Childhood tuberculosis in Malawi: caseload, diagnostic practices and treatment outcomes

AD Harries, SM Graham, MM Weismuller, NJM Claessens, S Meijnen, NJ Hargreaves, C Mwansambo, PN Kazembe, FM Salaniponi

Abstract


There were 22,982 cases of TB registered in Malawi in 1998, of which 2739 (11.9%) were children. Children accounted for 1.3% of all case notifications with smear-positive pulmonary TB (PTB), 21.3% with smear-negative PTB and 15.9% with extrapulmonary TB (EPTB). A significantly higher proportion of TB cases were diagnosed in central hospitals. Only 45% of children completed treatment. There were high rates of death (17%), default (13%) and unknown treatment outcomes (21%). Treatment outcomes were worse in younger children and in children with smear-negative PTB. In 2001, all 44 non-private hospitals in Malawi that register and treat children with tuberculosis (TB) were surveyed to determine actual diagnostic practice. This cross-sectional study identified 150 children aged 14 years or below in hospital receiving anti-TB treatment, 98 with pulmonary TB (PTB) and 52 with extrapulmonary TB (EPTB). Median duration of illness was 8 weeks. Most patients had fever, no response to anti-malarial treatment and antibiotics, and 40% had a positive family history of TB. Nearly 45% had weight for age

Full Text:
EMAIL FREE FULL TEXT
DOWNLOAD FREE FULL TEXT

Malawi Medical Journal.   ISSN: