Emerg Infect DisEmerging Infect. DisEIDEmerging Infectious Diseases1080-60401080-6059Centers for Disease Control and Prevention16710962337442705-168810.3201/eid1205.051688Letters to the EditorLetterDrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis, TaiwanDrug-resistant M. tuberculosis, TaiwanJouRuwen*ChuangPei-Chun*WuYing-ShunYanJing-JouLuhKwen-Tay§Center for Disease Control, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China;Chest Hospital, Tainan, Taiwan, Republic of China;National Cheng Kung University Hospital, Tainan, Taiwan, Republic of China;National Association of Tuberculosis, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of ChinaAddress for correspondence: Ruwen Jou, Reference Laboratory of Mycobacteriology, Center for Research and Diagnostics, Center for Disease Control, Department of Health, 161 Kun-Yang Street, Nan-Kang, Taipei, 115, Taiwan, Republic of China; fax: 886-2-2653-1387; email: rwj@cdc.gov.tw52006125871872Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosisdrug resistanceTaiwan

To the Editor: Global surveillance of drug resistance has shown that a substantial proportion of tuberculosis (TB) patients are infected with drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains (1). Earlier hospital-based surveys have been undertaken in Taiwan, but these lacked systematic sampling and testing methods, which made interpreting results difficult. The combined treatment efficiency and the actual prevalence of drug resistance were unknown. Thus the Taiwan Center for Disease Control initiated the Taiwan Surveillance of Drug Resistance in Tuberculosis program in 2002.

A laboratory surveillance system was established and supervised by the national reference laboratory. The system includes 6 medical centers, 2 TB referral centers, and 1 regional hospital, distributed in 4 regions of Taiwan. The 9 laboratories provide services for healthcare facilities in their own and surrounding areas. Both the national reference laboratory and contract laboratories participated in an external quality proficiency test provided by the College of American Pathologists and the national reference laboratory. Performance was also assessed by the supranational reference laboratory in Antwerp, Belgium.

The population in the first year (2003) of the survey was 22,562,663, the number of confirmed TB cases was 15,042, the estimated incidence was 66.7 per 100,000 population, and the rate of notification of new positive sputum samples was 34.6% (2). A total of 3,699 isolates, ≈50% of M. tuberculosis strains isolated, underwent antimicrobial drug susceptibility testing in the system. Since clinical data were not available, only combined (primary plus acquired) drug resistance rates were analyzed. The survey showed that the combined drug resistance rates were 9.5% to isoniazid, 5.8% to ethambutol, 6.4% to rifampin, 9.6% to streptomycin, 20.0% to any drug, and 4.0% to multiple drugs. Resistance to any single drug was 12.3%, to any 2 drugs was 4.8%, to any 3 drugs was 2.2%, and to any 4 drugs was 0.7%. In the third global drug resistance surveillance report, the median prevalence of combined drug resistance was 6.6% to isoniazid, 1.3% to ethambutol, 2.2% to rifampin, 6.1% to streptomycin, 10.4% to any drug, and 1.7% to multiple drugs (1).

Available historical data from Taiwan are not directly comparable because of different sampling methods and because susceptibility testing methods have been applied in various hospital settings over time (Table), which limits our ability to monitor trends. The latest drug resistance rates obtained from Chest Hospital, a specialized TB referral hospital, showed that the combined drug resistance of any and multiple drugs were 27.6% and 15.8%, respectively, from January 2002 to June 2004 (unpub. data).

Drug resistance patterns in Taiwan, 1960–2004
Hospital*No. strainsStudy periodDrug resistance (%)†
INHEMBRMPSMAnyMDRMethodsReference‡
Primary drug resistance
A1621960–196213.411.722.2Absolute concentration (6)
B15419628.47.814.3 (6)
B5571971–197222.615.430.8Resistance ratio on SM; absolute concentration on INH and EMB (6)
B1,9141979–19828.40.109.217.9Absolute concentration (6)
B1,9241984–19886.80.40.25.09.9Resistance ratio (1984–1986); absolute concentration (1986–1988) (6)
B1,9351990–19959.20.71.55.712.31.2Absolute concentration (6)
B249199612.00.82.04.816.11.6Absolute concentration (7)
C2541996–19994.75.95.911.022.01.6Proportion (8)
D4562001–200214.92.63.311.420.62.4BACTEC 960 (9)
E1902001–200211.15.82.15.316.82.1Proportion (6)
F6112002–20046.80.81.86.212.81.8ProportionNA
Acquired drug resistance
B200199663.028.546.521.567.046.0Absolute concentration (7)
C1991996–199925.611.132.217.149.215.1Proportion (8)
B1832000–200137.710.925.117.542.624.6Absolute concentration (10)
D572001–200231.615.817.519.336.815.8BACTEC 960 (9)
E622001–200254.833.945.217.764.545.2Proportion (6)
F3242002–200450.912.644.417.955.842.2ProportionNA
Combined drug resistance
G9421982–198620.415.38.89.827.88.1Proportion (11)
A6511990–199214.710.310.611.222.68.3Proportion (9)
G8841992–199620.912.811.89.128.910.1Proportion (11)
B1,091199631.511.418.211.935.517.3Absolute concentration (7)
C4531996–199913.98.217.413.734.07.5Proportion (8)
H6931996–200035.915.713.428.652.411.4Proportion (12)
I1,4111998–200219.015.76.110.030.55.1Proportion (13)
D5132001–200216.84.14.912.322.43.9BACTEC 960 (9)
E2522001–200221.812.712.78.328.612.8Proportion (6)
F9352002–200422.25.216.510.227.615.8ProportionNA

*A, Taipei Veterans General Hospital (medical center); B, Taiwan Provincial Chronic Disease Control Bureau (referral center); C, Taipei Municipal Chronic Disease Hospital (referral center); D, Changhua Christian Hospital (medical center); E, Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital (medical center); F, Chest Hospital (referral center); G, Chang–Gung Memorial Hospital (medical center); H, Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital (medical center); I, National Taiwan University Hospital (medical center).
†INH, isoniazid; EMB, ethambutol; RMP, rifampin; SM, streptomycin; Any, resistance to any 1 of INH, EMB, RMP, or SM; MDR, resistance to at least INH and RMP.
‡NA, not available.

In Taiwan, isoniazid and rifampin were introduced in 1957 and 1978, respectively. Rifampin resistance was first seen in Taiwan in 1982. In recent decades, however, the rates of primary rifampin resistance have increased (Table), and primary resistance to multiple drugs has increased to 2.4% over time.

Based on patient data collected from Chest Hospital, multidrug resistance occurred in 42.2% of retreated TB patients, and 1.8% of multidrug-resistant isolates were found in new TB patients from January 2002 to June 2004 (unpub. data). In the third global drug resistance surveillance report, the median prevalence of multidrug resistance was 7.0% (highest 58.3%) among retreated cases and 1.1% (highest 14.2%) among new cases.

Significant declining trends were observed for any acquired resistance (67.0% to 42.6%, p<0.0001) and acquired multidrug resistance (46.0% to 24.6%, p<0.0001) at the Taiwan Provincial Chronic Disease Control Bureau from 1996 to 2001 (3,4). In addition, a decline in combined isoniazid resistance (43.1% to 16.4%, p < 0.0001), rifampin resistance (23.4% to 9.5%, p<0.0049), and multidrug resistance (18.2% to 7.8%, p<0.0113) was also reported from Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital from 1996 to 2000 (5). Taken together, data obtained from the Taiwan Surveillance of Drug Resistance in Tuberculosis and those reported previously show that rates of combined resistance to any drugs and multiple drugs has declined in Taiwan.

For retreated cases, the high acquired resistance rates indicated suboptimal initial treatment and insufficient case management of new patients, which raises a challenge to the National TB Control Programme in Taiwan. The direct observed treatment, short-course (DOTS) strategy has consequently been suggested to expand to all patients with newly diagnosed cases. The Taiwan Surveillance of Drug Resistance in Tuberculosis program will be extended to collect each patient's clinical and epidemiologic data, according to principles suggested in the guidelines prepared by the World Health Organization.

Suggested citation for this article: Jou R, Chuang P-C, Wu Y-S, Yan J-J, Luh K-T. Drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Taiwan [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis [serial on the Internet]. 2006 May [date cited]. http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1205.051688

This work was in part supported by grant DOH94-DC-2028 from the Center for Disease Control, Department of Health, Taiwan, Republic of China.

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