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南非实施Xpert MTB/RIF后耐多药结核病治疗前的延误和失访:一项回顾性队列研究。

Delays and loss to follow-up before treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis following implementation of Xpert MTB/RIF in South Africa: A retrospective cohort study.

作者信息

Cox Helen, Dickson-Hall Lindy, Ndjeka Norbert, Van't Hoog Anja, Grant Alison, Cobelens Frank, Stevens Wendy, Nicol Mark

机构信息

Division of Medical Microbiology, Department of Pathology, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.

Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.

出版信息

PLoS Med. 2017 Feb 21;14(2):e1002238. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002238. eCollection 2017 Feb.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

South Africa has a large burden of rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB), with 18,734 patients diagnosed in 2014. The number of diagnosed patients has increased substantially with the introduction of the Xpert MTB/RIF test, used for tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis for all patients with presumptive TB. Routine aggregate data suggest a large treatment gap (pre-treatment loss to follow-up) between the numbers of patients with laboratory-confirmed RR-TB and those reported to have started second-line treatment. We aimed to assess the impact of Xpert MTB/RIF implementation on the delay to treatment initiation and loss to follow-up before second-line treatment for RR-TB across South Africa.

METHODS AND FINDINGS

A nationwide retrospective cohort study was conducted to assess second-line treatment initiation and treatment delay among laboratory-diagnosed RR-TB patients. Cohorts, including approximately 300 sequentially diagnosed RR-TB patients per South African province, were drawn from the years 2011 and 2013, i.e., before and after Xpert implementation. Patients with prior laboratory RR-TB diagnoses within 6 mo and currently treated patients were excluded. Treatment initiation was determined through data linkage with national and local treatment registers, medical record review, interviews with health care staff, and direct contact with patients or household members. Additional laboratory data were used to track cases. National estimates of the percentage of patients who initiated treatment and time to treatment were weighted to account for the sampling design. There were 2,508 and 2,528 eligible patients in the 2011 and 2013 cohorts, respectively; 92% were newly diagnosed with RR-TB (no prior RR-TB diagnoses). Nationally, among the 2,340 and 2,311 new RR-TB patients in the 2011 and 2013 cohorts, 55% (95% CI 53%-57%) and 63% (95% CI 61%-65%), respectively, started treatment within 6 mo of laboratory receipt of their diagnostic specimen (p < 0.001). However, in 2013, there was no difference in the percentage of patients who initiated treatment at 6 mo between the 1,368 new RR-TB patients diagnosed by Xpert (62%, 95% CI 59%-65%) and the 943 diagnosed by other methods (64%, 95% CI 61%-67%) (p = 0.39). The median time to treatment decreased from 44 d (interquartile range [IQR] 20-69) in 2011 to 22 d (IQR 2-43) in 2013 (p < 0.001). In 2013, across the nine provinces, there were substantial variations in both treatment initiation (range 51%-73% by 6 mo) and median time to treatment (range 15-36 d, n = 1,450), and only 53% of the 1,448 new RR-TB patients who received treatment were recorded in the national RR-TB register. This retrospective study is limited by the lack of information to assess reasons for non-initiation of treatment, particularly pre-treatment mortality data. Other limitations include the use of names and dates of birth to locate patient-level data, potentially resulting in missed treatment initiation among some patients.

CONCLUSIONS

In 2013, there was a large treatment gap for RR-TB in South Africa that varied significantly across provinces. Xpert implementation, while reducing treatment delay, had not contributed substantially to reducing the treatment gap in 2013. However, given improved case detection with Xpert, a larger proportion of RR-TB patients overall have received treatment, with reduced delays. Nonetheless, strategies to further improve linkage to treatment for all diagnosed RR-TB patients are urgently required.

摘要

背景

南非耐利福平结核病(RR-TB)负担沉重,2014年有18734例患者被诊断。随着用于所有疑似结核病患者结核病(TB)诊断的Xpert MTB/RIF检测方法的引入,诊断患者数量大幅增加。常规汇总数据显示,实验室确诊的RR-TB患者数量与报告开始二线治疗的患者数量之间存在很大的治疗差距(治疗前失访)。我们旨在评估Xpert MTB/RIF检测方法在南非全国范围内对RR-TB二线治疗开始延迟和治疗前失访的影响。

方法与结果

开展了一项全国性回顾性队列研究,以评估实验室确诊的RR-TB患者的二线治疗开始情况和治疗延迟。队列包括2011年和2013年(即Xpert检测方法实施前后)每个南非省份约300例连续诊断的RR-TB患者。排除6个月内曾有实验室RR-TB诊断的患者和目前正在接受治疗的患者。通过与国家和地方治疗登记册的数据链接、病历审查、与医护人员访谈以及与患者或家庭成员直接联系来确定治疗开始情况。使用额外的实验室数据追踪病例。对开始治疗的患者百分比和治疗时间的全国估计值进行加权,以考虑抽样设计。2011年和2013年队列中分别有2508例和2528例符合条件的患者;92%为新诊断的RR-TB患者(既往无RR-TB诊断)。在全国范围内,2011年和2013年队列中的2340例和2311例新RR-TB患者中,分别有55%(95%CI 53%-57%)和63%(95%CI 61%-65%)在实验室收到诊断标本后的6个月内开始治疗(p<0.001)。然而,在2013年,通过Xpert诊断的1368例新RR-TB患者中在6个月时开始治疗的患者百分比(62%,95%CI 59%-65%)与通过其他方法诊断的943例患者(64%,95%CI 61%-67%)之间没有差异(p=0.39)。治疗的中位时间从2011年的44天(四分位间距[IQR]20-69)降至2013年的22天(IQR为2-43)(p<0.001)。2013年,在九个省份中,治疗开始情况(6个月时范围为51%-73%)和治疗中位时间(范围为15-36天,n=1450)都存在很大差异,在接受治疗的1448例新RR-TB患者中,只有53%被记录在国家RR-TB登记册中。这项回顾性研究的局限性在于缺乏评估未开始治疗原因的信息,尤其是治疗前死亡率数据。其他局限性包括使用姓名和出生日期来查找患者层面的数据,这可能导致一些患者的治疗开始情况被遗漏。

结论

2013年,南非RR-TB存在很大的治疗差距,且各省之间差异显著。Xpert检测方法的实施虽然减少了治疗延迟,但在2013年对缩小治疗差距没有显著贡献。然而,鉴于Xpert提高了病例检测率,总体上有更大比例的RR-TB患者接受了治疗,延迟也有所减少。尽管如此,迫切需要采取策略进一步改善所有诊断为RR-TB患者与治疗的衔接。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6e23/5319645/36088c49bf70/pmed.1002238.g001.jpg

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