Abstract

BackgroundIn contrast to the conventional model of hospital-treated and government directly observed treatment (DOT) for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patient care, the Taiwan MDR-TB Consortium (TMTC) was launched in May 2007 with the collaboration of five medical care groups that have provided both care and DOT. This study aimed to determine whether the TMTC provided a better care model for MDR-TB patients than the conventional model.Methods and FindingsA total of 651 pulmonary MDR-TB patients that were diagnosed nation-wide from January 2000-August 2008 were enrolled. Of those, 290 (45%) MDR-TB patients whose initial sputum sample was taken in January 2007 or later were classified as patients in the TMTC era. All others were classified as patients in the pre-TMTC era. The treatment success rate at 36 months was better in the TMTC era group (82%) than in the pre-TMTC era group (61%) (p<0.001). With multiple logistic regressions, diagnosis in the TMTC era (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 2.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.9–4.2) was an independent predictor of a higher treatment success rate at 36 months. With the time-dependent proportional hazards method, a higher treatment success rate was still observed in the TMTC era group compared to the pre-TMTC era group (adjusted hazard ratio 6.3, 95% CI 4.2–9.5).ConclusionThe improved treatment success observed in the TMTC era compared to the pre-TMTC era is encouraging. The detailed TMTC components that contribute the most to the improved outcome will need confirmation in follow-up studies with large numbers of MDR-TB patients.

Highlights

  • The threat of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) to global public health is an important issue

  • In Taiwan, 1% of new TB cases are diagnosed as MDR tuberculosis, and the prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus is lower than 1% among MDRTB patients

  • The DOTS-Plus team reported adverse effects or other medical conditions to the physicians who were in direct charge of the program

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Summary

Introduction

The threat of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) to global public health is an important issue. In Taiwan, 1% of new TB cases are diagnosed as MDR tuberculosis, and the prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus is lower than 1% among MDRTB patients. The World Health Organization (WHO) advocated the strategy of ‘directly observed treatment, short course-plus’ (DOTS-Plus) in 1999. In Peru, a DOTS-Plus program operated by non-governmental organizations from the United States reported a cure rate of 66.3% among more than 400 patients with MDR-TB in 2008 [6]. In contrast to the conventional model of hospital-treated and government directly observed treatment (DOT) for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patient care, the Taiwan MDR-TB Consortium (TMTC) was launched in May 2007 with the collaboration of five medical care groups that have provided both care and DOT. This study aimed to determine whether the TMTC provided a better care model for MDR-TB patients than the conventional model

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