Reasons for low reported treatment success in notified tuberculosis patients from a London hospital according to new outcome reporting.

S J Conaty, S Dart, A C Hayward, M C Lipman
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Abstract

In January 2002 the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre (CDSC) introduced outcome reporting for tuberculosis 12 months after start of treatment. To determine whether outcome could change with longer and more detailed follow up, we examined this at 12 months and two years for a cohort notified in 2000 at a central London hospital. At 12 months 61/94 (65%) notified patients had completed treatment, 10 (16%) had died, 11 (12%) were lost to follow up, six (6%) were transferred to another service in the UK, four (4%) were still on treatment, and treatment for one (1%) patient had been stopped. After a mean follow up of two years, 65 (69%) had completed treatment. In this London service with a high prevalence of HIV infection (at least 23%), low treatment success was due to deaths, transfers and losses to follow up. The last of these was often due to patients returning to their country of origin (7 of 11). Tuberculosis was the primary or contributing cause of death in at least 4/94 (4%) cases. Completion rates need to be interpreted with caution particularly in specialist units with highly mobile populations. This has implications for national targets as well as for models of care.

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根据新的结果报告,伦敦一家医院报告的结核病患者治疗成功率低的原因。
2002年1月,传染病监测中心(CDSC)对开始治疗12个月后的结核病实行了结果报告制度。为了确定更长时间和更详细的随访是否会改变结果,我们对2000年在伦敦市中心一家医院通知的一个队列进行了12个月和2年的检查。12个月时,61/94(65%)患者完成治疗,10(16%)患者死亡,11(12%)患者失去随访,6(6%)患者转移到英国的另一个服务机构,4(4%)患者仍在接受治疗,1(1%)患者已停止治疗。平均随访2年后,65例(69%)完成了治疗。在这个艾滋病毒感染率很高(至少23%)的伦敦服务中,治疗成功率低是由于死亡、转移和失去随访。最后一个原因往往是患者返回原籍国(11例中有7例)。在至少4/94(4%)的病例中,结核病是主要或促成死亡的原因。完成率需要谨慎解释,特别是在高流动性人口的专科单位。这对国家目标和护理模式都有影响。
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