1. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis around the world: what progress has been made?
- Author
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Falzon D, Mirzayev F, Wares F, Baena IG, Zignol M, Linh N, Weyer K, Jaramillo E, Floyd K, and Raviglione M
- Subjects
- Antitubercular Agents therapeutic use, Brazil, China, Communicable Disease Control, Data Collection, Global Health, Humans, India, Isoniazid therapeutic use, Poverty, Rifampin therapeutic use, Russia, South Africa, Treatment Outcome, World Health Organization, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant drug therapy, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant epidemiology
- Abstract
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) (resistance to at least isoniazid and rifampicin) will influence the future of global TB control. 88% of estimated MDR-TB cases occur in middle- or high-income countries, and 60% occur in Brazil, China, India, the Russian Federation and South Africa. The World Health Organization collects country data annually to monitor the response to MDR-TB. Notification, treatment enrolment and outcome data were summarised for 30 countries, accounting for >90% of the estimated MDR-TB cases among notified TB cases worldwide. In 2012, a median of 14% (interquartile range 6-50%) of estimated MDR-TB cases were notified in the 30 countries studied. In 15 of the 30 countries, the number of patients treated for MDR-TB in 2012 (71 681) was >50% higher than in 2011. Median treatment success was 53% (interquartile range 40-70%) in the 25 countries reporting data for 30 021 MDR-TB cases who started treatment in 2010. Although progress has been noted in the expansion of MDR-TB care, urgent efforts are required in order to provide wider access to diagnosis and treatment in most countries with the highest burden of MDR-TB., (The content of this work is ©World Health Organization. Design and branding are ©ERS 2015.)
- Published
- 2015
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