Treatment outcome of HIV-associated tuberculosis in a resource-poor setting

Author:

Ifebunandu Ngozi A1,Ukwaja Kingsley N2,Obi Samuel N34

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Federal Medical Centre, Abakaliki

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Ebonyi State University Teaching Hospital, Abakaliki

3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Federal Medical Centre, Abakaliki

4. University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, Enugu, Nigeria

Abstract

Nigeria is among the countries with the world's highest tuberculosis (TB) burden, and HIV/TB co-infection is an important cause of mortality. We evaluate the treatment outcome of HIV-infected TB patients in Abakaliki, Nigeria. A retrospective cohort study of all TB patients registered at a tertiary hospital between January 2006 and December 2010 was conducted. Of 671 TB patients, 189 (28.2%) were HIV co-infected. Of these, 147 (77.8%) had pulmonary TB and 42 (22.2%) had extra-pulmonary TB. The overall treatment success rate was 52.4% ( n = 99) and the defaulted in treatment rate was 30.2% ( n = 57). Twenty-one (11.1%) died, and one (0.5%) had treatment failure. Younger age group (<15 years; P = 0.0024) and smear-positive status ( P = 0.0056) were independent predictors of successful treatment. TB/HIV co-infection is associated with high mortality and alarming default rates during treatment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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