Abstract

Abstract In this study, we analyzed pulmonary tuberculosis treatment outcomes among foreign nationals of different backgrounds. The research was conducted between January 2006 and December 2011. One hundred fifty nine foreign nationals residing in Osaka city had pulmonary tuberculosis during this period. Patients were grouped according to treatment outcomes. We conducted three different types of comparisons. First, we compared backgrounds of patients with treatment success or default. Second, backgrounds of patients who continued treatment in Japan or who moved overseas (transfer out) were compared. Third, treatment outcomes of foreign nationals between 20 and 39 years of age were compared with those of age-matched Japanese patients registered between 2010 and 2011. (1) The treatment outcomes were as follows: cured, 53 cases (33.3%); treatment completed, 55 cases (34.6 %); treatment failure, 0 cases (0.0%); treatment default, 14 cases (8.8%); moved overseas, 17 cases (10.7%); moved to another location inside Japan, 13 cases (8.2%); died, 6 cases (3.8%); and under treatment, 1 case (0.6%). (2) Comparison of treatment success and default among foreign nationals with pulmonary tuberculosis revealed a default rate among smear-negative cases of 14.5%, significantly higher than in smear-positive cases (2.1%; P < 0.05). (3) We compared backgrounds between foreign nationals with pulmonary tuberculosis who continued taking treatment in Japan and those who moved abroad (transfer out). The rate of overseas transfer out (44.4%) was higher among patients not covered by health insurance. This was significantly higher than among patients covered by public insurance or assistance (9.0%; P < 0.01). (4) Comparison of foreign and Japanese nationals between 20 and 39 years of age revealed a default rate in foreign nationals with pulmonary tuberculosis of 13.6%. This was significantly higher than that of Japanese patients (4.0%; P < 0.01). The rate of transfer out among foreign nationals with pulmonary tuberculosis was 19.1%, also significantly higher than that of Japanese patients (5.3%; P < 0.001). The rates of treatment default and transfer out among patients between 20 to 39 years of age were significantly higher among foreign nationals than in Japanese patients. Lack of knowledge about treatment and language problems may contribute to this finding. This suggests that adequate support and definitive directly observed treatment short-course programs are needed for foreign nationals. Patients who moved abroad (overseas transfer out) may also be ultimately categorized as treatment default. However, it is difficult to determine final treatment outcomes of patients who moved abroad. Further measures are needed to ensure that foreign nationals continue to receive treatment when they transfer overseas.

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