| Literature DB >> 32393736 |
Ivan S Pradipta1,2,3, Daphne Houtsma4, Job F M van Boven5,6, Jan-Willem C Alffenaar5,7,8,9, Eelko Hak4,6.
Abstract
Non-adherence to anti-tuberculosis (anti-TB) medication is a major risk factor for poor treatment outcomes. We therefore assessed the effectiveness of medication adherence enhancing interventions in TB patients. We report a systematic review of randomized controlled trials that included either latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) or active TB patients. Outcomes of interest included adherence rate, completed treatment, defaulted treatment and treatment outcomes. We identified four LTBI and ten active TB studies. In active TB patients, directly observed treatment (DOT) by trained community workers, short messaging service combined with education, counselling, monthly TB vouchers, drug box reminders and combinations of those were found effective. In LTBI patients, shorter regimens and DOT effectively improved treatment completion. Interestingly, DOT showed variable effectiveness, highlighting that implementation, population and setting may play important roles. Since non-adherence factors are patient-specific, personalized interventions are required to enhance the impact of a programme to improve medication adherence in TB patients.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32393736 PMCID: PMC7214451 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-020-0179-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the included articles.
The PRISMA flowchart reporting the number of papers identified, screened, excluded and included.
Characteristics of the included articles.
| Authors | Study design | Study period | Type of participant | Setting | Intervention | Control | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mohammed et al.[ | RCT | 2011–2014 | Adult newly TB patients | TB clinics and hospitals in Karachi, Pakistan | Zindagi SMS, a two-way SMS reminder system, sent daily SMS reminders and motivational messages to participants and asked them to respond through SMS or missed calls after taking their medication | Standard of care | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) and defaulted treatment |
| MacIntyre et al.[ | RCT | 1998–2000 | Adult newly TB patients | Two clinics in the North-Western Health care network, Victoria, Australia | DOT administered by a family member | Standard supervised but non-directly observed treatment | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) |
| Mohan et al.[ | RCT | 2001 | Adult newly TB patients | 15 TB centres in Baghdad, Iraq | DOT and home visits from trained members of the Iraqi Women’s Federation | DOT without home visits | Cured and defaulted treatment; sputum conversion: a negative sputum smear at the fifth month after treatment |
| Fang et al.[ | RCT | 2014–2015 | Adult pulmonary TB patients | Six districts in Anhui Province, China | Regular SMS to remind taking medicine and educate core knowledge about pulmonary TB. SMS contents: (a) following the doctor’s instructions and taking medicine timely, (b) re-examining sputum and chest X-ray periodically, (c) covering nose and mouth when sneezing or coughing and not spitting everywhere, (d) paying attention to washing hands, opening a ventilated window regularly, doing sports more, and improving resistibility, (e) adhering to regular treatment, and most of TB patients can be cured | DOT | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) and sputum conversion: a negative sputum smear at the sixth month after treatment |
| Thiam et al.[ | Cluster RCT | 2003–2005 | Newly diagnosed TB patients | Government district health centres in Senegal | Reinforced counselling through improved communication between health personnel and patients, decentralization of treatment, choice of DOT supporter by the patient and reinforcement of supervision activities | The usual standard care of TB | Cured and defaulted treatment |
| Clarke et al.[ | Cluster RCT | 2000–2001 | Adult newly TB patients | Farms in the Boland health district, Western Cape, South Africa | Adult farm dwellers selected as trained lay health workers to screen, refer, report, educate, motivate and observe the treatment of TB patients | No intervention of lay health workers | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) |
| Farooqi et al.[ | RCT | 2014–2015 | Adult newly pulmonary and extra-pulmonary TB patients | Khyber Teaching Hospital Peshawar and Emergency Satellite Hospital Nahaqi, Pakistan | DOT and daily mobile SMS reminders | DOT | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) and defaulted treatment |
| Lutge et al.[ | Cluster RCT | 2009–2010 | Adult newly TB patients | Primary public health care at Kwazulu-Natal, South of Africa | Monthly voucher USD 15 per month | No monthly voucher | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) and defaulted treatment |
| Liu et al.[ | Cluster RCT | 2009 | Adult newly pulmonary TB patients | Provinces of Heilongjiang, Jiangsu, Hunan and Chongqing, China | Text messaging reminder | The usual care: treatment monitoring can be self-administered treatment or treatment supervised by family members or treatment supervised by health care workers. The local doctor monitor the treatment | Poor adherence was due to the percentage of patient-months where at least 20% of doses (15 doses) were missed; poor treatment outcome |
| Drug box reminder | |||||||
| Combined (text messaging and drug box reminder) | |||||||
| Martins et al.[ | RCT | 2005–2006 | Adult newly pulmonary TB patients | Three primary care clinics in Dili, Timor-Leste | Nutritious, culturally appropriate daily meal (weeks 1–8) and food package (weeks 9–32) | Nutritional advice | Treatment completion: clearance of acid-fast bacilli from the sputum after treatment or the completion of 8 months of treatment or both; adherence to treatment: clinic attendance, DOT, interview and pill count |
| Menzies et al.[ | RCT | 2002 | Adult LTBI | A university-affiliated respiratory hospital, Canada | 4 months of daily rifampicin 10 mg/kg | 9 months of daily isoniazid 5 mg/ kg | Completed treatment defined as ≥80% took doses within 20 weeks for 4RIF or within 43 weeks for 9INH |
| Belknap et al.[ | Non-inferiority RCT | 2012–2014 | Adult LTBI patients | Outpatient tuberculosis clinics in the United States (9 sites), Spain (1 site), Hong Kong (1 site) and South Africa (1 site) | Directly observed treatment | SAT with monthly monitoring | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) |
| SAT with monthly monitoring and text message reminders | |||||||
| Hirsch-Moverman et al.[ | RCT | 2002–2005 | Adult LTBI patients | The Harlem Hospital Chest Clinic in New York, NY, USA | Peer-based intervention: peers educated and coached patients on adherence; gave social and emotional support and provided health care and social service system navigation, together with patients and health workers, to enhance patient–provider communication. The peers were people who had completed LTBI or anti-TB treatments and had attended a 4-week training programme that includes role-playing exercise, informational sessions and observation. Peers met participants by one-on-one at least once a week | Self-administered 9-month isoniazid treatment | Treatment completion (sum of completed treatment and cured treatment) |
| Hovell et al.[ | RCT | 1996–2000 | Adolescent LTBI patients | San Diego-Tijuana, Mexico–United States | Usual care plus adherence coaching: monthly case review and discussion about adherence problems and advice | The usual medical care: 300 mg INH per day was prescribed for 6–9 months with monthly evaluation | Treatment completion: completion of LTBI treatment as taking 180 pills within 270 days |
| Usual care plus self-esteem counselling: monthly meeting about relationship and communication with family, friends and cultural identity to enhance self-esteem |
RCT randomized controlled trial, LTBI latent tuberculosis infection, DOT directly observed treatment, SAT self-administration therapy, SMS Short Message Service, AFB acid-fast bacilli.
Effect of the intervention on the study outcomes in active tuberculosis patients.
| No. | Authors | Intervention | Intervention target | Number of participants | Study outcomes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group | Comparator group | Treatment completion | Interrupted rate | Adherence rate | Cured treatment | Sputum conversion | Poor treatment | ||||
| 1 | Mohammed et al.[ | Two-way SMS reminder system with motivational words | Patient and health care | 1104 | 1093 | RR 1.00; (0.96 to 1.04) | RR 0.92; (0.68 to 1.24) | — | — | — | — |
| 2 | MacIntyre et al.[ | Family DOT | Health care | 87 | 86 | RR 1.96; (0.98 to 1.15) | — | — | — | — | — |
| 3 | Mohan et al.[ | DOT and home visits by trained members of the Iraqi Women’s Federation | Patient and health care | 240 | 240 | — | RR 0.83; (0.02 to 0.34) | — | RR 1.2; (1.14 to 1.33) | RR 1.26; (1.15 to 1.37)a | — |
| 4 | Fang et al.[ | SMS and regular education of core knowledge about pulmonary TB | Patient and health care | 160 | 190 | RR 1.11; (1.04 to 1.18) | — | — | — | RR 1.26; (1.14 to 1.42)b | — |
| 5 | Thiam et al.[ | Reinforced counselling method | Patient and health care | 778 | 744 | — | RR 0.43; (0.21 to 0.89) | — | RR 1.18; (1.03 to 1.34) | — | — |
| 6 | Clarke et al.[ | Trained LHWs intervention | Patient and health care | 47 | 42 | RR 1.08; (0.92 to 1.27) | — | — | — | — | — |
| 7 | Farooqi et al.[ | Mobile SMS reminders | Patient and health care | 74 | 74 | RR 1.01; (0.95 to 1.10) | RR 0.75; (0.17 to 3.24) | — | — | — | — |
| 8 | Lutge et al.[ | Monthly voucher USD 15 per month | Socio-economy | 2170 | 1984 | RR 1.07; (1.04 to 1.11) | 0.06 (0.04 to 0.11) | — | — | — | — |
| 9 | Liu et al.[ | Text messaging reminder | Patient and health care | 996 | 1091 | — | — | MR 0.94 (0.71 to 1.24) | — | — | MR 0.44 (0.17, 1.13) |
| Drug box reminder | 992 | — | — | MR 0.58 (0.42 to 0.79) | — | — | MR 0.71 (0.33 to 1.51) | ||||
| Combination of text messaging and drug box reminder | 1059 | — | — | MR 0.49 (0.27 to 0.88) | — | — | MR 1.00 (0.45 to 2.20) | ||||
| 10 | Martins et al.[ | Food incentive | Patient | 136 | 129 | RR 0.98 (0.86 to 1.11) | — | MR -4.7 (−0.8 to −8.6)a MR 0 (−1.7 to 1.7)c | — | — | — |
Treatment completion is completing the prescribed doses of drugs; interrupted treatment is a defaulted or/and interrupted treatment groups that were compared with non-interrupted patient group; poor treatment is a combination of defaulted, failed treatment and death outcome; adherence rate is a proportion of missing anti-TB drug dose; sputum conversion is a conversion sputum to a negative result.
MR mean ratio, RR relative risk, OR odds ratio, TB tuberculosis, LTBI latent tuberculosis infection, DOT directly observed treatment, SAT self-administration therapy, SMS Short Message Service, AFB acid-fast bacilli, USD United States Dollar, LHW lay health worker.
aIntensive phase.
bConversion rate in the sixth month of treatment.
cContinuation phase.
Effect of the interventions on the study outcomes in latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) patients.
| No. | Authors | Intervention | Intervention target | Number of participants | Study outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group | Comparator group | Treatment completion | ||||
| 1 | Menzies et al.[ | 4 month of daily rifampicin 10 mg/kg | Treatment | 58 | 58 | RR 1.2; (1.02–1.4) |
| 2 | Belknap et al.[ | DOT | Patient and health care | 337 | 337 | RR 1.18; (1.09–1.27) |
| Self-administration therapy with weekly text message reminders and monthly monitoring | Patient and health care | 328 | 337 | RR 1.03; (0.95–1.13) | ||
| 3 | Hirsch-Moverman et al.[ | Peer-based intervention | Patient and health care | 128 | 122 | RR 1.06; (0.86–1.31) |
| 4 | Hovell et al.[ | Usual care plus adherence coaching | Patient and health care | 92 | 96 | RR 1.36; (0.98–1.88) |
| Usual care plus self-esteem counselling | Patient and health care | 98 | RR 1.12; (0.78–1.58) | |||
Treatment completion is completing the prescribed doses of drugs.
DOT directly observed treatment, RR relative risk.
Risk of bias assessment for randomized studies using the JADAD score.
| No. | Author | Randomization | Description of randomization | Double-blind method | Description of the blinding method | Description of participant withdrawal/drop-out | Total score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mohammed et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 2 | MacIntyre et al.[ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 3 | Mohan et al.[ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 4 | Belknap et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 5 | Fang et al.[ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 6 | Hirsch-Moverman et al.[ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 7 | Thiam et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 8 | Clarke et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 9 | Farooqi et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 10 | Hovell et al.[ | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 11 | Lutge et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 12 | Menzies et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 13 | Liu et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| 14 | Martins et al.[ | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
The JADAD questions: (1) Was the study described as randomized?; (2) Was the method used to generate sequence of randomization described and appropriate?; (3) Was the study described as double blind?; (4) Was the method of double-blinding described and appropriate?; (5) Was there a description of withdrawals and dropouts? A double-blinding method was either not possible or not applied for the included studies.