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Short and long-term outcomes of video observed treatment in tuberculosis patients, the Republic of Moldova | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Research

Short and long-term outcomes of video observed treatment in tuberculosis patients, the Republic of Moldova

Doltu S, Ciobanu A, Sereda Y, Persian R, Ravenscroft L, Kasyan L, Truzyan N, Dadu A, Reid AJ
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Abstract
INTRODUCTION
The Republic of Moldova is among the 18 high priority countries for tuberculosis (TB) in Europe. This study compared adherence and short and long-term TB treatment outcomes for TB patients who experienced asynchronous Video Observed Treatment (aVOT) during three months of outpatient treatment versus Directly Observed Treatment (DOT) in operational conditions in 2016-2017 in Chisinau.

METHODOLOGY
We used secondary data from the 2016-2017 Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) that piloted the aVOT Strategy in Chisinau and data from the national TB register. Relative risk was selected as a measure of association in analysis of treatment strategies (aVOT and DOT under operational conditions) and short and long-term treatment outcomes.

RESULTS
From 647 TB patients included in the study, 169 followed the treatment strategy in the RCT (83 in aVOT and 86 in DOT) and 478 were on DOT in operational conditions. Those in aVOT were more likely to have favourable short-term outcome than patients with DOT in operational conditions (RR 0.07; p < 0.001). TB recurrence as an indicator for the long-term outcome, was observed in group with DOT in operational conditions (40 cases, p = 0.006).

CONCLUSIONS
This study demonstrated that the aVOT treatment strategy was associated with better adherence and both short and long-term TB treatment favourable outcomes. aVOT as a new patient-centred approach supporting TB patients on improving treatment adherence and outcomes might be recommended as an alternative to DOT strategy in the Republic of Moldova.

Countries

Moldova

Subject Area

tuberculosismodels of careSORT-IT

Languages

English
DOI
10.3855/jidc.14601
Published Date
29 Sep 2021
PubMed ID
34609956
Journal
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 15, Issue 09.1, Pages 17S-24S
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