Sputum completion and conversion rates after intensive phase of tuberculosis treatment: An assessment of the Rwandan control program

被引:23
作者
Felix R Kayigamba
Mirjam I Bakker
Veronicah Mugisha
Michel Gasana
Maarten F Schim van der Loeff
机构
[1] INTERACT, CPCD, Kigali
[2] Royal Tropical Institute, KIT Biomedical Research, 1092 AD, Amsterdam
[3] ICAP, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, Kigali
[4] Rwanda National TB Control Program (PNILT), Ministry of Health, Kigali
[5] Center for Poverty-related Communicable Diseases (CPCD), Center for Infection and Immunity Amsterdam (CINIMA), AMC, 1100 DE, Amsterdam
[6] Public Health Service of Amsterdam (GGD), 1000 CE, Amsterdam
关键词
Africa; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Pulmonary tuberculosis; Sputum smear examination;
D O I
10.1186/1756-0500-5-357
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: In Rwanda tuberculosis (TB) is one of the major health problems. To contribute to an improved performance of the Rwandan National TB Control Program, we conducted a study with the following objectives: (1) to assess the completion rate of sputum smear examinations at the end of the intensive phase of TB treatment; (2) to assess the sputum conversion rate (SCR); (3) to assess associations between smear completion rate or SCR with key health facility characteristics. Methods: TB registers in 89 health facilities in five provinces were reviewed. Data of new and retreatment smearpositive pulmonary TB (PTB+) cases registered between January and June 2006 were included in the study. Data on key characteristics of the selected health facilities were also collected. Results: Among 1509 new PTB + cases, 32 (2.1%) had died by 2 months, and 178 (11.8%) had been transferred-out. Among the remaining 1299 patients, a smear examination at month 2 was done in 1039 (smear completion rate 80.0%). Among these 1039, 852 (82.0%) had become smear-negative. The smear completion rate and SCR varied considerably between health facilities. A high number of new PTB cases at a health facility was the only significant predictor of a low completion rate, while the only independent factor associated with low sputum conversion rates was rural (vs. urban) location of the health facility. Conclusions: In Rwanda, too few patients get a smear examination after 2 months of TB treatment; the SCR among those with smear results was adequate at 82%. A high number of new TB patients at a health facility was a significant predictor of a low completion rate. The national TB control program should design strategies to improve completion rates. © 2012 Kayigamba et al.
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