Abstract
SETTING
Eighteen treatment units for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Mongolia.
OBJECTIVE
To determine the total number of MDR-TB cases detected, their resistance patterns, the proportion and characteristics of cases starting treatment, the delay between diagnosis and treatment initiation, and the relation between treatment outcomes and drug resistance.
DESIGN
Retrospective cohort study using routine programme data.
RESULTS
Of 268 MDR-TB cases detected, 168 (63%) were resistant to HRES, 59 (22%) to HRS, 34 (13%) to HR and 7 (3%) to HRE. Of the 268 MDR-TB patients, 139 (52%) started treatment: 69 (50%) were secondary and/or university students, 35 (25%) were unemployed, 24 (17%) were currently employed and 14 (8%) retired, disabled or status was unrecorded. The median time from MDR-TB diagnosis to treatment initiation was 137 days (IQR 43-218). The treatment success rate was 69%; 9% failed treatment, which may indicate extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) or pre-XDR-TB.
CONCLUSION
Close to seven in 10 patients in Mongolia had a successful treatment outcome, which is encouraging. Specific problems included the high proportion of students, about half of all diagnosed patients accessed treatment and there was an unacceptable delay of 4 months to treatment. These issues need to be addressed.