Pediatrics
2009;52(5):529-537
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Drug-resistant tuberculosis in children has important implications for both the patients and tuberculosis control programs. In Korea, among all new patients, the isoniazid resistance rate was 9.9% and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis rate was 2.7% in 2004 (in patients aged 10-19 yr, the multidrug-resistant tuberculosis rate reached 2.1%). Tuberculosis in pediatric patients is difficult to diagnose because many children have nonspecific clinical signs and the detection rates of acid-fast bacilli smears and cultures are low. Therefore, every effort should be made to identify adult sources and obtain information on drug susceptibility because symptomatic adult patients have a higher chance of culture positivity and drug-susceptibility patterns are the same in most adult-child pair patients. Korean children are at significant risk of drug-resistant tuberculosis. As the isoniazid resistance rate is greater than 4% among the new cases in Korea, a four-drug regimen should be considered for initial treatment of children with active tuberculosis, unless drug-susceptibility test results are available. Treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis in children is challenging and there are only few available data. Tuberculosis control programs should be continuous with specific focus on pediatric populations because they can serve as reservoirs for future active cases. Further studies are needed regarding treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis in children.