Poor long-term outcomes despite improved hospital survival for patients with cryptococcal meningitis in rural, Northern Uganda
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Date
2024Author
Okwir, Mark
Link, Abigail
Opio, Bosco
Okello, Fred
Nakato, Ritah
Nabongo, Betty
Alal, Jimmy
Rhein, Joshua
Meya, David
Liu, Yu
Bohjanen, Paul R.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background
Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) remains a major cause of death among people living with HIV
in rural sub-Saharan Africa. We previously reported that a CM diagnosis and treatment program
(CM-DTP) improved hospital survival for CM patients in rural, northern Uganda. This
study aimed to evaluate the impact on long-term survival.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective study at Lira Regional Referral Hospital in Uganda evaluating
long-term survival (�1 year) of CM patients diagnosed after CM-DTP initiation (February
2017-September 2021). We compared with a baseline historical group of CM patients
before CM-DTP implementation (January 2015-February 2017). Using Cox proportional
hazards models, we assessed time-to-death in these groups, adjusting for confounders.
Results
We identified 318 CM patients, 105 in the Historical Group, and 213 in the CM-DTP Group.
The Historical Group had a higher 30-day mortality of 78.5% compared to 42.2% in the CMDTP
Group. The overall survival rate for the CM-DTP group at three years was 25.6%.
Attendance at follow-up visits (HR:0.13, 95% CI: [0.03–0.53], p <0.001), ART adherence
(HR:0.27, 95% CI: [0.10–0.71], p = 0.008), and fluconazole adherence: (HR:0.03, 95% CI:
[0.01–0.13], p <0.001), weight >50kg (HR:0.54, 95% CI: [0.35–0.84], p = 0.006), and performance
of therapeutic lumbar punctures (HR:0.42, 95% CI: [0.24–0.71], p = 0.001), were associated with lower risk of death. Altered mentation was associated with increased death
risk (HR: 1.63, 95% CI: 1.10–2.42, p = 0.016).
Conclusion
Long-term survival of CM patients improved after the initiation of the CM-DTP. Despite this
improved survival, long-term outcomes remained sub-optimal, suggesting that further work
is needed to enhance long-term survival.
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- Research Articles [17]