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About
Tuberculosis (TB) patients who receive inadequate treatment or do not complete therapy are more likely to remain infectious, thus contributing to the continuous spread of TB infection in communities. Despite the widespread use of Directly Observed Therapy, defaulters remain an important problem in TB control programmes. In Sénégal, defaulters rate reach 30%, which is hampering dramatically the effectiveness of control. New strategies to deliver treatment to TB patients and ensure proper adherence that are adapted to the local situations are urgently needed.
Objectives
The overall objective of the project is to improve tuberculosis treatment success rates in Sénégal. The specific objectives are:
Methods
The proposed research seeks to develop and test innovative methods to improve cure rates in TB patients. It will explore the factors of success of TB treatment using inter-disciplinary approach, integrating social sciences and economic analyses into TB research. The project is composed of 3 comprehensive phases:
Expected results:
Methods to improve patients' adherence to treatment that are affordable, acceptable and sustainable will be developed and tested according to qualitative and quantitative criteria.
Full description
General Project Methods
The proposed research seeks to develop and test innovative methods to improve treatment success rates in TB patients in Senegal. It will explore the factors of success of TB treatment using inter-disciplinary approach, integrating social sciences and economic analyses into TB research. The project is composed of 3 comprehensive phases, that will be run concurrently and complement each other:
Methods of the Intervention Trial:
The intervention is intended to improve access to care and increase adherence to treatment, targeting simultaneously DHC staff, TB patients and communities, and includes four components:
The intervention is applied at the District Health Centre (DHC) level, which is the unit of randomisation.
Sample Size:
Based on the detection of an average of 100 new TB cases per DHC per year, an estimated coefficient of variability k=0.12, an estimated success rate in the control arm of 65% using conventional TB control programmes procedures, with 80% power and a type I error of 5%, the required sample size aiming to detect a difference of at least 15% in the treatment success rate between the intervention and control arms is eight DHCs per arm. In order to take into account the variation in recruitment of TB patients between the DHCs, the randomisation is stratified on baseline detection rate of sputum smear positive cases in 2001, that were classified as less than 60/100 000 and more than or equal to 60/100 000.
Patients and follow-up DHCs with a functional TB diagnosis and treatment unit, where no other research projects were being undertaken, were eligible for inclusion. The study population consisted of all individuals presenting to the DHC between June 2003 and May 2004 with newly diagnosed sputum-smear positive pulmonary TB (at least two positive specimens), aged 15 years or more, and living in the district served by the DHC. Written informed consent was obtained at recruitment and patients were followed-up during the course of their eight month treatment regimen, with the last patients seen in January 2005.
Smear-negative and extra-pulmonary tuberculosis cases, as well as re-treatment cases, were not eligible for the study. Patients were recruited into the study between June 2003 and May 2004 and followed up till January 2005.
Endpoints:
Primary endpoints are both the proportion of recruited patients experiencing treatment success (those cured + those completing treatment), and the proportion of patients defaulting from treatment before completion. A "cured" patient is defined by a negative sputum-smear at eight months and on at least one previous occasion. Patients "completing treatment" are those missing smear results but who had finished their treatment regimen. A "defaulter" is defined as a patient who definitely stopped treatment before completion.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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