In-hospital mortality of intermittent vs daily antitubercular regimen in patients with meningeal tuberculosis--a retrospective study

The Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP), the State-run Tuberculosis Control Initiative of the Government of India, recommends intermittent thrice a week Directly Observed Treatment Short course (DOTS) both during intensive phase and continuation phase for a total of nine months f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Indian journal of tuberculosis 2012-01, Vol.59 (1), p.6-11
Hauptverfasser: Iype, Thomas, George, Litta Elizabeth, Cherian, Ajith, Kumar, Aswini, Ajitha, B K, Chandy, Sinchu, Kumar, K Vijaya
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container_end_page 11
container_issue 1
container_start_page 6
container_title Indian journal of tuberculosis
container_volume 59
creator Iype, Thomas
George, Litta Elizabeth
Cherian, Ajith
Kumar, Aswini
Ajitha, B K
Chandy, Sinchu
Kumar, K Vijaya
description The Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP), the State-run Tuberculosis Control Initiative of the Government of India, recommends intermittent thrice a week Directly Observed Treatment Short course (DOTS) both during intensive phase and continuation phase for a total of nine months for tubercular meningitis. However, most recent guidelines recommend daily regimen. Assessment of the in-hospital mortality in patients with meningeal tuberculosis. We retrospectively analyzed the data of patients (n = 98) admitted with a diagnosis of meningeal tuberculosis from January 1st 2006 to December 31st 2009 in a tertiary care centre in South India. Thwaites index score of four or less was used for diagnosis of meningeal tuberculosis which is a weighted diagnostic index score for dichotomised clinical variables including age, blood white cell count, duration of illness, CSF total white cell count, and CSF neutrophil percentage. We compared in-hospital treatment outcome of patients on thrice weekly intermittent DOTS regimen with daily regimen patients. The inhospital mortality was same (27%) in the two treatment regimens (p 0.944). However, there was less incidence of hepatic dysfunction in the intermittent DOTS regimen, even though it was not statistically significant (p 0.148). In the short-term, both regimens have similar mortality outcomes and no statistically significant difference in hepatic dysfunction during the hospital stay.
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subjects Adult
Antitubercular Agents - administration & dosage
Chi-Square Distribution
Comorbidity
Directly Observed Therapy
Female
Hospital Mortality
Humans
India - epidemiology
Male
Retrospective Studies
Severity of Illness Index
Tuberculosis, Meningeal - drug therapy
Tuberculosis, Meningeal - mortality
title In-hospital mortality of intermittent vs daily antitubercular regimen in patients with meningeal tuberculosis--a retrospective study
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