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Journal Article
|Research

Estimating the effect of hepatitis C infection on multidrug-resistant tuberculosis treatment outcomes under hypothetical interventions on regimen composition and adherence

LaHood A, Robins J, Stagg HR, Sauer S, Ahmed S, Bastard M, Guglielmetti L, Hewison C, Huerga H, Isani AK, Khan P, Khan U, Lomtadze N,
Mamsa S,
Melikyan N,
Mitnick CD,
Rich ML,
Seung K,
Siddiqui MR,
Skrahina A,
Stambekova A,
Tefera GB,
Franke MF
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Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is associated with unfavorable multidrug- and rifampicin-resistant (MDR/RR) tuberculosis (TB) outcomes. We examined whether this association would decrease in settings where no participants were lost-to-follow-up or where all adhered to regimens comprised of priority TB drugs. We analyzed data from 1,530 participants with HCV testing in the endTB observational cohort (NCT03259269). We estimated the relative risk of death, treatment failure, and loss-to-follow-up comparing participants with and without HCV, using inverse probability weighting to adjust for confounding. We then estimated relative risks of HCV on death and failure in weighted pseudopopulations representing hypothetical interventions eliminating loss-to-follow-up and ensuring adherence to strong MDR/RR-TB regimens. The unadjusted risk difference comparing participants with and without HCV was 14.1% (95% confidence interval [CI], 8.0%-20.1%), decreasing to 11.0% (95% CI, 3.0%-19.1%) after weighting. In pseudopopulations without loss-to-follow-up or with adequate adherence to strong regimens, the risk differences were 7.7% (95% CI, 0.8%-16.2%) and 7.0% (95% CI,−1.6% to 17.3%), respectively. Adjustment for baseline confounders attenuated the association between HCV and unfavorable outcomes, suggesting these factors partly explain the disparity. Further attenuation after eliminating loss-to-follow-up suggests that improving treatment retention in MDR/RR-TB care may reduce outcome disparities among patients with HCV.

Subject Area

tuberculosishepatitis C

Languages

English
DOI
10.1093/aje/kwag024
Published Date
02 Feb 2026
PubMed ID
41626714
Journal
American Journal of Epidemiology
Volume | Issue | Pages
Online ahead of print
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Estimating the effect of hepatitis C infection on multidrug-resistant tuberculosis treatment outcomes under hypothetical interventions on regimen composition and adherence | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal