Prediction of pulmonary tuberculosis treatment outcome in a sub‑Saharan African context

Background: Failure to treat many pathogens is a concern. Identifying a priori, patients with potential failure treatment outcome of a disease could allow measures to reduce the failure rate. Objective: The objectives of this study were to use the Scoring method to identify factors associated with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joseph Magloire Fossokeng Mouafo, André Nana Yakam, Claude Simo, Jules Sadefo Kamdem, Samuel Bowong, Louis Aimé Fono, Jürgen Noeske
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2023-11-01
Series:Journal of Public Health in Africa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.publichealthinafrica.org/jphia/article/view/2694
Description
Summary:Background: Failure to treat many pathogens is a concern. Identifying a priori, patients with potential failure treatment outcome of a disease could allow measures to reduce the failure rate. Objective: The objectives of this study were to use the Scoring method to identify factors associated with the tuberculosis unsuccessful treatment outcome and to predict the treatment outcome. Methods: A total of 1,529 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis were randomly selected in the city of Douala, Cameroon, this sample was randomly split into two parts: one subsample of 1,200 patients (78%) used as the Development sample, and the remaining of 329 patients (22%) used as the Validation sample. Baseline characteristics associated with unsuccessful treatment outcomes were investigated using logistic regression. The optimal score was based on the Youden’s index. Results: HIV positive status, active smoker and non-belief in healing were the factors significantly associated with unsuccessful treatment outcomes (p < 0.05). A model used to estimate the risk of unsuccessful treatment outcome was derived. The threshold probability which maximize the area under the ROC curve was 18%. Patients for whom the risk was greater than this threshold were classified as unsuccessful treatment outcome and the others as successful. HIV positive and active smoking status were associated with death; the non-belief in healing, youth and male gender associated with lost-to-follow-up, TB antecedent and not having TB contact associated with therapeutic treatment failure. Conclusion: To increase the tuberculosis treatment success rate, targeted follow-up could be taken during the treatment for TB patients with previous characteristics.
ISSN:2038-9922
2038-9930