Search Everything

Find articles, journals, projects, researchers, and more

Back to Articles

Treatment outcomes of extrapulmonary tuberculosis in Bahawalpur, Pakistan; a record review

Authors:
Muhammad Atif, Razia Fatima, Nafees Ahmad, Zaheer-Ud-Din Babar

Abstract

Background

There is limited published data form Pakistan on treatment success rate among extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) patients. The aim of this study was to assess clinical form, treatment outcomes, and identify the factors associated with unfavorable treatment outcome among EPTB patients.

Methods

A retrospective study was conducted at the Chest Disease Unit of the Bahawal Victoria Hospital, Pakistan. Medical records of EPTB patients, registered at the study site from January 1, 2015 to September 30, 2017, were reviewed to obtain the data. Final treatment outcomes among EPTB patients were evaluated in accordance with the standard Word Health Organization (WHO) criteria. Multivariate binary logistic regression analysis was used to identify the factors associated with unfavorable treatment outcome.

Results

A total of 651 EPTB patients were included in the study. Highest proportion of patients had pleural TB (n = 217, 33.3%). Out of the total 651 patients, 463 (71.1%) successfully completed the treatment. Among 177 (27.2%) patients with unfavorable treatment outcome, 10 (1.5%) died, while 165 (25.4%) lost to follow-up the treatment. Lymph node TB (AOR 0.65, 95% CI 0.422, 0.989) and meningeal TB (AOR 2.1, 95% CI 1.065, 4.144) were significantly associated with unfavorable treatment outcome.

Conclusion

The treatment success (favorable outcome) rate among EPTB patients was less than the target (i.e., ≥ 90%) set by the WHO. Highest proportion of patients lost to follow-up during the treatment.

Keywords: Extrapulmonary tuberculosis Treatment outcomes Unsuccessful treatment outcome Unfavorable treatment outcome High TB burden countries Pakistan
DOI: https://doi.ms/10.00420/ms/3582/8J6AM/TBB | Volume: 13 | Issue: 35 | Views: 0
Download Full Text (Free)
Article Document
1 / 1
100%

Subscription Required

Your subscription has expired. Please renew your subscription to continue downloading articles and access all premium features.

  • Unlimited article downloads
  • Access to premium content
  • Priority support
  • No ads or interruptions

Upload

To download this article, you can either subscribe for unlimited downloads, or upload 0 items (articles and/or projects) to download this specific article.

Total: 0 / 0
  • Choose any combination (e.g., 2 articles + 1 project = 3 total)
  • After uploading, you can download this specific article
  • Or subscribe for unlimited downloads of all articles