TB associated with worsened patient mortality post-treatment
Patients who have been treated for tuberculosis (TB) have a significantly increased chance of mortality from all causes compared to the overall population, according to a new study.
Long-term mortality estimates following tuberculosis treatment
is rare. A team of investigators led by Kamila Romanowski,
MSc—of Provincial TB Services at the British Columbia
Centre for Disease Control—found that cardiovascular
disease was the most common cause of death following
treatment.
The combined standardized mortality ratio (SMR) for people with
tuberculosis when compared with the general population was
2.915%. Restricted to just people with a cure or confirmed
treatment completion, that number jumped to 3.76%.
Estimates remained consistent when stratified for type, age,
sex, and country income.
Investigators reviewed studies published between January 1997
and May 2018. Overall, 7283 studies were identified, 10 of which
were used. Studies used provided bacterial or clinical
confirmation of tuberculosis, provided sufficient data
on mortality estimates—or enough to calculate it.
All the studies also used a cohort design. Studies that had a
study population of 50 patients or fewer or studies who
duplicated data were excluded. Combined, 40,781 people and
6922 deaths were analyzed.
Cause of mortality for 4226 deaths post treatment were
extracted. Investigators either extracted or calculated the
SMR. When an SMR wasn’t available, mortality hazard ratios
or mortality rate ratios were used.
“People treated for tuberculosis
have significantly increased mortality following
treatment compared with the general population or matched
controls,” the study states.
In recent years, promising steps have been made to treat
tuberculosis. In April, a study conducted across 4 countries found a drug that was
able to clear up the multidrug
resistant tuberculosis in only half the time
recommended by the World Health Organization: 20
months.
The previous phase 3 trial had an efficacy rate of 78.8%,
which is only 1% lower than the efficacy of the long- term
treatment rate. The short regimen consisted of high-dose
moxifloxacin, clofazimine, ethambutol and pyrazinamide
administered over a 40-week period, supplemented in the first 16
weeks by kanamycin, isoniazid,
and prothionamide.
"The results have been used by WHO in their most recent
recommendations for treating MDR-TB," researcher Andrew Nunn,
MSc, of the Medical Research Council Clinical Trials Unit at
University College London told MD Magazine® in an interview at the time of the study’s
publication. "A second stage of the study is investigating
whether the injectable drug can be replaced
with bedaquiline, to provide an all-oral regimen."
Investigators from the most recent trial concluded TB’s
association with worsened mortality among patients when compared
to the general population. Such findings indicate the need for
additional research into the biomedical and social factors at
play, they wrote.
The study, “Long-term all-cause mortality in people treated for
tuberculosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis," was published online in The Lancet.
Source:
MD Magazine