Role of individual drugs in the chemotherapy of tuberculosis.
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Vol. 4 (9) , 796-806
Abstract
During the course of chemotherapy, certain drugs are predominant in their bactericidal activities. Isoniazid is responsible for an initial kill of about 95% of organisms during the first 2 days of treatment. Its bactericidal role is then replaced by rifampicin and pyrazinamide during the intensive phase. In the continuation phase with an isoniazid/rifampicin regimen, rifampicin is the only effective drug against persisters, as shown by the similarity of response by patients with initially isoniazid-resistant or sensitive strains. If the continuation phase regimen does not contain rifampicin but does contain isoniazid, the dominant bactericidal drug is isoniazid. In this case, the response of patients with initial isoniazid resistance is appreciably less good than in those with sensitive organisms. The review suggests exploration in randomised control trials of a continuation phase of rifampicin (or rifapentine) alone. It also suggests the importance of the dose size of rifampicin and the need for exploring a higher dose. Finally, it emphasises the importance of finding drugs that act on persisting organisms that are phenotypically but not genetically resistant to rifampicin.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: