Frank van Leth

Associate Professor Health Sciences

Adherence to Tuberculosis Therapy among Patients Receiving Home-Based Directly Observed Treatment: Evidence from the United Republic of Tanzania


Journal article


A. Mkopi, N. Range, F. Lwilla, S. Egwaga, Alexander Schulze, E. Geubbels, F. van Leth
PLoS ONE, 2012

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Mkopi, A., Range, N., Lwilla, F., Egwaga, S., Schulze, A., Geubbels, E., & van Leth, F. (2012). Adherence to Tuberculosis Therapy among Patients Receiving Home-Based Directly Observed Treatment: Evidence from the United Republic of Tanzania. PLoS ONE.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Mkopi, A., N. Range, F. Lwilla, S. Egwaga, Alexander Schulze, E. Geubbels, and F. van Leth. “Adherence to Tuberculosis Therapy among Patients Receiving Home-Based Directly Observed Treatment: Evidence from the United Republic of Tanzania.” PLoS ONE (2012).


MLA   Click to copy
Mkopi, A., et al. “Adherence to Tuberculosis Therapy among Patients Receiving Home-Based Directly Observed Treatment: Evidence from the United Republic of Tanzania.” PLoS ONE, 2012.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2012a,
  title = {Adherence to Tuberculosis Therapy among Patients Receiving Home-Based Directly Observed Treatment: Evidence from the United Republic of Tanzania},
  year = {2012},
  journal = {PLoS ONE},
  author = {Mkopi, A. and Range, N. and Lwilla, F. and Egwaga, S. and Schulze, Alexander and Geubbels, E. and van Leth, F.}
}

Abstract

Background Non-adherence to tuberculosis (TB) treatment is the leading contributor to the selection of drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and subsequent treatment failure. Tanzania introduced a TB Patient Centred Treatment (PCT) approach which gives new TB patients the choice between home-based treatment supervised by a treatment supporter of their own choice, and health facility–based treatment observed by a medical professional. The aim of this study was to assess the extent and determinants of adherence to anti-TB therapy in patients opting for home-based treatment under the novel PCT approach. Methods In this cross-sectional study, the primary outcome was the percentage of patients adherent to TB therapy as detected by the presence of isoniazid in urine (IsoScreen assay). The primary analysis followed a non-inferiority approach in which adherence could not be lower than 75%. Logistic regression was used to examine the influence of potentially predictive factors. Results A total of 651 new TB patients were included. Of these, 645 (99.1%) provided urine for testing and 617 patients (95.7%; 90%CI 94.3–96.9) showed a positive result. This result was statistically non-inferior to the postulated adherence level of 75% (p<0.001). Conclusions Adherence to TB therapy under home-based Directly Observed Treatment can be ensured in programmatic settings. A reliable supply of medication and the careful selection of treatment supporters, who preferably live very close to the patient, are crucial success factors. Finally, we recommend a cohort study to assess the rate of adherence throughout the full course of TB treatment.