Drug resistance was extensive and care was complex; nevertheless, high rates of treatment completion were achieved albeit at considerable cost.
To describe factors associated with multidrug-resistant (MDR), including extensively-drug-resistant (XDR), tuberculosis (TB) in the United States, we abstracted inpatient, laboratory, and public health clinic records of a sample of MDR TB patients reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from California, New York City, and Texas during 2005–2007. At initial diagnosis, MDR TB was detected in 94% of 130 MDR TB patients and XDR TB in 80% of 5 XDR TB patients. Mutually exclusive resistance was 4% XDR, 17% pre-XDR, 24% total first-line resistance, 43% isoniazid/rifampin/rifabutin-plus-other resistance, and 13% isoniazid/rifampin/rifabutin-only resistance. Nearly three-quarters of patients were hospitalized, 78% completed treatment, and 9% died during treatment. Direct costs, mostly covered by the public sector, averaged $134,000 per MDR TB and $430,000 per XDR TB patient; in comparison, estimated cost per non-MDR TB patient is $17,000. Drug resistance was extensive, care was complex, treatment completion rates were high, and treatment was expensive.
Drug-resistant
Studies of MDR TB in the United States have been limited by small sample sizes, limited study periods, minimal information on outcomes and costs, or reliance solely on surveillance data (
Our study describes and analyzes characteristics associated with drug resistance, timely diagnosis, treatment practices, outcomes, and costs associated with MDR TB for cases reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) by California, New York, NY, and Texas during 2005–2007. These 3 areas contribute about half of US MDR TB cases annually.
CDC and local institutional review boards approved the study and granted a waiver of patient informed consent and patient authorization. We defined a 5-drug regimen (
Each site identified cases of MDR TB and extensively drug-resistant (XDR) TB reported to CDC during 2005–2007. The study included all XDR TB cases and a 75% simple random sample of MDR TB cases from California and New York, NY (New York City), and a 50% sample from Texas. Using standardized forms, we abstracted hospital, laboratory, and public health clinic records retrospectively for patient demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical characteristics and for treatment, case management, outcomes, and costs. Total charges for each TB-associated hospitalization were abstracted from hospital UB-04 forms. To ascertain sputum-culture conversion and drug resistance, we examined all available culture and drug-susceptibility testing (DST) results from diagnosis through treatment.
To assess representativeness, we compared our sample with National TB Surveillance System data from all US sites. We identified characteristics among MDR TB patients associated with the following 3 dichotomous outcomes: drug resistance acquisition, expert consultation use, and death during TB treatment. Multivariable logistic regression was used with backward selection at p<0.05 to identify variables remaining in final models (SAS version 9.2/9.3; SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). Adjusted odds ratios (AORs) significant at 95% CIs and Schwarz Criterion statistics are reported for goodness-of-fit. Variables included in initial models were patient demographics (gender, age group, race/ethnicity, foreign birth), socioeconomic factors (homelessness, unemployment, illicit substance use, excess alcohol use, smoking), medical risks (HIV infection, diabetes), TB history, disease severity (acid-fast bacilli [AFB]–smear positivity, cavitation, dissemination), drug-resistance pattern, receipt of TB clinic outpatient care, and additional relevant characteristics (for acquired resistance: receipt of ≥4 effective medications; for expert consultation: incarceration in a correctional institution, long-term-care facility residence, pregnancy, death during treatment, number of adverse events, private outpatient insurance; for death during treatment: pregnancy, incarceration in a correctional institution).
Inpatient costs were measured; outpatient costs and productivity losses were estimated (
Study total direct costs were compared with estimated direct costs for cases of non-MDR TB (
For productivity losses from hospitalization, we applied an updated 2010 dollar value of work-plus-home production of $224/day for employed patients and $40/day for home-only production of unemployed patients (
The sample consisted of 135 patients (130 with MDR TB and 5 with XDRTB), representing 36% (130/364) of MDR TB and 56% (5/9) of XDR TB cases reported in the United States during 2005–2007. Among these patients, 87% were foreign born and 36% had prior TB disease (
| Characteristic | Study participants, no. (%), n = 135 | All US MDR TB patients, no. (%), n = 370 |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||
| M | 68 (50) | 205 (55) |
| F | 67 (50) | 164 (44) |
| Age, y | ||
| Median | 38.2 | |
| 0–14 | 1 (1) | 13 (4) |
| 15–24 | 24 (18) | 64 (17) |
| 25–44 | 62 (46) | 171 (46) |
| 45–64 | 40 (30) | 91 (25) |
|
| 8 (6) | 31 (8) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Hispanic | 42 (31) | 100 (27) |
| White† | 4 (3) | 31 (8) |
| Black | 14 (10) | 63 (17) |
| Asian | 72 (53) | 173 (47) |
| Other/unknown | 3 (2) | 3 (1) |
| Geographic origin | ||
| Foreign born‡ | 118 (87) | 305 (82) |
| US born | 17 (13) | 64 (17) |
*Study patients were from California, New York City, and Texas. MDR, multiple-drug resistant; XDR, extensively drug resistant; TB, tuberculosis. †Statistically significant differences between percentages of study patients and all US MDR TB patients at p<0.05. ‡For 110 participants, median no. years after first entry into United States = 3.5.
| Characteristic | Study participants, no. (%), n = 135 | All US MDR TB patients, no. (%), n = 370 |
|---|---|---|
| History of LTBI, % of 130 known | 21 (16) | |
| History of completing LTBI Rx, % of 21 with history of LTBI | 14 (67) | |
| History of TB disease† | 48 (36) | 60 (16) |
| Contact with infectious TB patient, % of 87 known | 10 (11) | |
| Contact with infectious MDR TB patient, % of 10 contacts | 6 (60) | |
| Dead at TB diagnosis | 1 (1) | 5 (1) |
| Smear positive at any time, % of 134 alive at diagnosis† | 103 (77) | 223 (60) |
| Sites of TB disease | ||
| Pulmonary | 115 (85) | 332 (90) |
| Extrapulmonary only | 8 (6) | 37 (10) |
| Disseminated at any time | 12 (9) | |
| Extent of pulmonary disease at diagnosis | ||
| Extensive | 69 | |
| Moderate | 31 | |
| Minimal | 21 | |
| Undocumented | 6 | |
| Description of extensive pulmonary disease, at any time | ||
| Miliary | 4 | |
| Cavitary | 58 | 127 |
| Multiple lobes | 70 | |
| Collapsed lobes | 6 | |
| Extent of extrapulmonary disease at diagnosis | ||
| Extensive | 2 | |
| Moderate | 3 | |
| Minimal | 3 | |
| *MDR, multidrug resistant; XDR, extensively drug resistant; TB, tuberculosis; LTBI, latent TB infection; Rx, treatment. Blank cells indicate data not available. †Statistically significant differences between percentages of study patients and all US MDR TB patients at p<0.05. | ||
Of the 135 patients, disease was pulmonary for 85%, extrapulmonary only for 6%, and disseminated for 9%. Of 127 patients with pulmonary or disseminated disease, 69 (54%) had extensive disease. Of 8 patients with extrapulmonary-only disease, 2 (25%) had extensive disease. Of 134 patients alive at diagnosis, 77% (103) had at least 1 AFB-smear–positive specimen, 72% from sputum.
At various times during treatment,
Percentage of 135 patients for whom
Among 128 patients for whom DST was conducted multiple times on separate dates, acquired resistance to an anti-TB medication during treatment was detected for 27 (21%). According to multivariable analysis, acquisition of drug resistance during treatment was more likely for patients who were recently homeless (AOR 5.8, 95% CI 1.2–28.9), who had pre-XDR or XDR TB (AOR 5.1, 95% CI 1.9–14.2), or who were Black (AOR 4.1, 95% CI 1.1–15.4) (
| Variable | Initial OR estimate | Initial 95% CI | Initial Pr>χ2 | Final OR estimate | Final 95% CI | Final Pr>χ2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | <0.001 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.973 | |||
| 33.19 | 0.80–>999.999 | 0.065 | ||||
| 18.76 | 0.93–377.71 | 0.056 | ||||
| 8.78 | 2.31–33.42 | 0.001 | ||||
| AFB-smear positive | 5.34 | 0.86–33.22 | 0.072 | |||
| Age 25-44 y | 4.83 | 0.65–36.03 | 0.124 | |||
| Hispanic ethnicity | 4.83 | 0.11–216.20 | 0.417 | |||
| ≥4 Effective medications | 3.46 | 0.41–29.47 | 0.256 | |||
| Age 45–64 y | 3.41 | 0.39–30.21 | 0.271 | |||
| Asian race | 3.35 | 0.07–151.32 | 0.534 | |||
| Disseminated TB disease | 2.28 | 0.21–24.20 | 0.495 | |||
| Foreign born | 2.10 | 0.15–28.64 | 0.577 | |||
| Recent cigarette smoker | 1.96 | 0.41–9.31 | 0.397 | |||
| Recent excess alcohol use | 0.99 | 0.13–7.65 | 0.988 | |||
| TB clinic outpatient management | 0.98 | 0.18–5.35 | 0.980 | |||
| Recent unemployment | 0.97 | 0.24–3.93 | 0.964 | |||
| Cavitary disease | 0.77 | 0.21–2.84 | 0.694 | |||
| Diabetes | 0.76 | 0.16–3.70 | 0.732 | |||
| History of TB disease | 0.44 | 0.12–1.59 | 0.208 | |||
| HIV infection | 0.39 | 0.03–4.92 | 0.463 | |||
| Recent injection drug or noninjection drug use | 0.15 | 0.00–5.08 | 0.291 |
*MDR TB, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; XDR TB, extensively drug-resistant TB; OR, odds ratio; AFB, acid-fast bacilli; Pr, probability. Boldface indicates significance in the final model. Blank cells indicate variables not retained in the final model. †Model fit intercept and covariates: Akaike information criterion, initial 136.392, final 116.619; Schwarz criterion, initial 198.964, final 127.996; –2logL, initial 92.392, final 108.619.
For 74 patients who had TB symptoms before diagnosis, a median of 1.6 months elapsed from symptom onset to initial TB diagnosis. Of 134 patients alive at diagnosis, 123 (92%) started receiving ≥2 second- or third-line medications a median of 2.4 months after initial TB diagnosis. The median duration of infectiousness was 10 months.
Among 105 patients who completed treatment, treatment duration varied. Median durations were 32.3 months (interquartile range [IQR] 30.6–37.8) for those with XDR, 25.1 months (IQR 23.6–29.2) for those with pre-XDR, 25.7 months (IQR 22.4–26.9) for those with total-first-line–resistant, 24.1 months (IQR 20.1–27.0) for those with isoniazid/rifampin/rifabutin-plus–resistant, and 20.0 months (IQR 19.4–24.5) for those with isoniazid/rifampin/rifabutin-only–resistant TB.
Providers changed medications for 134 patients alive at diagnosis a median of 7 times during treatment; 33% of 988 medication changes were because of adverse events and 10% because of DST results. Of 134 patients, 34% received a 5-drug regimen before sputum-culture conversion, and 61% ultimately received a 5-drug regimen. Of the 134 patients, 81% received an effective (i.e., medication to which their isolate was never resistant) injectable medication and 86% received an effective fluoroquinolone medication during treatment. Of 123 patients who received outpatient care, 90% received >80% of outpatient medication doses by directly observed therapy (DOT).
Most study patients were hospitalized for TB, often several times; 73% (98) were hospitalized at least 1 time and 29% were hospitalized
Of the 134 patients alive at diagnosis, 81% had documentation of physician consultation with an MDR TB expert during inpatient or outpatient care. Expert consultation was more likely for patients managed primarily by a TB clinic (AOR 5.7, 95% CI 1.9–16.8) and less likely for those with private insurance (AOR 0.2, 95% CI = 0.1–0.7) (
| Variable | Initial OR estimate | Initial 95% CI | Initial Pr>χ2 | Final OR estimate | Final 95% CI | Final Pr>χ2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| XDR TB | >999.999 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.939 | |||
| Recent homelessness | >999.999 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.887 | |||
| Correctional institution residence | >999.999 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.939 | |||
| Recent injection drug or noninjection drug use | 61.63 | 0.00–>999.999 | 0.401 | |||
| Recent cigarette smoker | 27.88 | 0.56–>999.999 | 0.096 | |||
| Diabetes | 26.44 | 1.28–545.80 | 0.034 | |||
| Disseminated TB disease | 9.49 | 0.18–501.11 | 0.266 | |||
| 7.96 | 1.50–42.32 | 0.015 | ||||
| Age 45–64 y | 4.30 | 0.38–48.55 | 0.239 | |||
| Recent unemployment | 3.81 | 0.52–28.18 | 0.190 | |||
| Age 25–44 years | 2.92 | 0.58–14.63 | 0.192 | |||
| Long-term care facility resident | 1.87 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.878 | |||
| 5-drug regimen | 1.13 | 0.22–5.82 | 0.882 | |||
| Total no. adverse events | 1.12 | 0.88–1.42 | 0.371 | |||
| Total first-line resistance | 0.63 | 0.11–3.77 | 0.614 | |||
| Acquired resistance | 0.57 | 0.07–4.37 | 0.588 | |||
| Foreign born | 0.55 | 0.03–12.28 | 0.705 | |||
| History of TB disease | 0.53 | 0.13–2.10 | 0.363 | |||
| Age | 0.50 | 0.02–14.97 | 0.687 | |||
| HIV infection | 0.34 | 0.02–7.21 | 0.492 | |||
| Pregnant | 0.28 | 0.02–5.15 | 0.393 | |||
| 0.14 | 0.02–0.87 | 0.035 | ||||
| Pre-XDR | 0.12 | 0.01–1.35 | 0.087 | |||
| Male | 0.12 | 0.02–0.82 | 0.031 | |||
| Died | 0.05 | <0.001–3.46 | 0.165 | |||
| White race | 0.05 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.988 | |||
| <0.001 | <0.001–0.06 | 0.002 | ||||
| Black race | <0.001 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.937 | |||
| Hispanic ethnicity | <0.001 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.938 | |||
| Asian race | <0.001 | <0.001–>999.999 | 0.943 |
*MDR TB, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; XDR TB, extensively drug-resistant TB; OR, odds ratio. Boldface indicates significance in the final model. Blank cells indicate variables not retained in the final model.
†Model fit intercept and covariates: AIC (initial 133.402, final 121.683), SC (initial 223.235, final 133.274
Of the 134 patients alive at diagnosis, ≈90% were assigned a case manager. Case management activities included home visits (68%), social worker assistance (37%), transportation assistance (32%), incentives (25%), housing assistance (17%), and other activities including legal orders for DOT or isolation (9%–15%). Only 4% of patients received none of these case management services. Interpreter use was documented for 60% of 107 patients who understood some or no English.
Of 112 eligible patients, including all XDR TB patients, sputum culture converted to negative for 109 (97%). Patients considered ineligible for culture conversion included 1 patient whose TB was diagnosed after death, 6 who died during treatment, 3 who were transferred to another US jurisdiction or out of the United States, 7 who had extrapulmonary-only disease, and 6 without a positive sputum culture result. Of the 3 for whom no culture conversion was documented, 1 was lost to follow-up after 166 days and 2 completed treatment. Culture conversion occurred within a median of 2 months from starting a 5-drug-regimen but varied by resistance pattern (
Of the 134 patients alive at diagnosis, 78% completed treatment, 11% transferred within or outside the United States or were lost to follow-up, and 1% stopped treatment because of adverse events (
| Resistance pattern | Completed treatment, % | Transferred within United States, % | Transferred out of United States, % | Lost to follow-up, % | Stopped because of side effects, % | Died during treatment, % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All, N = 134 | 78 | 3 | 6 | 2 | 1 | 9 |
| INH/RIF/RBT-only, n = 17 | 59 | 0 | 18 | 6 | 0 | 18 |
| INH/RIF/RBT-plus, n = 58 | 83 | 3 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
| First-line, n = 32 | 78 | 0 | 3 | 6 | 3 | 9 |
| Pre-XDR, n = 22 | 77 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 9 |
| XDR, n = 5 | 100 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| *MDR TB, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; XDR TB, extensively drug-resistant TB; INH, isoniazid; RIF, rifampin; RBT, rifabutin. | ||||||
Of the 4 HIV-infected patients who died of TB-related causes, 3 had a CD4 count of
Among patients alive at diagnosis, a median of 1 adverse event (average 2.9) resulted in medication change or adjustment, but only 2 patients completely stopped treatment. According to multivariate linear regression, use of clofazimine was significantly associated (p<0.05) with more adverse events but was not associated with death during treatment. Of 9 patients receiving clofazimine, 6 experienced postinitiation gastrointestinal effects that resulted in their discontinuing clofazimine. Because of MDR TB or its treatment, of the 134 patients, 13% experienced hearing impairment, 13% hepatitis, 11% renal impairment, 8% difficulty ambulating, 7% visual impairment, and 1% seizures. Depression or psychosis was documented for 19% (80% of whom were taking cycloserine), and pulmonary impairment was documented for 4%. Of 103 impairments, 66% were mild, but another 7% were graded most severe and occurred for 6 patients, 3 of whom completed treatment; 2 of those patients died (lung and mobility impairments), and 1 transferred outside the country.
Direct costs averaged $134,000 (SE $9,683) per MDR TB patient and $430,000 (SE $73,109) per XDR TB patient. In comparison, costs are estimated at $17,000 (SE $1,210) per non-MDR TB patient (
Average, median, and distribution of direct costs per patient in 2010 US dollars by drug resistance. This box-plot diagram shows the minimum and maximum values (vertical lines), the averages and medians (numbers), and the interquartile ranges (box). MDR, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis; XDR, extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis.
When days hospitalized were controlled for, characteristics associated with greater direct costs, in descending order, were having XDR TB, residency in a long-term-care institution, non–injection-drug use, HIV infection, or having public insurance (adjusted R2 = 0.55). When days hospitalized were controlled for, characteristics associated with greater direct-plus-productivity-loss costs were death, XDR TB, non–injection-drug use, HIV-infection, diabetes, or being male (R2 = 0.66) (
| Characteristic | Study participants, no. (%), n = 135 | All US MDR TB patients, no. (%), n = 370 |
|---|---|---|
| Unemployed† | 38 (28) | 187 (51) |
| Homeless | 9 (7) | 20 (5) |
| Correctional institution resident | 6 (4) | 7 (2) |
| Long-term care facility resident | 4 (3) | 6 (2) |
| Injection drug use | 5 (4) | 8 (2) |
| Noninjection drug use† | 12 (9) | 15 (4) |
| Excess alcohol use | 15 (11) | 31 (8) |
| Smoker | 31 (23) | |
| Pregnant at treatment initiation | 6 (4) | |
| Private health insurance, % of 112 known | 24 (21) | |
| Public health insurance, % of 112 known | 49 (44) | |
| Jail/prison health coverage, % of 112 known | 2 (2) | |
| Other health insurance, % of 112 known | 5 (4) | |
| No health insurance, % of 112 known | 32 (29) | |
| HIV+ | 14 (10) | 29 (8) |
| Receiving HAART | 9 (64) | |
| Receiving ART | 1 (7) | |
| Receiving neither HAART nor ART | 3 (21) | |
| Receipt of ART not documented | 1 (7) | |
| Not HIV infected | 102 (76) | 205 (55) |
| HIV status unknown | 19 (14) | 136 (37) |
| Diabetes, % of 121 known | 24 (20) | |
| ESRD, % of 121 known | 3 (2) | |
| Prolonged corticosteroid therapy, % of 121 known | 2 (2) | |
| Other immunosuppressive therapy, % of 121 known | 2 (2) | |
| Cancer, % of 121 known | 3 (2) | |
| Hematologic diseases, % of 121 known | 2 (2) |
*Study patients were from California, New York City, and Texas. MDR, multidrug resistant; XDR, extensively drug resistant; TB, tuberculosis; HIV+, HIV infected; HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy; ART, antiretroviral therapy; ESRD, end-stage renal disease. Blank cells indicate data not available. †Statistically significant differences between percentages of study patients and all US MDR TB patients at p<0.05.
In this population-based sample, which comprised 36% (130/364) of MDR TB and 56% (5/9) of XDR TB cases reported in the United States during 2005–2007, MDR/XDR TB diagnosis and treatment were very complex:
Despite this complexity, for nearly all eligible patients, sputum cultures converted to negative and 78% of patients completed treatment, including all those with XDR TB. Only 1% stopped treatment because of adverse events. The mortality rate (10%) was lower than that for other countries (
Some diagnostic and treatment practices contributed to successful outcomes. Among symptomatic patients, initial TB diagnosis was made relatively quickly, within 7 weeks of symptom onset. Nearly three-fourths (73%) of patients were hospitalized; duration was 1 month for non-XDR TB patients and 9 months for XDR TB patients. Extensive DST of first-line and second-line medications was conducted within 2 months of treatment initiation for most patients. At some point during treatment, 61% of patients were receiving a 5-drug regimen. For outpatient care, DOT was used nearly universally, including during home isolation as recommended by national guidelines (
Deficiencies in practices were identified. Despite CDC recommendations, ≈20% of patients had no documentation of expert consultation. Outcome was unknown for 3% who transferred within and 6% outside the United States and for 2% who were lost to follow-up. Acquisition of any drug resistance during treatment occurred for 21% of patients and was more likely to occur in populations difficult to treat (those who had pre-XDR TB or XDR TB or were homeless), suggesting a need for more vigilant treatment monitoring. There were delays of ≈3 months before patients started a 5-drug regimen. Today, the use of more rapid molecular diagnostic techniques could shorten the time to initiation of an appropriate treatment regimen (
Because MDR TB treatment lasts >2 years (vs. 6 months for drug-susceptible TB), uses expensive medications, and requires hospitalization for ≈75% of patients (vs. 50% with drug-susceptible TB), it was very costly to treat and manage; average direct cost was $134,000 per MDR TB patient and $430,000 per XDR TB patient. The estimated $17,000 per non-MDR TB patient is 8 and 25 times lower than the costs for MDR TB and XDR TB, respectively. In contrast, lifetime care per HIV-infected patient costs $380,000 (updated to 2010 dollars) (
During 2005–2007, the 373 MDR/XDR TB cases cost the US health care system an estimated $53 million; during this time there were ≈41,000 total TB cases. Direct costs for an average XDR TB patient were 3.2 times those for an average MDR TB patient, mostly because of hospitalization costs. Only 20% of XDR TB and 28% of MDR TB patients were managed solely as outpatients. The public sector incurred 80% of the MDR TB costs and 100% of the XDR TB costs.
With health care reform, a substantial proportion of uninsured TB patients are expected to become eligible for Medicaid coverage, which should increase access to health care and early TB diagnosis and decrease TB-associated hospitalizations and deaths. Prevention opportunities for MDR TB are limited. Maintaining the capacity of public health departments and of publicly financed hospitals to act as safety nets (regardless of patient insurance status) to quickly diagnose MDR/XDR TB and isolate and effectively treat the patients will be critical for preventing deaths and transmission of drug-resistant TB organisms. Investment in infection control infrastructure and the capacity to prevent TB among MDR TB patient contacts is also critical; our cost-of-illness estimates did not include these programmatic costs of preventing cases. During the 1979–1994 TB resurgence and MDR TB outbreaks in the United States, New York City renovated hospitals and the Rikers Island prison and treated 20,000 excess TB patients at a cost of ≈$1.7 billion (updated to 2010 dollars) (
This study had some limitations. Detailed hospitalization records were unavailable for 17 patients. Moreover, documentation of care for incarcerated patients was limited. Follow-up data for all patients were unavailable after 1 year of treatment. Because outpatient care was provided by a mixture of public and private providers, we used average wholesale medication prices to estimate medication costs, which overestimated actual costs to TB clinics that have access to reduced (often one half to one third) medication prices negotiated with pharmaceutical companies. Estimates of out-of-pocket costs were not included.
In this population-based sample of MDR/XDR TB patients in the United States, despite the extensive drug resistance found at the time of diagnosis, culture conversion and treatment completion rates were high and mortality rates were low. Records of treatment practices documented near-universal use of DOT. However, these outcomes came at a high cost to the public sector, providing incentives for the United States to prevent MDR/XDR TB. Preventing MDR/XDR TB in the United States will require addressing factors associated with development of drug resistance in countries where foreign-born US patients originate, as well as rapid diagnosis, appropriate regimen selection, robust case management practices, and continued emphasis on DOT in the United States.
Additional methods, cost analysis, definitions, and additional results with regard to treatment practices, outcomes, and costs of MDR TB and XDR TB in the United States, 2005–2007.
We acknowledge the efforts of many persons involved with study data collection and management and data analysis consultation, including Holly Anger, Pennan Barry, Peter Cegielski, Jeffrey Chrismon, Carla Cueva, Wafaa El-Sadr, Denise Garrett, Jerrie Givens, Anita Musafar, Thomas Navin, Hugo Ortega, Stephanie Ott, Nicolette Palermo, Vicki Randle, Alicia Rodriguez, Marthe Sende, Brian Sizemore, John Stamper, Andrew Vernon, Charles Wallace, Ying Wang, and James Watt.
This work was supported by the Tuberculosis Epidemiologic Studies Consortium of CDC. The CDC National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention and the Division of Tuberculosis Elimination supported CDC and contract staff and the analytical resources used during the project.
Ms Marks is an epidemiologist/economist in the Division of Tuberculosis Elimination at CDC. Her research interests include combining epidemiologic research and economic analysis of TB diagnostics, MDR TB treatment, outcomes, and prevention, and often focus on populations experiencing health disparities, such as persons living with HIV or homelessness, and sexual/gender minorities.