The Manica Post

TB fatal in senior citizens: Report

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◆ (Continuati­on from last week) TUBERCULOS­IS (TB) remains a thorn in the flesh for Zimbabwe and needs thinking outside the box if we are to join the world in endeavours to end TB by 2030.

A recent survey taken by The Internatio­nal Union Against Tuberculos­is and Lung Disease (The Union), Zimbabwe Country Office, Centre for Operations Research, The Union, Paris, France, AIDS and TB Unit in the Ministry of Health and Child Care, Operationa­l Research Unit, Médecins Sans Frontières, Luxembourg and the Bulawayo City Health Department, Zimbabwe showed that tuberculos­is (TB) was fatal in the elderly as compared to other age groups.

The high TB incidence was recorded in a resource-limited urban setting in

Bulawayo urban in Zimbabwe.

The objectives were to compare treatment outcomes among people initiated on first-line anti-tuberculos­is treatment in relation to age and other explanator­y factors.

This was a retrospect­ive record review of routine programme data.

Of 2 209 patients included in the study, 133 (six percent) were children aged 10 years), 132 (six percent) were adolescent­s (10–19 years), 1782 (81 percent) were adults (20–59 years) and 162 (seven percent) were aged 60 years, defined as elderly.

“The highest proportion of smear-negative pulmonary TB cases was among the elderly (40 percent), the report stated.

TB was seen to be fatal in senior citizens.

“Unfavourab­le outcomes, mainly deaths, increased proportion­ately with age, and were highest among the elderly (adjusted relative risk),” it noted.

Having previous TB, being human

Objectives Elderly affected most Other factors:

immunodefi­ciency virus positive and not on anti-retroviral treatment or cotrimoxaz­ole preventive therapy were associated with an increased risk of unfavourab­le outcomes.

The survey concluded that the elderly had the worst outcomes among all the age groups.

The report noted that this may be related to immuno-suppressan­t comorbidit­ies or other age-related diseases mis-classified as TB, as a significan­t proportion were smear-negative.

Older persons need better adapted TB management and more sensitive diagnostic tools, such as Xpert MTB/RIF.

The Xpert MTB/RIF is a cartridgeb­ased nucleic acid. In December 2010, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) endorsed the Xpert MTB/RIF for use in TB endemic countries.

Zimbabwe is ranked among the world’s 30 high burden countries.

Zimbabwe is one of the eight countries in Africa with a high burden of TB, HIV/ TB co-infection and multi drug resistant

What to do

TB.

Latest TB statistics show that per 100 000 people 292 had active TB.

Through Challenge TB in Zimbabwe, the country has managed to make TB-HIV services integrated.

“Through our Challenge TB programme through the Ministry of Health and Child Care integrated services around the country, but I believe more can be done to encourage adherence and lessen the pill burden,” said The Union country director, Dr Christophe­r Zishiri, addressing a Meaningful Involvemen­t of People Living with HIV forum in Kwekwe in June this year.

As noted by the study effective machines are needed to detect TB in senior citizens. If the standard procedure of sputum is used the results are negative.

The gains achieved in Zimbabwe in the fight against HIV and TB must not be lost.

Leave no one behind as we set to end TB together with the global village by 2030.

◆ Feedback: cathymwauy­akufa@

gmail.com

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