The pattern of comorbidity and its prevalence among drug-resistant tuberculosis patients at treatment initiation in Lagos, Nigeria

Author:

Adejumo Olusola A12,Olusola-Faleye Bolanle3,Adepoju Victor A4,Gidado Mustapha5,Onoh Moses O4,Adegboye Oluwatosin4,Abdur-Razzaq H6,Moronfolu Olanike6,Shogbamimu Yeside7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Community Health and Primary Health Care, Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Lagos, Nigeria

2. Mainland Hospital Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria

3. SHOP Plus Nigeria, Abt Associates

4. KNCV TB Foundation Nigeria/ Challenge TB project, Abuja, Nigeria

5. KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation. The Hague, Netherlands

6. Lagos State TB and Leprosy Control Programme, Lagos State Ministry of Health, Alausa Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria

7. Directorate of Disease Control, Lagos State Ministry of Health, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria

Abstract

Abstract Background Multimorbidity is increasingly being recognized as a serious public health concern in the control of both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB). This study assessed the pattern of comorbidities and their prevalence in DR-TB patients at treatment initiation in Lagos, Nigeria. Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted. The baseline laboratory records (human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] status, fasting blood sugar, audiometry, thyroid function tests, serum electrolyte, haemoglobin level and pregnancy test) of DR-TB patients initiated on treatment in Lagos, Nigeria between 1 August 2014 and 31 March 2017 were reviewed. Results A total of 565 DR-TB patients’ laboratory records were reviewed, of which 397 (70.3%) had comorbidities. The proportion with one, two, three and four comorbidities was 60.2%, 29.7%, 8.1% and 2.0%, respectively. Anaemia was the most common (48.1%) comorbid condition, while anaemia and hypokalaemia (7.3%), anaemia and hypothyroidism (6.5%) and anaemia and HIV (5%) were most common among patients with more than one comorbid condition. DR-TB patients with comorbidity were significantly older (34.8±12.3 y) than those without comorbidity (32.0±12.8 y) (p=0.038). Of the 176 females in the reproductive age group, 8 (4.5%) were pregnant at baseline. Conclusions The prevalence of comorbidity among DR-TB patients was high. There is a need for the national TB program to expand its DR-TB council of experts and also integrate reproductive health services into DR-TB management in Nigeria.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine,Parasitology

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