Treatment Practices, Outcomes, and Costs of Multidrug-Resistant and Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis, United States, 2005–2007
Suzanne M. Marks
, Jennifer Flood, Barbara Seaworth, Yael Hirsch-Moverman, Lori Armstrong, Sundari Mase, Katya Salcedo, Peter Oh, Edward A. Graviss, Paul W. Colson, Lisa Armitige, Manuel Revuelta, Kathryn Sheeran, and the TB Epidemiologic Studies Consortium
Author affiliations: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (S.M. Marks, L. Armstrong, S. Mase, TB Epidemiologic Studies Consortium); California Department of Public Health, Richmond, California, USA (J. Flood, K. Salcedo, P. Oh); Texas Department of State Health Services, Tyler, Texas, USA (B. Seaworth, L. Armitige, K. Sheeran); University of Texas Health Science Center, Tyler (B. Seaworth, L. Armitige, K. Sheeran); ICAP/Columbia University, New York, New York, USA (Y. Hirsch-Moverman, P.W. Colson, M. Revuelta); Methodist Hospital Research Institute, Houston, Texas, USA (E.A. Graviss)
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Figure 1
Figure 1. Percentage of 135 patients for whom Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates had the following mutually exclusive resistance patternsINH/RIF/RBT-only, resistant to isoniazid (INH)/rifampin (RIF)/rifabutin (RBT) only; INH/RIF/RBT-plus, resistant to a median of 4 medications; first-line, resistant to a median of 6 medications; pre-XDR, resistant to a median of 8 medications; XDR, resistant to a median of 11 medications.
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