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Initiation and completion rates for latent TB infection treatment: a systematic review

Abstract

Background

Control of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) is an important step towards tuberculosis elimination. Preventive treatment will prevent the development of disease in most cases diagnosed with LTBI. However, low initiation and completion rates affect the effectiveness of preventive treatment. The objective was to systematically review data on initiation rates and completion rates for LTBI treatment regimens in the general population and specific populations with LTBI.

Methods

A systematic review of the literature (PubMed, Embase) published up to February 2014 was performed.

Results

Forty-five studies on initiation rates and 83 studies on completion rates of LTBI treatment were found. These studies provided initiation rates (IR) and completion rates (CR) in people with LTBI among the general population (IR 26–99 %, CR 39–96 %), case contacts (IR 40–95 %, CR 48–82 %), healthcare workers (IR 47–98 %, CR 17–79 %), the homeless (IR 34–90 %, CR 23–71 %), people who inject drugs (IR 52–91 %, CR 38–89 %), HIV-infected individuals (IR 67–92 %, CR 55–95 %), inmates (IR 7–90 %, CR 4–100 %), immigrants (IR 23–97 %, CR 7–86 %), and patients with comorbidities (IR 82–93 %, CR 75–92 %). Generally, completion rates were higher for short than for long LTBI treatment regimens.

Conclusion

Initiation and completion rates for LTBI treatment regimens were frequently suboptimal and varied greatly within and across different populations.


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Source: BMC Infectious Diseases

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By Andreas Sandgren et al.

Published: May 23, 2016, 1:29 p.m.

Last updated: May 23, 2016, 1:33 p.m.

Tags: Latent TB

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