Who are the patients that default tuberculosis treatment? – space matters!

Author:

NUNES C.,DUARTE R.,VEIGA A. M.,TAYLOR B.

Abstract

SUMMARYThe goals of this article are: (i) to understand how individual characteristics affect the likelihood of patients defaulting their pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) treatment regimens; (ii) to quantify the predictive capacity of these risk factors; and (iii) to quantify and map spatial variation in the risk of defaulting. We used logistic regression models and generalized additive models with a spatial component to determine the odds of default across continental Portugal. We focused on new PTB cases, diagnosed between 2000 and 2013, and included some individual information (sex, age, residence area, alcohol abuse, intravenous drug use, homelessness, HIV, imprisonment status). We found that the global default rate was 4·88%, higher in individuals with well-known risk profiles (males, immigrants, HIV positive, homeless, prisoners, alcohol and drug users). Of specific epidemiological interest was that our geographical analysis found that Portugal's main urban areas (the two biggest cities) and one tourist region have higher default rates compared to the rest of the country, after adjusting for the previously mentioneded risk factors. The challenge of treatment defaulting, either due to other individual non-measured characteristics, healthcare system failure or patient recalcitrance requires further analysis in the spatio-temporal domain. Our findings suggest the presence of significant within-country variation in the risk of defaulting that cannot be explained by these classical individual risk factors alone. The methods we advocate are simple to implement and could easily be applied to other diseases.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology

Reference14 articles.

1. Epidemiology of tuberculosis in big cities of the European Union and European Economic Area countries;De;Eurosurveillance,2014

2. Critical reflections on evidence, ethics and effectiveness in the management of tuberculosis: public health and global perspectives

3. World Health Organization. Definitions and reporting framework for tuberculosis: 2013 revision. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2013.

4. Tuberculosis treatment outcome monitoring in European Union countries: systematic review;Van;European Respiratory Journal,2013

5. Tuberculosis treatment outcomes in Europe: a systematic review

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