Title of article :
Modeling Time to Death of Patients with Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis at Saint Peter’s Specialized Hospital
Author/Authors :
Wongel Wotale, Teramaj Department of Statistics - College of Natural Science - Mettu University, Mettu, Oromia, Ethiopia , Negash Terefe, Abiyot Department of Statistics - College of Natural Science - Jimma University - Jimma, Oromia, Ethiopia , Abdisa Fufa, Jaleta Department of Statistics - College of Natural Science - Jimma University - Jimma, Oromia, Ethiopia
Abstract :
Currently, the worldwide prevalence and incidence of multidrug-resistant
tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is drastically increasing. The main objective of this study was modeling the
time-to-death of patients with MDR-TB at St. Peter’s Specialized Hospital, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia,
by using various parametric shared frailty models.
Study Design: A retrospective study design was used.
Methods: The study population was TB patients with MDR at St. Peter’s Specialized Hospital from
January 2016 through December 2019. Exponential, Weibull, and log-normal were used as
baseline hazard functions with the gamma and inverse Gaussian frailty distributions. All the models
were compared based on Akaike’s Information Criteria.
Results: The overall median time to death was 11 months and 123 (33.5%) patients died. Patients
who lived in rural areas had shorter survival time than those who lived in urban areas with an
accelerated factor of 0.135 (P=0.002). Patients with a history of anti-TB drug consumption had a
short survival time than those without such a history with an accelerated factor of 0.02 (P=0.001).
The variability (heterogeneity) of time to death of patients in the region for the selected model
(Weibull-inverse Gaussian shared frailty model) was θ=0.144 (P=0.027).
Conclusion: The MDR-TB patients with weight gain, khat and alcohol consumption, clinical
complication of pneumothorax and pneumonia, extrapulmonary TB, and history of anti-TB drug
consumption as well as those who lived in rural areas had a shorter survival time, compared to
others. There was a significant heterogeneity effect in the St. Peter’s Specialized Hospital. The best
model for predicting the time to death of MDR-TB patients was Weibull-inverse Gaussian shared
frailty model.
Keywords :
Hospital , Multidrug-Resistance Tuberculosis , Retrospective , Shared frailty , Time-to-Death
Journal title :
Journal of Research in Health Sciences(JRHS)