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* From the University of British Columbia (Drs. F. Marra, C.A. Marra, Shi, Elwood, and FitzGerald), Vancouver, BC, Canada; and BC Centre for Disease Control (Ms. Moadebi and Mr. Stark) Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Correspondence to: Fawziah Marra, PharmD, BC Centre for Disease Control, Vaccine and Pharmacy Services, 655 West 12th Ave, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 4R4 Canada; e-mail: fawziah.marra{at}bccdc.ca
| Abstract |
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Objectives: To compare overall rate of major adverse events associated with levofloxacin-containing regimen to standard therapy.
Methods: Cases (levofloxacin-containing regimen) were matched by age and sex to their control subjects (standard first-line TB drugs). Eligible patients were identified from the provincial TB database from 2001 to 2004. Drug safety was assessed by evaluation of the nature of the adverse event, the likelihood of association with the study medications, and severity. Only major side effects, that is, those who had a severe or moderate adverse event that was categorized to be definitely, probably, or possibly related to the TB medications, were considered for the analysis.
Results: During the 3-year study period, 102 patients received levofloxacin, and 358 patients received first-line agents for treatment of active TB. There were no significant differences between the two groups except for indication (82% of patients in the levofloxacin group had an antecedent adverse event to first-line TB drugs, whereas 18% received levofloxacin because of resistance) and concurrent use of first-line drugs (majority of patients in the levofloxacin arm were not receiving concurrent isoniazid or rifampin). The rate of any major adverse event was almost half among those using levofloxacin as among those on standard therapies (rate ratio, 0.60; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.44 to 0.82). After adjustment for the differences in exposure of concomitant medications, the rate of any major adverse event was similar between the levofloxacin and control arms (adjusted rate ratio, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.66 to 1.03). Furthermore, there was no difference between the levofloxacin and control arms with respect to CNS (adjusted rate ratio, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.61 to 1.43), GI tract (adjusted rate ratio, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.58 to 1.13), skin (adjusted rate ratio, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.38 to 1.10), or musculoskeletal (MSK) [adjusted rate ratio, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.48 to 1.60] related adverse events when adjusted for concomitant drugs. The results of the secondary analysis for the rate of major adverse events within the first 100 days were similar to the primary analysis. The time to the first major adverse event was similar between the levofloxacin group and the control group (adjusted hazards ratio, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.76 to 1.34).
Conclusions: Concomitant use of a levofloxacin-containing regimen resulted in a similar rate of adverse events compared with conventional first-line regimens when used for treatment of active TB, despite a history of adverse events.
Key Words: adverse events fluoroquinolones levofloxacin tuberculosis
| Introduction |
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6 months.5 Intolerance to these medications or drug-resistant disease requires the use of alternative regimens frequently containing quinolones.678 The second-generation quinolone antibiotics (ofloxacin and ciprofloxacin) have moderate in vitro activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis,910 but the activity (both in vitro and in vivo) of the newer-generation fluoroquinolones, such as levofloxacin1112 and moxifloxacin, is twofold to threefold greater.1314 Prospective clinical trials of fluoroquinolones as first-line agents for the treatment of TB are limited, and the majority of clinical data678 are on their use as second-line agents, either for those patients infected with drug-resistant M tuberculosis or for those with drug-sensitive disease who are intolerant to the first-line agents. Since the introduction of levofloxacin in North America, it has become a commonly used fluoroquinolone because of its superior in vivo activity against M tuberculosis, as well as its more-convenient dosing schedule (levofloxacin is administered once daily compared with the twice-daily schedule for ciprofloxacin/ofloxacin).15 Results from the randomized clinical trials16 evaluating moxifloxacin for the treatment of M tuberculosis are in progress, and, as such, the use of this newer fluoroquinolone is not as prevalent as levofloxacin at the present time.
In August 2001, the TB Control Service at the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control switched from ciprofloxacin to levofloxacin for the treatment of patients with drug-resistant TB infection and for patients who had TB and were intolerant to first-line medications. In order to determine the safety of the new fluoroquinolone-containing regimen, we examined the incidence of adverse events in the levofloxacin-containing regimen vs standard regimens.
| Materials and Methods |
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Subjects
All of the cases of active TB were confirmed by the isolation of M tuberculosis from culture. We evaluated medication records of patients who had received
7 days of levofloxacin (with other antituberculous agents) or standard first-line treatment (ie, isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol) from 2001 to 2004 for the treatment of active TB. The data collected included age, sex, weight, country of origin, comorbid conditions, other antituberculous medications, dosage, duration of treatment, hospitalizations, previous intolerances to antituberculous medications, adverse events, and reasons for discontinuation of therapy.
Outcome Definitions
In the assessment of the study outcomes, in order to be recorded as an adverse event in the TB control database, both the attending physician and the nurse practitioner at the Tuberculosis Treatment Clinics had to concur (at the time of patient assessment) that the medication was responsible for the observed reaction. These adverse events were additionally evaluated by the investigative team for severity and the likelihood of association with the study medications according to previously published criteria described below.1718
The nature of the adverse events were categorized as those related to the central nervous system, respiratory, cardiovascular (CVS), gastrointestinal, skin, and musculoskeletal (MSK). Central nervous system events included seizures, fever, vertigo/tinnitus, paresthesia, visual disturbances, headache, and confusion. CVS events included arrhythmias, hypotension, increased heart rate, and chest pain. GI system events included nausea and vomiting, anorexia/weight loss, dyspepsia, abdominal pain and hepatitis. Hepatitis was defined as liver transaminases more than three times the upper limit of normal in the presence of GI symptoms or transaminases more than five times the upper limit of normal without symptoms. Dermatologic system events were characterized as rash, pruritis, and swelling. MSK complaints included fatigue, weakness, joint pain, and tendonitis.
The severity of the adverse reaction was categorized as mild, moderate, or severe. Severity was considered as follows: (1) mild if the signs and symptoms did not require additional medication and the study drugs were continued; (2) moderate if the signs and symptoms did not require additional medication but were controlled on discontinuation of the study medication; or (3) severe if the signs and symptoms were potentially life-threatening, permanently disabling, resulted in extended hospital stay and/or required significant treatment (eg, systemic drugs), and required discontinuation of the study medication.
The likelihood of association of the adverse event to the study medication was assessed as definite, probable, possible, or unlikely by using the following five criteria: (1) known adverse drug reaction; (2) temporal relationship; (3) adverse drug reaction disappeared with dose reduction or discontinuation of study drug; (4) symptoms could not be explained by any other known condition or predisposition of patient; and (5) symptoms reappeared on rechallenge, or laboratory tests showed higher-than-normal drug levels or metabolic disturbances, which explained the symptoms. An adverse drug reaction was characterized as definite if all five of the criteria were satisfied; probable if the first four criteria were satisfied; possible if the first three criteria were satisfied; or unlikely if the relevant information could not be obtained, if the temporal sequence was atypical, or if other conditions or dispositions were considered far more likely to have caused the symptoms.
For purposes of this analysis, we included only those patients who were considered to have had a major adverse event. This was defined as patients who had a severe or moderate adverse event that was categorized to be definitely, probably, or possibly related to the TB medications according to the criteria.
Statistical Analysis
The quality of the matching of the age variable was assessed using t test. Cross-tabulations and
2 tests of homogeneity were computed for gender. Other descriptive analyses were calculated using t tests and
2 tests as appropriate. All p values < 0.05 were considered to be significant, whereas p values < 0.1 were considered as a trend to significance.
The primary analysis was to determine the overall rate of any major event occurrence in the two study arms using a Poisson regression model with the logarithm (the time taking the study drug) as an offset variable.19 As such, a rate-ratio, with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), between the levofloxacin group and the control group was generated. The potential confounders were evaluated for each person-day of the follow-up, including ethnicity, baseline liver function, previous medication intolerance, and concurrent medications. An adjusted rate ratio was generated by a two-sided elimination method. Second, these Poisson regression analyses were repeated for each of the individual symptom systems (eg, CNS, GI, and skin).
Since a report regarding adverse events of first-line TB agents found that most of the events occurred in the first 3 months, we conducted another analysis looking at the rate of a major adverse event in the first 100 days.1720 Other secondary analyses2122 included time-to-event curves for each group that were calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared by means of the log-rank test. Cox proportional hazards models were used to compare the time to the first event for the occurrence of any major event and the individual symptom systems.23 Hazard ratios and their 95% CIs were computed for these models.
| Results |
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The rate of any major adverse event in the age-matched and gender-matched sample was almost half among those using levofloxacin as among those on standard therapies (rate ratio, 0.60; 95% CI, 0.44 to 0.82) [Table 2 ]. However, after an additional adjustment for the differences in exposure of concomitant medications (ethambutol, pyrazinamide, rifampin, and isoniazid), the rate ratio was no longer significantly different (Table 2). Similarly, for adverse events of the skin, the age-matched and gender-matched rate ratio showed that levofloxacin had a significantly lower event rate (rate ratio, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.20 to 0.92) when compared with the standard therapies. But after additional adjustment for exposure of concomitant medications, the rate ratio was no long significantly different (Table 2). Finally for the other organ systems (CNS, GI, and MSK), although all of the point estimates of the rate ratio were < 1 (signifying that levofloxacin had a lower event rate), none of these were significant in either the unadjusted (ie, age-matched and gender-matched only) or adjusted (ie, age, gender, and concomitant drugs) models.
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The time to the first major adverse event was similar between the levofloxacin group and the control group (adjusted hazards ratio, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.76 to 1.34). Similarly, the results of the other Cox regression models showed that the time to a major adverse event by an organ system was similar between the two groups (Table 3 ). The time to any major event for the first 100 days, for the overall case (adjusted hazards ratio, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.74 to 1.33), as well as by an organ system, was no different between the levofloxacin group and the control arm. This finding is illustrated in a Kaplan-Meier survival curve (Fig 1 ).
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| Discussion |
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There is a suggestion in the literature that most adverse events for anti-TB agents occur in the first 100 days, and, therefore, using person-days of treatment for the analysis may underestimate the toxicity. Therefore, we conducted a secondary analysis for the rate of any major adverse event in the levofloxacin and control arms in the first 100 days of therapy. Ninety-five percent of the events occurred in the first 100 days; however, the rate of events (either overall or by individual organ system) did not differ compared with the primary analysis using person-days. Although the overall event rate ratio was no longer statistically significant (it crossed the point of unity with the upper confidence limit being 1.02), the point estimate was still < 1 (rate ratio, 0.70), indicating a possible lower adverse event rate in the levofloxacin group compared with the control subjects.
For the primary analysis, the relevant question being addressed is whether regimens containing levofloxacin have less toxicity than those that do not. Because the influence of the major confounding factors were either controlled by the design (age and sex) or were equally distributed between the two groups, it is unlikely that this lower rate ratio was influenced by other factors. Intuitively, this observation makes sense, because those who were treated with levofloxacin appeared to have been treated with fewer medications and, thus, could be expected to have fewer adverse events. However, even when this differential exposure to anti-TB medication was controlled for in the analysis, the point estimate for the adjusted rate ratio for levofloxacin was still < 1 with 95% confidence intervals that barely crossed the point of unity (rate ratio, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.68 to 1.08). As such, the results of this study, although not definitive in suggesting that fluoroquinolone-containing treatment regimens may result in fewer major adverse events in the treatment of active TB, do definitively show that the rate of adverse events is certainly not higher then other anti-TB medications and may, in fact, be lower.
Another possible limitation of the study may have been that the group receiving levofloxacin had a lower rate of adverse events because they were no longer exposed to the agents that were problematic in the first exposure, but, when we examined this in the multivariate model, we did not find an association, and this parameter was not retained in our final Poisson regression models.
Fluoroquinolones are currently being recommended as second-line agents for the treatment of multidrug-resistant TB and for those patients with intolerance to first-line agents by the World Health Organization.6 In addition, consensus guidelines from the American Thoracic Society, US Center for Disease Control and Prevention, and Infectious Diseases Society of America have suggested incorporating fluoroquinolones for prophylaxis of those exposed to multidrug-resistant TB.5 These two recommendations have been based on prospective clinical data, which have used ofloxacin,24252627 ciprofloxacin,28293031 and levofloxacin273233 in combination with other anti-TB agents for the treatment of drug-resistant or drug-sensitive TB. Despite the use of fluoroquinolones for a prolonged period in routine clinical practice, there remains little literature on their tolerance outside of a clinical-trial setting.3435 Limited tolerance to fluoroquinolones has been described when used for preventative therapy in combination with pyrazinamide, but these are individual case reports or case series.3637383940 We recognize the importance of a case series in identifying adverse events; however, the lack of a control group makes it difficult to definitively identify fluoroquinolones as the cause for the excess adverse events. Our study represents the first population-based, case-control study with a large sample size to objectively assess the adverse events associated with the use of fluoroquinolones for treatment of active TB in routine clinical practice.
The limited tolerance to the combination of ofloxacin and pyrazinamide was first described in 1994 when 14 of 16 health-care workers (87.5%) receiving prophylactic therapy (ie, treatment of latent TB) discontinued treatment in < 6 months because of adverse events.3637 A high incidence of adverse effects with ofloxacin and pyrazinamide was reported again 1997,38 when 13 of 22 patients (59%) prematurely discontinued prophylactic therapy with these agents. The adverse effects included GI reactions, arthralgias, and increases in liver function tests, with one patient experiencing peak aspartate aminotransferase levels of 1,835 U/L and alanine aminotransferase levels of 2,990 U/L. Since then, two reports describing the intolerance of levofloxacin (the L-isomer of ofloxacin) and pyrazinamide have been published.3839 Papastavros et al39 conducted a case series of 17 individuals with suspected multidrug-resistant, latent TB infection who were treated with pyrazinamide and levofloxacin. They found that the regimen of pyrazinamide and levofloxacin was poorly tolerated, with 14 of 17 individuals (82%) experiencing at least one adverse event involving the MSK, GI, dermatologic, or central nervous systems. Lou et al40 evaluated the tolerability of levofloxacin and pyrazinamide in solid organ transplant patients given a prophylactic treatment. The investigators of this study also found that the regimen of pyrazinamide and levofloxacin was poorly tolerated, with 27 of 48 transplant recipients (56%) discontinuing their treatment within the first 4 months because of adverse events.
Nonrandomized studies such as ours are susceptible to bias because of confounding by indication.41 The patients in the levofloxacin group were already intolerant to anti-TB medications (this was not adjusted for in our analysis, because a prior adverse event was one of the criteria to be placed on levofloxacin) and, thus, may have been predisposed to the development of adverse events. However, as shown by the consistently protective effect (rate ratio, < 1) of levofloxacin, if this bias exists, it would be conservative and would favor the levofloxacin group. Another limitation of the study is the small sample size, which provided limited power to detect significant associations between the cases and the control subjects. Third, the occurrence of major side effects with anti-TB drugs is associated with age, gender, ethnicity (birthplace in Asia), and HIV.1718 Although our analysis was matched for age and gender in the design, and there was a very similar distribution in ethnicity between groups, we were unable to adjust for HIV status, because it was not available for all of the patients. However, this was unlikely to be a source of major confounding in our population because of the relatively low prevalence of HIV infection among TB patients in British Columbia.42 The results of our study may not be generalizable to other populations, because Asians and Aboriginals represented > 75% of the sample. Possible bias may have included a clinicians tendency to change the therapy for relatively minor adverse events more commonly when the patient was on their first-line regimen (control subjects) compared with the second regimen (cases).
The treatment of multidrug-resistant TB involves the use of multiple second-line and toxic agents for a prolonged period of time. Compliance is stressed when counseling patients on their medication, and patients must be able to tolerate their therapeutic regimens in order to achieve a cure. In this setting, the use of an anti-TB agent with fewer side effects is desirable.
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| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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None of the authors have direct financial interest in the subject matter of the manuscript. In particular, none of the authors have received funding from Jansen-Ortho, the manufacturer of Levofloxacin.
Received for publication November 29, 2004. Accepted for publication February 4, 2005.
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