Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study

Abstract Background Tuberculosis (TB) is a major problem in developing countries. TB in Egypt is considered an important public health problem. Egypt is ranked among the mid-level incidence countries. Objective To evaluate TB status in 19 governorates and to compare the TB situation in Upper and Low...

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Main Authors: Medhat F. Negm, Amira H. Allam, Tbahany M. Goda, Mona Elawady
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-01-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Bronchology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4103/ejb.ejb_47_19
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spelling doaj-3bf9bc3fc9a64cb7ba00138e8990bfb12021-01-24T12:46:11ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Bronchology1687-84262314-85512020-01-0113572272910.4103/ejb.ejb_47_19Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate studyMedhat F. Negm0Amira H. Allam1Tbahany M. Goda2Mona Elawady3Faculty of Medicine, Benha UniversityFaculty of Medicine, Benha UniversityFaculty of Medicine, Benha UniversityFaculty of Medicine, Benha UniversityAbstract Background Tuberculosis (TB) is a major problem in developing countries. TB in Egypt is considered an important public health problem. Egypt is ranked among the mid-level incidence countries. Objective To evaluate TB status in 19 governorates and to compare the TB situation in Upper and Lower Egypt over 20 years from 1992 to 2012 before and after the application of directly observed treatment short-course strategy (DOTS). Patients and methods This is a retrospective study involving record review. The registered data were collected from TB registration units in the 19 governorates. Results The highest percentage of TB cases was in the age group 15–30 years. Infection was higher in males than females and in rural areas more than urban areas. Pulmonary TB and smear positivity at diagnosis, second, third, and fifth month were higher in Lower Egypt. Treatment after failure or relapse was significantly higher in Upper Egypt, whereas default rate, failure rate, and death rate were significantly higher in Lower Egypt. Regarding treatment outcome, cure, complete treatment, and transfer out were significantly increased after DOTS than before. Failure, default, and death were significantly reduced after DOTS than before DOTS. Upper Egypt included higher incidence rates of TB, new adult smear-positive cases, new extrapulmonary TB cases, and sputum conversion rate at the end of the initial phase of treatment. Cure rate and treatment success rate were significantly higher among patients of Upper Egypt, whereas transfer out rate and retreatment failure rate were significantly higher among Lower Egypt patients. Conclusion TB is still a health problem in Egypt, with pulmonary TB more in Lower Egypt, whereas extrapulmonary more in Upper Egypt, but after the introduction of DOTS, there is a significant increase in cure and success rate, with markers of success being more in Upper Egypt.https://doi.org/10.4103/ejb.ejb_47_19directly observed treatment short-course strategyEgyptLowertuberculosisUpper
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Medhat F. Negm
Amira H. Allam
Tbahany M. Goda
Mona Elawady
spellingShingle Medhat F. Negm
Amira H. Allam
Tbahany M. Goda
Mona Elawady
Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
The Egyptian Journal of Bronchology
directly observed treatment short-course strategy
Egypt
Lower
tuberculosis
Upper
author_facet Medhat F. Negm
Amira H. Allam
Tbahany M. Goda
Mona Elawady
author_sort Medhat F. Negm
title Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
title_short Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
title_full Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
title_fullStr Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
title_full_unstemmed Tuberculosis in Upper and Lower Egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
title_sort tuberculosis in upper and lower egypt before and after directly observed treatment short-course strategy: a multi-governorate study
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Journal of Bronchology
issn 1687-8426
2314-8551
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Tuberculosis (TB) is a major problem in developing countries. TB in Egypt is considered an important public health problem. Egypt is ranked among the mid-level incidence countries. Objective To evaluate TB status in 19 governorates and to compare the TB situation in Upper and Lower Egypt over 20 years from 1992 to 2012 before and after the application of directly observed treatment short-course strategy (DOTS). Patients and methods This is a retrospective study involving record review. The registered data were collected from TB registration units in the 19 governorates. Results The highest percentage of TB cases was in the age group 15–30 years. Infection was higher in males than females and in rural areas more than urban areas. Pulmonary TB and smear positivity at diagnosis, second, third, and fifth month were higher in Lower Egypt. Treatment after failure or relapse was significantly higher in Upper Egypt, whereas default rate, failure rate, and death rate were significantly higher in Lower Egypt. Regarding treatment outcome, cure, complete treatment, and transfer out were significantly increased after DOTS than before. Failure, default, and death were significantly reduced after DOTS than before DOTS. Upper Egypt included higher incidence rates of TB, new adult smear-positive cases, new extrapulmonary TB cases, and sputum conversion rate at the end of the initial phase of treatment. Cure rate and treatment success rate were significantly higher among patients of Upper Egypt, whereas transfer out rate and retreatment failure rate were significantly higher among Lower Egypt patients. Conclusion TB is still a health problem in Egypt, with pulmonary TB more in Lower Egypt, whereas extrapulmonary more in Upper Egypt, but after the introduction of DOTS, there is a significant increase in cure and success rate, with markers of success being more in Upper Egypt.
topic directly observed treatment short-course strategy
Egypt
Lower
tuberculosis
Upper
url https://doi.org/10.4103/ejb.ejb_47_19
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