Abstract

Worldwide, Drug-resistant Tuberculosis (DR-TB) remains a big problem; the diagnostic capacity has superseded the clinical management capacity thereby causing ethical challenges. In Sub-Saharan Africa, treatment is either inadequate or lacking and some diagnosed patients are on treatment waiting lists. In Uganda, various health system challenges impeded scale-up of DR-TB care in 2012; only three treatment initiation facilities existed, with only 41 of the estimated 1010 RR-TB/MDR-TB cases enrolled on treatment yet 300 were on the waiting list and there was no DR-TB treatment scale-up plan. To scale up care, the National TB and leprosy Program (NTLP) with partners rolled out a DR-TB mixed model of care. In this paper, we share achievements and outcomes resulting from the implementation of this mixed Model of DR-TB care. Routine NTLP DR-TB program data on treatment initiation site, number of patients enrolled, their demographic characteristics, patient category, disease classification (based on disease site and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status), on co-trimoxazole preventive therapy (CPT) and antiretroviral therapy (ART) statuses, culture results, smear results and treatment outcomes (6, 12, and 24 months) from 2012 to 2017 RR-TB/MDR-TB cohorts were collected from all the 15 DR-TB treatment initiation sites and descriptive analysis was done using STATA version 14.2. We presented outcomes as the number of patient backlog cleared, DR-TB initiation sites, RR-TB/DR-TB cumulative patients enrolled, percentage of co-infected patients on the six, twelve interim and 24 months treatment outcomes as per the Uganda NTLP 2016 Programmatic Management of drug-resistant Tuberculosis (PMDT) guidelines (NTLP, 2016). Over the period 2013–2015, the RR-TB/MDR-TB Treatment success rate (TSR) was sustained between 70.1% and 74.1%, a performance that is well above the global TSR average rate of 50%. Additionally, the cure rate increased from 48.8% to 66.8% (P = 0.03). The Uganda DR-TB mixed model of care coupled with early application of continuous improvement approaches, enhanced cohort reviews and use of multi-disciplinary teams allowed for rapid DR-TB program expansion, rapid clearance of patient backlog, attainment of high cumulative enrollment and high treatment success rates. Sustainability of these achievements is needed to further reduce the DR-TB burden in the country. We highly recommend this mixed model of care in settings with similar challenges.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, Drug-resistant Tuberculosis (DR-TB) remains a big challenge with Multidrugresistant TB (MDR-TB) and extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) being the worst forms

  • The backlog of the 300 RR-TB/MDR-TB patients who were on the treatment waiting list was cleared by the end of 2014

  • Characteristics of patients enrolled for RR-TB/MDR-TB treatment

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Summary

Introduction

Drug-resistant Tuberculosis (DR-TB) remains a big challenge with Multidrugresistant TB (MDR-TB) and extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) being the worst forms. Rifampicin resistance (RR-TB): resistance to rifampicin detected using phenotypic or genotypic methods, with or without resistance to other anti-TB drugs; includes any resistance to rifampicin in the form of mono-resistance, poly-resistance, MDR-TB, or XDR-TB [1,2,3]. Untreated MDR-TB fuels the generation and subsequent transmission of XDR-TB [2] and incident cases are predicted to increase [8]. In this regard, the emergence of DR-TB continues to threaten global efforts to eliminate TB and threatens to reverse the global progress made in TB control [9,10,11,12]

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