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Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?

INTRODUCTION: Adherence to second-line antituberculosis drug is challenging. A combination of strategies needs to be implemented to achieve adherence. In Georgia an optimized adherence support (OAS) – a package of education, psychosocial support and adherence counselling – was added to the already e...

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Autores principales: Jomidava, Tinatin, Khogali, Mohammed, Sereda, Yuliia, Avaliani, Zaza, Davitashvili, Malkhaz, Madzgharashvili, Mikheil, Tukvadze, Nestan, Chaphurishvili, Lali, Chincharauli, Mamuka, Kipiani, Maia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9323534/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34609958
http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.13783
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author Jomidava, Tinatin
Khogali, Mohammed
Sereda, Yuliia
Avaliani, Zaza
Davitashvili, Malkhaz
Madzgharashvili, Mikheil
Tukvadze, Nestan
Chaphurishvili, Lali
Chincharauli, Mamuka
Kipiani, Maia
author_facet Jomidava, Tinatin
Khogali, Mohammed
Sereda, Yuliia
Avaliani, Zaza
Davitashvili, Malkhaz
Madzgharashvili, Mikheil
Tukvadze, Nestan
Chaphurishvili, Lali
Chincharauli, Mamuka
Kipiani, Maia
author_sort Jomidava, Tinatin
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Adherence to second-line antituberculosis drug is challenging. A combination of strategies needs to be implemented to achieve adherence. In Georgia an optimized adherence support (OAS) – a package of education, psychosocial support and adherence counselling – was added to the already existing package of adherence support (supervised treatment, adherence incentives, transport cost reimbursement) to improve adherence and increase treatment success. We assessed the additive benefits of OAS on adherence and treatment outcomes. METHODOLOGY: This was a before and after cohort study using routine programme data in the National Center for Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases in Tbilisi. All adult rifampicin- and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB) patients enrolled for treatment under directly observed therapy in the NCTLD during the period before (June 2015 – January 2016) and after (June 2017 – January 2018) were included in the study. Primary outcomes were: i) adequate adherence defined as ≥ 85% of days covered by TB medication during the whole treatment period; ii) final treatment outcomes. RESULTS: Of 221 RR/MDR-TB, most patients were male (76%, N = 167) with a mean age of 41 ± 14 years. Adherence data was available for 111 patients in the ‘before’ and 97 patients in the ‘after’ cohort. Adequate adherence was achieved by 62% (69/111) in the ‘before’ and 70% (68/97) in the ‘after’ cohort (p = 0.290). Overall treatment success was 64% (73/114) and 63% (67/107) in the ‘before’ and ‘after’ cohorts respectively (p = 0.937). CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of OAS had modest effect on adherence and had no additive benefits on treatment outcomes among RR/MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen.
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spelling pubmed-93235342022-07-26 Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia? Jomidava, Tinatin Khogali, Mohammed Sereda, Yuliia Avaliani, Zaza Davitashvili, Malkhaz Madzgharashvili, Mikheil Tukvadze, Nestan Chaphurishvili, Lali Chincharauli, Mamuka Kipiani, Maia J Infect Dev Ctries Article INTRODUCTION: Adherence to second-line antituberculosis drug is challenging. A combination of strategies needs to be implemented to achieve adherence. In Georgia an optimized adherence support (OAS) – a package of education, psychosocial support and adherence counselling – was added to the already existing package of adherence support (supervised treatment, adherence incentives, transport cost reimbursement) to improve adherence and increase treatment success. We assessed the additive benefits of OAS on adherence and treatment outcomes. METHODOLOGY: This was a before and after cohort study using routine programme data in the National Center for Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases in Tbilisi. All adult rifampicin- and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB) patients enrolled for treatment under directly observed therapy in the NCTLD during the period before (June 2015 – January 2016) and after (June 2017 – January 2018) were included in the study. Primary outcomes were: i) adequate adherence defined as ≥ 85% of days covered by TB medication during the whole treatment period; ii) final treatment outcomes. RESULTS: Of 221 RR/MDR-TB, most patients were male (76%, N = 167) with a mean age of 41 ± 14 years. Adherence data was available for 111 patients in the ‘before’ and 97 patients in the ‘after’ cohort. Adequate adherence was achieved by 62% (69/111) in the ‘before’ and 70% (68/97) in the ‘after’ cohort (p = 0.290). Overall treatment success was 64% (73/114) and 63% (67/107) in the ‘before’ and ‘after’ cohorts respectively (p = 0.937). CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of OAS had modest effect on adherence and had no additive benefits on treatment outcomes among RR/MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen. 2021-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9323534/ /pubmed/34609958 http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.13783 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Jomidava, Tinatin
Khogali, Mohammed
Sereda, Yuliia
Avaliani, Zaza
Davitashvili, Malkhaz
Madzgharashvili, Mikheil
Tukvadze, Nestan
Chaphurishvili, Lali
Chincharauli, Mamuka
Kipiani, Maia
Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?
title Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?
title_full Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?
title_fullStr Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?
title_full_unstemmed Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?
title_short Does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in RR / MDR-TB patients on 18–20 months regimen in Tbilisi, Georgia?
title_sort does optimized adherence support improve treatment outcomes in rr / mdr-tb patients on 18–20 months regimen in tbilisi, georgia?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9323534/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34609958
http://dx.doi.org/10.3855/jidc.13783
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