Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2018)

Tuberculosis Treatment Monitoring by Video Directly Observed Therapy in 5 Health Districts, California, USA

  • Richard S. Garfein,
  • Lin Liu,
  • Jazmine Cuevas-Mota,
  • Kelly Collins,
  • Fatima Muñoz,
  • Donald G. Catanzaro,
  • Kathleen Moser,
  • Julie Higashi,
  • Teeb Al-Samarrai,
  • Paula Kriner,
  • Julie Vaishampayan,
  • Javier Cepeda,
  • Michelle A. Bulterys,
  • Natasha K. Martin,
  • Phillip Rios,
  • Fredric Raab

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2410.180459
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 10
pp. 1806 – 1815

Abstract

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We assessed video directly observed therapy (VDOT) for monitoring tuberculosis treatment in 5 health districts in California, USA, to compare adherence between 274 patients using VDOT and 159 patients using in-person directly observed therapy (DOT). Multivariable linear regression analyses identified participant-reported sociodemographics, risk behaviors, and treatment experience associated with adherence. Median participant age was 44 (range 18–87) years; 61% of participants were male. Median fraction of expected doses observed (FEDO) among VDOT participants was higher (93.0% [interquartile range (IQR) 83.4%–97.1%]) than among patients receiving DOT (66.4% [IQR 55.1%–89.3%]). Most participants (96%) would recommend VDOT to others; 90% preferred VDOT over DOT. Lower FEDO was independently associated with US or Mexico birth, shorter VDOT duration, finding VDOT difficult, frequently taking medications while away from home, and having video-recording problems (p<0.05). VDOT cost 32% (range 6%–46%) less than DOT. VDOT was feasible, acceptable, and achieved high adherence at lower cost than DOT.

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