Abstract

 

Sputum-smear negative pulmonary tuberculosis - Controlled trail of 3-month and 2-month regimens of chemotherapy - First Report.

Hong Kong Chest Services; Tuberculosis Research Centre; British Medical Research Council.

Lancet; 1979; 1361-1363.

Of 1072 Chinese patients with radiographically active pulmonary tuberculosis and no microscopic evidence of acid-fast bacilli in sputum examinations, only 691 (64%) were sputum-culture negative. All patients were randomly allocated to selective chemotherapy (anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy not being started until the activity of the disease had been confirmed), to daily streptomycin, isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide for 2 months or 3 months, or to a standard 12-month control regimen. During the subsequent 12 months, 64% of the patients in the selective chemotherapy series started anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy. Both 2-month and 3-month regimens were inadequate for patients whose pretreatment sputum cultures were positive (relapse-rates 14% and 7%, respectively, in patients with drug-sensitive strains) but in the patients whose first cultures were negative the relapse-rate was only 1% after both short-term regimen.

 

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