Abstract

BackgroundIn August 2017, the Uganda Ministry of Health was notified of increased cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Arua District, Uganda during 2017. We investigated to identify the scope of the increase and risk factors for infection, evaluate health facilities’ capacity to manage MDR-TB, and recommend evidence-based control measures.MethodsWe defined an MDR-TB case-patient as a TB patient attending Arua Regional Referral Hospital (ARRH) during 2013–2017 with a sputum sample yielding Mycobacterium tuberculosis resistant to at least rifampicin and isoniazid, confirmed by an approved drug susceptibility test. We reviewed clinical records from ARRH and compared the number of MDR-TB cases during January–August 2017 with the same months in 2013–2016. To identify risk factors specific for MDR-TB among cases with secondary infection, we conducted a case-control study using persons with drug-susceptible TB matched by sub-county of residence as controls. We observed infection prevention and control practices in health facilities and community, and assessed health facilities’ capacity to manage TB.ResultsWe identified 33 patients with MDR-TB, of whom 30 were secondary TB infection cases. The number of cases during January–August 2017 was 10, compared with 3–4 cases in January–August from 2013 to 2016 (p = 0.02). Men were more affected than women (6.5 vs 1.6/100,000, p < 0.01), as were cases ≥18 years old compared to those < 18 years (8.7 vs 0.21/100,000, p < 0.01). In the case-control study, poor adherence to first-line anti-TB treatment (aOR = 9.2, 95% CI: 2.3–37) and initiating treatment > 15 months from symptom onset (aOR = 11, 95% CI: 1.5–87) were associated with MDR-TB. All ten facilities assessed reported stockouts of TB commodities. All 15 ambulatory MDR-TB patients we observed were not wearing masks given to them to minimize community infection. The MDR-TB ward at ARRH capacity was 4 patients but there were 11 patients.ConclusionThe number of cases during January–August in 2017 was significantly higher than during the same months in 2013–2016. Poor adherence to TB drugs and delayed treatment initiation were associated with MDR-TB infection. We recommended strengthening directly-observed treatment strategy, increasing access to treatment services, and increasing the number of beds in the MDR-TB ward at ARRH.

Highlights

  • In August 2017, the Uganda Ministry of Health was notified of increased cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Arua District, Uganda during 2017

  • Data abstraction and case finding Using registers obtained from Arua Regional Referral Hospital (ARRH), we identified all patients who were diagnosed with TB and MDR-TB

  • We evaluated the association between MDR-TB and exposure risk factors using conditional logistic regression at bivariate and multivariable levels

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Summary

Introduction

In August 2017, the Uganda Ministry of Health was notified of increased cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Arua District, Uganda during 2017. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis resistant to at least isoniazid and rifampicin, is an increasing global public health problem [1]. World Health Organization, treatment for MDR-TB still typically lasts about 2 years, with a 55–67% cure rate; in comparison, a standard 6-month treatment regimen can achieve a 95% cure rate for drug-susceptible TB cases [3, 4]. The prolonged treatment for MDR-TB requires expensive second-line regimens and presents serious financial challenges for national TB programs and families, especially in the resource-limited sub-Saharan Africa. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that in 2016, there were 600,000 incident cases of drug-resistant

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