A randomized controlled study of socioeconomic support to enhance TB prevention and treatment, Peru
Objective
To evaluate the impact of socioeconomic support on tuberculosis preventive therapy initiation in household contacts of tuberculosis patients and on treatment success in patients.
Methods
A non-blinded,
household-randomized, controlled study was performed between
February 2014 and June 2015 in 32 shanty towns in Peru. It
included patients being treated for tuberculosis and their
household contacts. Households were randomly assigned to either
the standard of care provided by Peru’s national
tuberculosis programme (control arm) or the same standard of
care plus socioeconomic support (intervention arm).
Socioeconomic support comprised conditional cash transfers up to
230 United States dollars per household, community meetings and
household visits. Rates of tuberculosis preventive therapy
initiation and treatment success (i.e. cure or treatment
completion) were compared in intervention and control arms.
Findings
Overall, 282 of 312 (90%)
households agreed to participate: 135 in the intervention arm
and 147 in the control arm. There were 410 contacts younger than
20 years: 43% in the intervention arm initiated tuberculosis
preventive therapy versus 25% in the control arm (adjusted odds
ratio, aOR: 2.2; 95% confidence interval, CI: 1.1–4.1). An
intention-to-treat analysis showed that treatment was successful
in 64% (87/135) of patients in the intervention arm versus 53%
(78/147) in the control arm (unadjusted OR: 1.6; 95% CI:
1.0–2.6). These improvements were equitable, being
independent of household poverty.
Conclusion
A tuberculosis-specific,
socioeconomic support intervention increased uptake of
tuberculosis preventive therapy and tuberculosis treatment
success and is being evaluated in the Community Randomized
Evaluation of a Socioeconomic Intervention to Prevent TB
(CRESIPT) project.
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Source:
WHO Bulletin