Objectives: To characterise the prevalence, clinical and radiological features of drug resistant tuberculosis in selected patients with pulmonary tuberculosis in Harare between 1994 and 1996.
Design: A retrospective review of medical and microbiological records.
Setting: Beatrice Road Infectious Diseases Hospital, Harare, Zimbabwe.
Subjects: 381 smear-positive tuberculosis patients who had samples submitted to the National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory for culture and susceptibility testing.
Main outcome measures: Prevalence of resistance of isolated cultures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to anti-tuberculosis drugs; clinical, radiological and microbiological response to treatment with recommended anti-tuberculosis regimens.
Results: Resistance to one or more drugs was detected in 16 isolates (16/165, 9.7%), single drug resistance in five (3.0%) and resistance to two or more drugs in 11 (6.7%). There were no distinctive clinical or radiological features of drug-resistant tuberculosis, although a higher percent of drug resistant cases had evidence of pleural disease (25% vs 2.5%, p = 0.005). Neither past history of tuberculosis or known or suspected HIV infection was associated with the presence of drug resistance.
Conclusions: In spite of the resurgence of tuberculosis and the high prevalence of HIV infection in Zimbabwe, the rates of drug resistance have remained relatively low, even among a selected population at high risk of resistance. A significant proportion of cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis appear to be due to new transmission of drug resistant strains, which reinforces the importance of maintaining a surveillance system for the monitoring of drug susceptibility. Ongoing prospective studies should provide more reliable estimates of the prevalence and determinants of drug resistance in Zimbabwe.