Abstract

BackgroundChina incurs an extremely low treatment coverage of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). This study aimed to understand the experience of MDR-TB patients on quality of health care, and the clinical impact through an up to six-year follow-up.MethodsCohorts of MDR-TB patients were built in TB/MDR-TB designated hospitals in four regions of China from 2014 to 2015. Patients were followed up during treatment course, and yearly confirmation afterward until 2019. Delay in MDR-TB diagnosis and treatment was calculated upon bacteriological confirmation and treatment initiation. Risk factors for unfavourable outcomes were identified by multivariate logistic regression.ResultsAmong 1168 bacteriological-positive TB patients identified from a 12-million population, 58 (5.0%) MDR-TB cases were detected. The median delay for MDR-TB diagnosis was 90.0 days, with 13.8% having a delay above 180.0 days. MDR-TB treatment was only recommended to 19 (32.8%) participants, while the rest continued with regimen for drug-susceptible TB. In MDR-TB treatment group, 36.8% achieved treatment success, while the others had incomplete treatment (21.1%), loss to follow-up (36.8%) and TB relapse (5.3%). For non-MDR-TB treatment group, 33.3% succeeded, 25.6% relapsed, 2.6% failed, 23.1% died, and 15.4% were lost to follow-up. Overall, only 35.7% (20/56) of detected MDR-TB patients had favourable outcomes and higher education level was positively associated with it (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 3.60, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.04–12.5).ConclusionsA large proportion of patients did not receive MDR-TB treatment and had unfavourable outcomes. Delayed MDR-TB diagnosis resulted in poor quality of MDR-TB care. Rapid diagnosis, regulated patient management and high-quality MDR-TB treatment should be enhanced in China.

Highlights

  • China incurs an extremely low treatment coverage of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB)

  • Poor accessibility to drug susceptibility testing (DST) especially in rural areas [7], long waiting time for conventional DST results [8] and incomplete highrisk screening strategy for MDR-TB [9] might explain the low detection rate of MDR-TB in China; while delayed DST, unaffordable treatment cost, drug-induced adverse effects and fragile supply chain of second-line drugs could be the main reasons for the low treatment coverage [5, 10, 11]

  • There were 19 (32.8%) patients who were transferred to MDR-TB care, while the other 39 (67.2%) were still under treatment for drug susceptible TB, 5.1% (2/39) received an additional fluoroquinolone (FQ)

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Summary

Introduction

China incurs an extremely low treatment coverage of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Great achievements have been made, China remains the country having the second highest burden of TB and MDR-TB in the world [2]. Poor accessibility to drug susceptibility testing (DST) especially in rural areas [7], long waiting time for conventional DST results [8] and incomplete highrisk screening strategy for MDR-TB [9] might explain the low detection rate of MDR-TB in China; while delayed DST, unaffordable treatment cost, drug-induced adverse effects and fragile supply chain of second-line drugs could be the main reasons for the low treatment coverage [5, 10, 11]

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