Abstract

Little is known about the impact of drug resistance on recurrence in TB. We conducted a cohort study to measure the impact of multi-drug resistance (MDR) on TB recurrence over nine years in Henan Province China. We reviewed medical records and conducted field interviews of 100 MDR and 150 non-MDR TB patients who were treated between 2001 and 2002. We compared long-term recurrence rates, risk factors, and outcomes in 2010 for 234 individuals who could be followed up. About one third (29.5%, 69/234) suffered recurrence after completion of treatment. The overall recurrence rate was 35/1,000 patient-years (PY), with a much higher rate (65/1,000 PY) among MDR-TB patients. MDR (HR: 2.75; CI: 1.58–4.79) and patient annual household income less than 10,000 Yuan (HR: 2.05; CI 1.11–3.80) were associated with recurrence. The mean time for recurrence among MDR-TB patients was 5.7 years, compared to 7.2 years among non-MDR-TB patients. Among the recurrence group members, 61.3% died, and 18.8% had failed treatments. We believe that the high TB recurrence rate after 9 years suggests that a high cure rate cannot accurately predict long-term outcome. We recommend that TB surveillance and control should be strengthened with a focus on MDR-TB and directly observed treatment, to reduce TB recurrence and transmission of MDR-TB.

Highlights

  • Poor adherence to treatment is a well-known risk factor for tuberculosis (TB) recurrence

  • A statistically significant difference in recurrence rate between multi-drug resistance (MDR) and non-MDR-TB patients was seen after 9 years (61.3% versus 27.9%; p

  • We found that TB recurrence was strongly associated with MDR-TB infection and patient annual household income less than 10,000 Yuan

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Summary

Introduction

Poor adherence to treatment is a well-known risk factor for tuberculosis (TB) recurrence. While there are few published data on recurrence rates, it is considered probable that drug resistance increases risk of recurrence [1,2,3]. Patients with MDR-TB have poor treatment outcomes compared with patients with drug-sensitive TB [5,6,7,8]. Research on the contribution of MDR-TB to TB recurrence provides evidence for targeting control efforts and more efficient use of health resources in high TB burden countries, like China. The average relapse rate among notified TB patients in China in 2014 was 3.0%, but the rate among MDR-TB patients was not PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0168865. The average relapse rate among notified TB patients in China in 2014 was 3.0%, but the rate among MDR-TB patients was not PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0168865 January 24, 2017

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