Abstract

BackgroundMyanmar faces a health security threat, with an increasing number of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) cases. Long delays in the initiation of treatment are a barrier to MDR-TB control.ObjectivesThe main objectives of this study were (1) to identify the determinants of delay in treatment initiation after MDR-TB diagnosis, and (2) to explore the effects of treatment delay on disease infectivity, severity, treatment adherence, and treatment outcomes.MethodsThis retrospective study reviewed 330 MDR-TB treatment cards for patients enrolled for treatment at Yangon Regional Tuberculosis Centre, in 2014.ResultsMedian treatment delay was 105 days, interquartile range (IQR) 106 (61–167) days; (51.5%) of patients experienced a long treatment delay (≥ 105 days). Regarding the determinants of treatment delay, this study identified important patient-healthcare system interaction factors. Significant risk factors of long treatment delay included female sex, age > 30 years, and prior contact with patients with MDR-TB. Patients with long treatment delays were significantly different from those with short delays, in terms of having high sputum smear grade, resistance to more than two main drugs (isoniazid and rifampicin), and long culture conversion time. In this study, delay in the initiation of treatment was associated with poor treatment outcome, but this was not statistically significant after adjusting for other risk factors. Median treatment-delay times were longer among patients with poor outcomes (144 days) than those with successful outcomes (102 days).ConclusionsPost-diagnosis delays in the initiation of treatment among MDR-TB patients were significantly long. The study results showed that inadequate MDR-TB treatment initiation center, centralization of treatment initiation, limitation of human resources, were health-system factors delaying timely treatment initiation and implementation of an effective TB-control program. Our findings highlight the need for immediate interventions to reduce treatment delay and improve treatment outcomes, including scaling up diagnostic capacity with Xpert MTB/RIF at township level, expansion of decentralized MDR-TB treatment initiation centers, ensuring a productive health workforce comprising trained health personnel, and providing health education and treatment-adherence counseling to patients and family members.

Highlights

  • Despite the progressive control of tuberculosis (TB) worldwide, the disease burden and treatment outcomes among patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) have remained virtually unchanged [1]

  • The study results showed that inadequate MDR-TB treatment initiation center, centralization of treatment initiation, limitation of human resources, were health-system factors delaying timely treatment initiation and implementation of an effective TB-control program

  • Our findings highlight the need for immediate interventions to reduce treatment delay and improve treatment outcomes, including scaling up diagnostic capacity with Xpert MTB/ RIF at township level, expansion of decentralized MDR-TB treatment initiation centers, ensuring a productive health workforce comprising trained health personnel, and providing health education and treatment-adherence counseling to patients and family members

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the progressive control of tuberculosis (TB) worldwide, the disease burden and treatment outcomes among patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) have remained virtually unchanged [1]. The catastrophic socioeconomic costs incurred by patients undergoing long-term treatment is the main MDR-TB management problem in low- and middle-income countries [2]. In low- and middle-income countries, expensive treatment options, limitations of secondline drugs, and many drug adverse effects, have made it increasingly difficult to treat MDR-TB. Most patients still experience long delays in accessing effective treatment, which may be months or years in countries with high MDR-TB burden [5,6,7]. Long delays in the initiation of treatment are a barrier to MDR-TB control

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