American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Mar 2022
Efficacy of Long-Acting Bedaquiline Regimens in a Mouse Model of Tuberculosis Preventive Therapy.
Rationale: Completion of preventive therapy is a major bottleneck in global tuberculosis control. Long-acting injectable drug formulations would shorten therapy administration and may thereby improve completion rates. Recently, a long-acting formulation of bedaquiline demonstrated antituberculosis activity for up to 12 weeks after injection in a validated mouse model of preventive therapy. ⋯ Measurements and Main Results: One injection of long-acting bedaquiline at 160 mg/kg exerted antituberculosis activity for 12 weeks. Compared with the positive control (daily isoniazid-rifapentine for 4 wk), six regimens had equivalent bactericidal activity (including two all-oral comparator regimens), and two regimens had superior sterilizing activity: one injection with 2 weeks of oral bedaquiline and high-dose rifapentine; and two injections with 4 weeks of oral bedaquiline. Conclusions: Long-acting injectable bedaquiline has significant potential for shortening tuberculosis preventive therapy.
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The term "advanced sarcoidosis" is used for forms of sarcoidosis with a significant risk of loss of organ function or death. Advanced sarcoidosis often involves the lung and is described as "advanced pulmonary sarcoidosis" (APS), which includes advanced pulmonary fibrosis, associated complications such as bronchiectasis and infections, and pulmonary hypertension. Although APS affects a small proportion of patients with sarcoidosis, it is the leading cause of poor outcomes, including death. Here we review the major patterns of APS with a focus on the current management as well as potential approaches for improved outcomes for this most serious sarcoidosis phenotype.