Cargando…

Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi

BACKGROUND: In Malawi, outpatients who have presumptive tuberculosis (TB), i.e. fever, night sweats, weight loss and/or any-duration cough (HIV-infected) or cough of at least 2 weeks (HIV-uninfected), are registered in chronic cough registers. They should receive a diagnostic work-up with first-step...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: van Lettow, Monique, Bedell, Richard, Maosa, Sonia, Phiri, Kenneth, Chan, Adrienne K., Mwinjiwa, Edson, Kwekwesa, Aunex, Kawonga, Harry, Joshua, Martias, Harries, Anthony D., van Oosterhout, Joep J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4640882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26556045
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141414
_version_ 1782400135588741120
author van Lettow, Monique
Bedell, Richard
Maosa, Sonia
Phiri, Kenneth
Chan, Adrienne K.
Mwinjiwa, Edson
Kwekwesa, Aunex
Kawonga, Harry
Joshua, Martias
Harries, Anthony D.
van Oosterhout, Joep J.
author_facet van Lettow, Monique
Bedell, Richard
Maosa, Sonia
Phiri, Kenneth
Chan, Adrienne K.
Mwinjiwa, Edson
Kwekwesa, Aunex
Kawonga, Harry
Joshua, Martias
Harries, Anthony D.
van Oosterhout, Joep J.
author_sort van Lettow, Monique
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In Malawi, outpatients who have presumptive tuberculosis (TB), i.e. fever, night sweats, weight loss and/or any-duration cough (HIV-infected) or cough of at least 2 weeks (HIV-uninfected), are registered in chronic cough registers. They should receive a diagnostic work-up with first-step provider-initiated HIV testing and sputum testing which includes XpertMTB/RIF, following a national algorithm introduced in 2012. METHODS: An operational study, in which we prospectively studied 6-month outcomes of adult outpatients who were registered in chronic cough registers in Zomba Central Hospital and Matawale peri-urban Health Center, between February and September 2013. We recorded implementation of the diagnostic protocol and outcomes at 6 months from registration. RESULTS: Of 348 patients enrolled, 165(47%) were male, median age was 40 years, 72(21%) had previous TB. At registration 154(44%) were known HIV-positive, 34(10%) HIV-negative (26 unconfirmed) and 160(46%) had unknown HIV status; 104(56%) patients with unknown/unconfirmed HIV status underwent HIV testing. At 6 months 191(55%) were HIV-positive, 87(25%) HIV-negative (26 unconfirmed) and 70(20%) still had unknown HIV status. Higher age and registration in Matawale were independently associated with remaining unknown HIV status after 6 months. 62% of patients had sputum tested, including XpertMTB/RIF, according to the algorithm. TB was diagnosed in 54(15%) patients. This was based on XpertMTB/RIF results in 8(15%) diagnosed cases. In 26(48%) TB was diagnosed on clinical grounds. Coverage of ART in HIV-positive patients was 89%. At 6 months, 236(68%) were asymptomatic, 48(14%) symptomatic, 25(7%) had been lost-to-follow-up and 39(11%) had died. Mortality among those HIV-positive, HIV-negative and with unknown HIV-status was 15%, 2% and 10%, respectively. Male gender, being HIV-positive-not-on-ART and not receiving antibiotics were independent risk factors for mortality. CONCLUSION: HIV prevalence among patients with presumptive TB was high (55%). One quarter was not HIV tested and mortality in this group was substantial (10%). The impact of XpertMTB/RIF on TB diagnosis was limited.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4640882
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46408822015-11-13 Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi van Lettow, Monique Bedell, Richard Maosa, Sonia Phiri, Kenneth Chan, Adrienne K. Mwinjiwa, Edson Kwekwesa, Aunex Kawonga, Harry Joshua, Martias Harries, Anthony D. van Oosterhout, Joep J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: In Malawi, outpatients who have presumptive tuberculosis (TB), i.e. fever, night sweats, weight loss and/or any-duration cough (HIV-infected) or cough of at least 2 weeks (HIV-uninfected), are registered in chronic cough registers. They should receive a diagnostic work-up with first-step provider-initiated HIV testing and sputum testing which includes XpertMTB/RIF, following a national algorithm introduced in 2012. METHODS: An operational study, in which we prospectively studied 6-month outcomes of adult outpatients who were registered in chronic cough registers in Zomba Central Hospital and Matawale peri-urban Health Center, between February and September 2013. We recorded implementation of the diagnostic protocol and outcomes at 6 months from registration. RESULTS: Of 348 patients enrolled, 165(47%) were male, median age was 40 years, 72(21%) had previous TB. At registration 154(44%) were known HIV-positive, 34(10%) HIV-negative (26 unconfirmed) and 160(46%) had unknown HIV status; 104(56%) patients with unknown/unconfirmed HIV status underwent HIV testing. At 6 months 191(55%) were HIV-positive, 87(25%) HIV-negative (26 unconfirmed) and 70(20%) still had unknown HIV status. Higher age and registration in Matawale were independently associated with remaining unknown HIV status after 6 months. 62% of patients had sputum tested, including XpertMTB/RIF, according to the algorithm. TB was diagnosed in 54(15%) patients. This was based on XpertMTB/RIF results in 8(15%) diagnosed cases. In 26(48%) TB was diagnosed on clinical grounds. Coverage of ART in HIV-positive patients was 89%. At 6 months, 236(68%) were asymptomatic, 48(14%) symptomatic, 25(7%) had been lost-to-follow-up and 39(11%) had died. Mortality among those HIV-positive, HIV-negative and with unknown HIV-status was 15%, 2% and 10%, respectively. Male gender, being HIV-positive-not-on-ART and not receiving antibiotics were independent risk factors for mortality. CONCLUSION: HIV prevalence among patients with presumptive TB was high (55%). One quarter was not HIV tested and mortality in this group was substantial (10%). The impact of XpertMTB/RIF on TB diagnosis was limited. Public Library of Science 2015-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4640882/ /pubmed/26556045 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141414 Text en © 2015 van Lettow et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van Lettow, Monique
Bedell, Richard
Maosa, Sonia
Phiri, Kenneth
Chan, Adrienne K.
Mwinjiwa, Edson
Kwekwesa, Aunex
Kawonga, Harry
Joshua, Martias
Harries, Anthony D.
van Oosterhout, Joep J.
Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi
title Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi
title_full Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi
title_fullStr Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi
title_short Outcomes and Diagnostic Processes in Outpatients with Presumptive Tuberculosis in Zomba District, Malawi
title_sort outcomes and diagnostic processes in outpatients with presumptive tuberculosis in zomba district, malawi
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4640882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26556045
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141414
work_keys_str_mv AT vanlettowmonique outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT bedellrichard outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT maosasonia outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT phirikenneth outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT chanadriennek outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT mwinjiwaedson outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT kwekwesaaunex outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT kawongaharry outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT joshuamartias outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT harriesanthonyd outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi
AT vanoosterhoutjoepj outcomesanddiagnosticprocessesinoutpatientswithpresumptivetuberculosisinzombadistrictmalawi