Effect of smoking on drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment outcomes and potential mechanistic pathways: A multicountry cohort study
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Background
People who smoke are at increased risk of unfavorable tuberculosis treatment outcomes compared with those who do not, but the pathways that explain this disparity are unclear.
Objective
To estimate the difference in a successful end-of-treatment outcome by smoking status among people with multidrug- or rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis (MDR/RR-TB) and to examine if this difference changes if people who smoked had the same retention in treatment as those who did not smoke.
Design and methods
Using data from the prospective endTB Observational Study, we estimated the difference in treatment success by cigarette smoking status, adjusting for baseline confounders including demographics, social history, and comorbidities. To examine how this difference changed if everyone was retained in treatment, we censored participants who were lost to follow-up and applied inverse probability of censoring weights to simulate this scenario.
Results
Among 1786 participants in 12 countries, 539 (30.2%) reported smoking at least 1 cigarette daily. People who smoked were more frequently in post-Soviet countries, and had a complex social history (e.g., incarceration and substance use) and infectious comorbidities (e.g., hepatitis C). At the end of treatment, 73.5% of people who smoked and 80.3% of people who did not smoke had treatment success (risk difference in percentage points: -6.8, 95% confidence interval [CI]: -11.1, -2.6). After adjusting for baseline confounders, the risk difference was similar (-5.2 percentage points) but the 95% CI was less precise (-14.1, 3.2). When simulating a scenario in which everyone was retained in treatment, the risk difference was attenuated (-1.9 percentage points; 95% CI: -11.1, 4.7).
Conclusion
People who smoked had a lower frequency of MDR/RR-TB treatment success than those who did not smoke. Eliminating loss to follow-up reduced this difference by smoking status, suggesting that pathways related to retention in treatment were a major driver of this disparity.
What is already known on this topic
Most observational research supports that cigarette smoking negatively impacts TB treatment outcomes, but it is unclear why.
What this study adds
People who smoked had a lower frequency of MDR/RR-TB treatment success than those who did not smoke. Eliminating loss to follow-up attenuated this difference.
How this study might affect research, practice, or policy
Implementing interventions that address causes of loss to follow-up, in addition to smoking cessation services, could improve MDR/RR-TB treatment outcomes among people who smoke.