Abstract

IntroductionThe emergence of MDR-TB remained a major public health threat particularly in developing countries. With increased prevalence and complexity of treatment, the burden of MDR-TB challenged the country. It is of an important; the epidemiology of drug resistant TB is not well understood. There are few studies conducted to assess the prevalence, determinants and treatment outcome of MDR-TB with inconclusive finding. Therefore, we aimed to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis on Epidemiology of MDR-TB in Ethiopia, So that policy makers and other stalk holders could have pooled evidence on the problem to make a decision.MethodsThe review was conducted through a systematic literature search of articles published between 1997 and 2017. Five bibliographic databases and libraries: PubMed/Medline, Global Health Database, Embase, the Cochrane Library, and African Index Medicus were used. After cleaning and sorting, analysis was performed using STATA version 11. The pooled rate of MDR-TB prevalence, determinants and treatment outcome was estimated with a random-effects model. Heterogeneity was assessed by the I2 and publication bias through funnel plot.ResultsThe 34 studies that were retained for final analysis enrolled a total of 7461 TB or MDR-TB patients. We found that 2.18% (95% CI 1.44–2.92%) of newly diagnosed and 21.07% (95% CI 11.47–30.67%) of previously treated patients have MDR-TB with overall prevalence of 7.24% (95% CI 6.11–8.37). History of previous treatment is the major determinant (pooled OR = 4.78 (95% CI 3.16–6.39)), while contact history and adherence also contributed. In this review the pooled death computed among 5 articles showed that 12.25% (95% CI 9.39–15.11%) of MDR-TB patients were died in the course of treatment. Complication, drug side effects and HIV infection were the main determinants for the death.Conclusion and recommendationThe prevalence is by far higher than the previous reports. It is mainly associated with history of previous treatment along with contact history. However, the treatment outcomes are comparable with previous studies, yet it is a concern. Comorbidities, drug side effects and HIV sero-positivity were the determinants. Thus, proper treatment of drug susceptible TB and early detection and treatment of MDR-TB before complication develops along with prevention of drug side effect and contacts with MDR-TB cases are very important.

Highlights

  • The emergence of Multidrug Resistance (MDR)-TB remained a major public health threat in developing countries

  • We found that 2.18% of newly diagnosed and 21.07% of previously treated patients have Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) with overall prevalence of 7.24%

  • In this review the pooled death computed among 5 articles showed that 12.25% of MDR-TB patients were died in the course of treatment

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Summary

Introduction

The emergence of MDR-TB remained a major public health threat in developing countries. With increased prevalence and complexity of treatment, the burden of MDR-TB challenged the country. It is of an important; the epidemiology of drug resistant TB is not well understood. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is a type of TB that is resistant to the two most effective first-line drugs; Rifampicin and Isoniazid. It results from primary infection or may develop in the course of a patient’s treatment [1]. The occurrence of MDR-TB is mainly attributable to human errors that predispose for resistance development, genetic factors are believed to contribute to certain extent [2, 3]. The principal patient-related factor that predispose to MDR-TB is non-adherence to drug susceptible TB treatment [4]. There were about 240,000 deaths from MDR/RR-TB in 2016 [5]

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