BACKGROUND: The REMEMBER (A5274) study found that the four-drug TB preventive regimen did not reduce mortality compared to isoniazid-only, raising adherence concerns. Using drug measurements and pharmacometrics, we assessed adherence in the four-drug arm by comparing participants who developed TB (cases) to those who did not (controls). METHODS: Using a 1:4 matched case-control design, we analysed stored blood samples at weeks 2, 4, and 8 since treatment start. Rifampicin and pyrazinamide were measured, and adherence was assessed using two thresholds: i) lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) and ii) personalised thresholds derived from pharmacokinetic simulations. Population pharmacokinetic models and Monte Carlo simulations were used to predict individualised thresholds assuming 100% adherence. Conditional logistic regression compared non-adherence between cases and controls. RESULTS: Among 28 cases and 112 controls, the proportion of samples <LLOQ was 52% (cases) versus 45% (controls) for rifampicin and 20% (cases) versus 14% (controls) for pyrazinamide. Non-adherence was significantly higher in cases compared to controls for two pyrazinamide metrics: the week 4 LLOQ (P = 0.050) and the week 2 2.5th percentile personalised threshold (P = 0.023). CONCLUSION: Poor adherence may have contributed to TB incidence in REMEMBER. While not definitive, personalised thresholds from model-based simulations remain useful for adherence assessment.
Abdelgawad et al. (Sun,) studied this question.