Abstract
Surveys suggest that clinicians diverge from guidelines when treating Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) pulmonary disease (PD). To determine prescribing patterns, we conducted a cohort study of adults >66 years of age in Ontario, Canada, with MAC or Mycobacterium xenopi PD during 2001–2013. Using linked laboratory and health administrative databases, we studied the first treatment episode (>60 continuous days of >1 of a macrolide, ethambutol, rifamycin, fluoroquinolone, linezolid, inhaled amikacin, or, for M. xenopi, isoniazid). Treatment was prescribed for 24% MAC and 15% of M. xenopi PD patients. Most commonly prescribed was the recommended combination of macrolide, ethambutol, and rifamycin, for 47% of MAC and 36% of M. xenopi PD patients. Among MAC PD patients, 20% received macrolide monotherapy and 33% received regimens associated with emergent macrolide resistance. Although the most commonly prescribed regimen was guidelines-recommended, many regimens prescribed for MAC PD were associated with emergent macrolide resistance.
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CITATION STYLE
Brode, S. K., Chung, H., Campitelli, M. A., Kwong, J. C., Marchand-Austin, A., Winthrop, K. L., … Marras, T. K. (2019). Prescribing patterns for treatment of mycobacterium avium complex and m. Xenopi pulmonary disease in ontario, canada, 2001–2013. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 25(7), 1271–1280. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2507.181817
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