Predictors of unsuccessful tuberculosis treatment outcomes in Brazil: an analysis of 259,484 patient records

Author:

Ryuk Do KyungORCID,Pelissari Daniele M,Alves Kleydson,Oliveira Patricia Bartholomay,Castro Marcia C,Cohen Ted,Sanchez Mauro,Menzies Nicolas AORCID

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionTuberculosis (TB) causes over 1 million deaths annually. Providing effective treatment is a key strategy for reducing TB deaths. In this study, we identified factors associated with unsuccessful treatment outcomes among individuals treated for TB in Brazil.MethodsWe obtained data on individuals treated for TB between 2015 and 2018 from Brazil’s National Disease Notification System (SINAN). We excluded patients with a history of prior TB disease or with diagnosed TB drug resistance. We extracted information on patient-level factors potentially associated with successful treatment, including demographic and social factors, comorbid health conditions, health-related behaviors, health system level at which care was provided, use of directly observed therapy (DOT), and clinical examination results. We categorized treatment outcomes as successful (cure, completed) or unsuccessful (death, regimen failure, loss to follow-up). We fit multivariate logistic regression models to identify factors associated with unsuccessful treatment outcome.ResultsAmong 259,484 individuals treated for drug susceptible TB, 19.7% experienced an unsuccessful treatment outcome (death during treatment 7.8%, regimen failure 0.1%, loss to follow-up 11.9%). The odds of unsuccessful outcome were higher with older age (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 2.90 [95% confidence interval: 2.62–3.21] for 85-100-year-olds vs. 25-34-year-olds), male sex (aOR 1.28 [1.25– 1.32], vs. female sex), Black race (aOR 1.23 [1.19–1.28], vs. White race), no education (aOR 2.03 [1.91– 2.17], vs. complete high school education), HIV infection (aOR 2.72 [2.63–2.81], vs. no HIV infection), illicit drug use (aOR 1.95 [1.88–2.01], vs. no illicit drug use), alcohol consumption (aOR 1.46 [1.41– 1.50], vs. no alcohol consumption), smoking (aOR 1.20 [1.16–1.23], vs. non-smoking), homelessness (aOR 3.12 [2.95–3.31], vs. no homelessness), and immigrant status (aOR 1.27 [1.11–1.45], vs. non-immigrants). Treatment was more likely to be unsuccessful for individuals treated in tertiary care (aOR 2.20 [2.14–2.27], vs. primary care), and for patients not receiving DOT (aOR 2.35 [2.29–2.41], vs. receiving DOT).ConclusionThe risk of unsuccessful TB treatment varied systematically according to individual and service-related factors. Concentrating clinical attention on individuals with a high risk of poor treatment outcomes could improve the overall effectiveness of TB treatment in Brazil.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference22 articles.

1. (WHO) WHO: Global Tuberculosis Report 2023. In. Edited by (WHO) WHO. Geneva: World Health Organization (WHO); 2023: 57.

2. Drivers of tuberculosis epidemics: the role of risk factors and social determinants;Social science & medicine,2009

3. (WHO) WHO: WHO consolidated guidelines on tuberculosis, Module 4: Treatment. In: Drug-susceptible tuberculosis treatment. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization (WHO); 2022: 58.

4. (WHO) WHO: Definitions and reporting framework for tuberculosis - 2013 revision: updated December 2014 and January 2020. In. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization (WHO) 2020: 47.

5. Proporção de cura de tratamento de casos novos de TB pulmonar, com confirmação laboratorial , 2011-2020 [http://indicadorestuberculose.aids.gov.br/]

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