Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.

In rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa, infrastructure and resources for treatment of cryptococcal meningitis (CM) are often lacking. We introduced a CM diagnosis and treatment program (CM-DTP) at Lira Regional Referral Hospital (LRRH) in rural Uganda to determine if implementing high-quality standard...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abigail Link, Mark Okwir, David Meya, Betty Nabongo, James Okello, Danuta Kasprzyk, Paul R Bohjanen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2022-01-01
Series:PLOS Global Public Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000254
_version_ 1797724803873898496
author Abigail Link
Mark Okwir
David Meya
Betty Nabongo
James Okello
Danuta Kasprzyk
Paul R Bohjanen
author_facet Abigail Link
Mark Okwir
David Meya
Betty Nabongo
James Okello
Danuta Kasprzyk
Paul R Bohjanen
author_sort Abigail Link
collection DOAJ
description In rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa, infrastructure and resources for treatment of cryptococcal meningitis (CM) are often lacking. We introduced a CM diagnosis and treatment program (CM-DTP) at Lira Regional Referral Hospital (LRRH) in rural Uganda to determine if implementing high-quality standard of care protocols would improve outcomes. Information extracted from hospital charts and clinical record forms at LRRH were used to compare diagnoses, treatments, and outcomes for all patients diagnosed with meningitis (n = 281) over a two-year period after initiation of the CM-DTP in February of 2017 to all patients diagnosed with meningitis (n = 215) in the two preceding years. After implementation of the CM-DTP, we observed increased confirmed diagnoses of CM from 22.2% (48 of 215) to 35.2% (99 of 281), (p = 0.002) among all patients diagnosed with meningitis. Among all patients treated for CM, the proportion who received standard of care treatment with amphotericin B plus fluconazole increased from 63 of 127 (49.6%) to 109 of 146 (74.7%), (p <0.001) and mortality improved from 66 of 127 (52.0%) to 57 of 146 (39.0%), (p = 0.04) after implementation of the CM-DTP. Implementation of the CM-DTP was associated with increased number of lumbar punctures and decreased use of antibiotics in patients with CM, as well as decreased mortality among patients with meningitis from all causes. Improved diagnosis, treatment, and mortality were observed following implementation of the CM-DTP. Our results demonstrate that quality treatment of CM in rural Uganda is feasible.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T10:22:05Z
format Article
id doaj.art-ca4841abf48b46d99240a19028edcda6
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2767-3375
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T10:22:05Z
publishDate 2022-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLOS Global Public Health
spelling doaj.art-ca4841abf48b46d99240a19028edcda62023-09-02T10:03:51ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Global Public Health2767-33752022-01-0125e000025410.1371/journal.pgph.0000254Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.Abigail LinkMark OkwirDavid MeyaBetty NabongoJames OkelloDanuta KasprzykPaul R BohjanenIn rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa, infrastructure and resources for treatment of cryptococcal meningitis (CM) are often lacking. We introduced a CM diagnosis and treatment program (CM-DTP) at Lira Regional Referral Hospital (LRRH) in rural Uganda to determine if implementing high-quality standard of care protocols would improve outcomes. Information extracted from hospital charts and clinical record forms at LRRH were used to compare diagnoses, treatments, and outcomes for all patients diagnosed with meningitis (n = 281) over a two-year period after initiation of the CM-DTP in February of 2017 to all patients diagnosed with meningitis (n = 215) in the two preceding years. After implementation of the CM-DTP, we observed increased confirmed diagnoses of CM from 22.2% (48 of 215) to 35.2% (99 of 281), (p = 0.002) among all patients diagnosed with meningitis. Among all patients treated for CM, the proportion who received standard of care treatment with amphotericin B plus fluconazole increased from 63 of 127 (49.6%) to 109 of 146 (74.7%), (p <0.001) and mortality improved from 66 of 127 (52.0%) to 57 of 146 (39.0%), (p = 0.04) after implementation of the CM-DTP. Implementation of the CM-DTP was associated with increased number of lumbar punctures and decreased use of antibiotics in patients with CM, as well as decreased mortality among patients with meningitis from all causes. Improved diagnosis, treatment, and mortality were observed following implementation of the CM-DTP. Our results demonstrate that quality treatment of CM in rural Uganda is feasible.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000254
spellingShingle Abigail Link
Mark Okwir
David Meya
Betty Nabongo
James Okello
Danuta Kasprzyk
Paul R Bohjanen
Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.
PLOS Global Public Health
title Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.
title_full Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.
title_fullStr Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.
title_short Impact of a Cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in rural, Northern Uganda.
title_sort impact of a cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis and treatment program at lira regional referral hospital in rural northern uganda
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000254
work_keys_str_mv AT abigaillink impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda
AT markokwir impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda
AT davidmeya impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda
AT bettynabongo impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda
AT jamesokello impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda
AT danutakasprzyk impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda
AT paulrbohjanen impactofacryptococcalmeningitisdiagnosisandtreatmentprogramatliraregionalreferralhospitalinruralnorthernuganda