Post-treatment Mortality Among Patients With Tuberculosis: A Prospective Cohort Study of 10 964 Patients in Vietnam
This prospective cohort study followed patients with tuberculosis in Vietnam for 3 years after diagnosis. During that time, 8.9% of patients died: two-thirds after treatment completion.Recurrent tuberculosis and cardiovascular disease were major causes of death, as identified in verbal autopsies. A...
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Published in | Clinical infectious diseases Vol. 68; no. 8; pp. 1359 - 1366 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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Oxford University Press
08.04.2019
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Abstract | This prospective cohort study followed patients with tuberculosis in Vietnam for 3 years after diagnosis. During that time, 8.9% of patients died: two-thirds after treatment completion.Recurrent tuberculosis and cardiovascular disease were major causes of death, as identified in verbal autopsies.
Abstract
Background
Tuberculosis is the leading infectious cause of death. Steep reductions in tuberculosis-related mortality are required to realize the World Health Organization’s “End Tuberculosis Strategy.” However, accurate mortality estimates are lacking in many countries, particularly following discharge from care. This study aimed to establish the mortality rate among patients with pulmonary tuberculosis in Vietnam and to quantify the excess mortality in this population.
Methods
We conducted a prospective cohort study among adult patients treated for smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in 70 clinics across Vietnam. People living in the same households were recruited as controls. Participants were re-interviewed and their survival was established at least 2 years after their treatment with an 8-month standardized regimen. The presence of relapse was established by linking identifying data on patients and controls to clinic registries. Verbal autopsies were performed. The cumulative mortality among patients was compared to that among a control population, adjusting for age and gender.
Results
We enrolled 10964 patients and 25707 household controls. Among enrolled tuberculosis patients, 9% of patients died within a median follow-up period of 2.9 years: 342 (3.1%) during treatment and 637 (5.8%) after discharge. The standardized mortality ratio was 4.0 (95% confidence interval 3.7–4.2) among patients with tuberculosis, compared to the control population. Tuberculosis was the likely cause of death for 44.7% of these deceased patients.
Conclusions
Patients treated for tuberculosis had a markedly elevated risk of death, particularly in the post-treatment period. Interventions to reduce tuberculosis mortality must enhance the early detection of drug-resistance, improve treatment effectiveness, and address non-communicable diseases. |
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AbstractList | Tuberculosis is the leading infectious cause of death. Steep reductions in tuberculosis-related mortality are required to realize the World Health Organization's "End Tuberculosis Strategy." However, accurate mortality estimates are lacking in many countries, particularly following discharge from care. This study aimed to establish the mortality rate among patients with pulmonary tuberculosis in Vietnam and to quantify the excess mortality in this population.
We conducted a prospective cohort study among adult patients treated for smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in 70 clinics across Vietnam. People living in the same households were recruited as controls. Participants were re-interviewed and their survival was established at least 2 years after their treatment with an 8-month standardized regimen. The presence of relapse was established by linking identifying data on patients and controls to clinic registries. Verbal autopsies were performed. The cumulative mortality among patients was compared to that among a control population, adjusting for age and gender.
We enrolled 10964 patients and 25707 household controls. Among enrolled tuberculosis patients, 9% of patients died within a median follow-up period of 2.9 years: 342 (3.1%) during treatment and 637 (5.8%) after discharge. The standardized mortality ratio was 4.0 (95% confidence interval 3.7-4.2) among patients with tuberculosis, compared to the control population. Tuberculosis was the likely cause of death for 44.7% of these deceased patients.
Patients treated for tuberculosis had a markedly elevated risk of death, particularly in the post-treatment period. Interventions to reduce tuberculosis mortality must enhance the early detection of drug-resistance, improve treatment effectiveness, and address non-communicable diseases. This prospective cohort study followed patients with tuberculosis in Vietnam for 3 years after diagnosis. During that time, 8.9% of patients died: two-thirds after treatment completion.Recurrent tuberculosis and cardiovascular disease were major causes of death, as identified in verbal autopsies. Abstract Background Tuberculosis is the leading infectious cause of death. Steep reductions in tuberculosis-related mortality are required to realize the World Health Organization’s “End Tuberculosis Strategy.” However, accurate mortality estimates are lacking in many countries, particularly following discharge from care. This study aimed to establish the mortality rate among patients with pulmonary tuberculosis in Vietnam and to quantify the excess mortality in this population. Methods We conducted a prospective cohort study among adult patients treated for smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in 70 clinics across Vietnam. People living in the same households were recruited as controls. Participants were re-interviewed and their survival was established at least 2 years after their treatment with an 8-month standardized regimen. The presence of relapse was established by linking identifying data on patients and controls to clinic registries. Verbal autopsies were performed. The cumulative mortality among patients was compared to that among a control population, adjusting for age and gender. Results We enrolled 10964 patients and 25707 household controls. Among enrolled tuberculosis patients, 9% of patients died within a median follow-up period of 2.9 years: 342 (3.1%) during treatment and 637 (5.8%) after discharge. The standardized mortality ratio was 4.0 (95% confidence interval 3.7–4.2) among patients with tuberculosis, compared to the control population. Tuberculosis was the likely cause of death for 44.7% of these deceased patients. Conclusions Patients treated for tuberculosis had a markedly elevated risk of death, particularly in the post-treatment period. Interventions to reduce tuberculosis mortality must enhance the early detection of drug-resistance, improve treatment effectiveness, and address non-communicable diseases. BACKGROUNDTuberculosis is the leading infectious cause of death. Steep reductions in tuberculosis-related mortality are required to realize the World Health Organization's "End Tuberculosis Strategy." However, accurate mortality estimates are lacking in many countries, particularly following discharge from care. This study aimed to establish the mortality rate among patients with pulmonary tuberculosis in Vietnam and to quantify the excess mortality in this population. METHODSWe conducted a prospective cohort study among adult patients treated for smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in 70 clinics across Vietnam. People living in the same households were recruited as controls. Participants were re-interviewed and their survival was established at least 2 years after their treatment with an 8-month standardized regimen. The presence of relapse was established by linking identifying data on patients and controls to clinic registries. Verbal autopsies were performed. The cumulative mortality among patients was compared to that among a control population, adjusting for age and gender. RESULTSWe enrolled 10964 patients and 25707 household controls. Among enrolled tuberculosis patients, 9% of patients died within a median follow-up period of 2.9 years: 342 (3.1%) during treatment and 637 (5.8%) after discharge. The standardized mortality ratio was 4.0 (95% confidence interval 3.7-4.2) among patients with tuberculosis, compared to the control population. Tuberculosis was the likely cause of death for 44.7% of these deceased patients. CONCLUSIONSPatients treated for tuberculosis had a markedly elevated risk of death, particularly in the post-treatment period. Interventions to reduce tuberculosis mortality must enhance the early detection of drug-resistance, improve treatment effectiveness, and address non-communicable diseases. |
Author | Nguyen, K C Dinh, N S Nguyen, H D Nguyen, B H Bestrashniy, J R B M Ho, J Britton, W J Fox, G J Nguyen, T A Phan, T L Nguyen, T L Marks, G B Le, T N A Nguyen, V H Tran, N B Nghiem, L P H Pham, D C Le, T N Nguyen, V N |
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Keywords | recurrence mortality pulmonary multi-drug resistant tuberculosis |
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References | World Health Organization ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0011) 2016 World Health Organization ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0001) 2017 Fox ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0015) 2018; 378 World Health Organization ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0016) 2013 General Statistics Office ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0014) Christensen ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0022) 2014; 6 Rao ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0026) 2010; 88 Holtz ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0023) 2006; 144 World Health Organization ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0013) 2010 Gegia ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0018) 2017; 17 Gebreegziabher ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0003) 2016; 11 Toms ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0021) 2015; 39 key 2019040801004482900_CIT0002 CDC ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0020) 2014 Wang ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0007) 2015; 93 Vree ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0010) 2007; 11 Field ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0025) 2014; 14 World Health Organization ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0017) 2012 Uplekar ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0005) 2015; 385 Cain ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0006) 2015; 19 Roquilly ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0024) 2017; 47 Virenfeldt ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0004) 2014; 4 Nhung ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0012) 2015; 19 Lönnroth ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0019) 2016; 110 Miller ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0008) 2015; 105 Shuldiner ( key 2019040801004482900_CIT0009) 2016; 20 |
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Snippet | This prospective cohort study followed patients with tuberculosis in Vietnam for 3 years after diagnosis. During that time, 8.9% of patients died: two-thirds... Tuberculosis is the leading infectious cause of death. Steep reductions in tuberculosis-related mortality are required to realize the World Health... BACKGROUNDTuberculosis is the leading infectious cause of death. Steep reductions in tuberculosis-related mortality are required to realize the World Health... |
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Title | Post-treatment Mortality Among Patients With Tuberculosis: A Prospective Cohort Study of 10 964 Patients in Vietnam |
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