Association between TB delay and TB treatment outcomes in HIV-TB co-infected patients: a study based on the multilevel propensity score method
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Published:2024-04-30
Issue:1
Volume:24
Page:
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ISSN:1471-2334
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Container-title:BMC Infectious Diseases
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMC Infect Dis
Author:
Liao Rujun,Hu Lin,Yu Jie,Chen Ying,Chen Miaoshuang,Yan Jingmin,Li Xin,Han Xinyue,Jike Chunnong,Yu Gang,Wang Ju,Liao Qiang,Xia Lan,Bai Xuefei,Shi Jinhong,Jiang Tian,Du Liang,Zhang Tao
Abstract
Abstract
Background
HIV-tuberculosis (HIV-TB) co-infection is a significant public health concern worldwide. TB delay, consisting of patient delay, diagnostic delay, treatment delay, increases the risk of adverse anti-TB treatment (ATT) outcomes. Except for individual level variables, differences in regional levels have been shown to impact the ATT outcomes. However, few studies appropriately considered possible individual and regional level confounding variables. In this study, we aimed to assess the association of TB delay on treatment outcomes in HIV-TB co-infected patients in Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture (Liangshan Prefecture) of China, using a causal inference framework while taking into account individual and regional level factors.
Methods
We conducted a study to analyze data from 2068 patients with HIV-TB co-infection in Liangshan Prefecture from 2019 to 2022. To address potential confounding bias, we used a causal directed acyclic graph (DAG) to select appropriate confounding variables. Further, we controlled for these confounders through multilevel propensity score and inverse probability weighting (IPW).
Results
The successful rate of ATT for patients with HIV-TB co-infection in Liangshan Prefecture was 91.2%. Total delay (OR = 1.411, 95% CI: 1.015, 1.962), diagnostic delay (OR = 1.778, 95% CI: 1.261, 2.508), treatment delay (OR = 1.749, 95% CI: 1.146, 2.668) and health system delay (OR = 1.480 95% CI: (1.035, 2.118) were identified as risk factors for successful ATT outcome. Sensitivity analysis demonstrated the robustness of these findings.
Conclusions
HIV-TB co-infection prevention and control policy in Liangshan Prefecture should prioritize early treatment for diagnosed HIV-TB co-infected patients. It is urgent to improve the health system in Liangshan Prefecture to reduce delays in diagnosis and treatment.
Funder
Sichuan Science and Technology Program
Key Research and development Project of Liangshan Prefecture Science and Technology Plan
Health Commission of Sichuan province
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Chongqing Science and Technology Program
Sichuan University Education Foundation
Central government funding items
Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture Center for Disease Control and Prevention
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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