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Association between cardiometabolic risk factors and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: A case-control study

by Sishir Poudel, Laxman Wagle, Tara Prasad Aryal, Binay Adhikari, Sushan Pokharel, Dipendra Adhikari, Kshitiz Bhandari, Kshitiz Rijal, Jyoti Bastola Paudel

Background

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) continues to be a major public health concern, especially in high-burden countries like Nepal. While individual risk factors are known, the cumulative impact of cardiometabolic factors on MDR-TB is not well understood.

Methods

A health-facility-based, age- and sex-matched 1:2 case-control study was conducted at MDR-TB treatment centers in Gandaki Province, Nepal. MDR-TB patients (cases) and drug-sensitive tuberculosis (DS-TB) patients (controls) were enrolled. Cases were defined as adults (≥18 years) with confirmed MDR-TB; controls were adults with sputum-positive DS-TB. Data on sociodemographics, cardiometabolic risk factors (alcohol, tobacco, abnormal body mass index, hypertension, diabetes), TB literacy, and treatment history were collected using a structured, pretested questionnaire by trained medical officers. Data were analyzed using Stata v13.0. Binary logistic regression was used to assess associations between risk factors and MDR-TB. Ethical approval was obtained from the Nepal Health Research Council and written informed consent was obtained from all participants.

Results

A total of 183 participants (61 cases, 122 controls) were included. Mean age of participants was 42.5 years (SD = 18.5); 73.8% were male. Most participants were from urban areas (74.9%), and 66.7% were unemployed. Cardiometabolic risk factors were present in 79.2% of participants. Alcohol and tobacco use were reported by 59.6% and 45.9%, respectively; 9.8% had diabetes and 7.1% had hypertension. Known TB contact and prior TB history were reported by 26.8% and 31.1% respectively. In multivariate analysis, unemployment (AOR: 5.24, 95% CI: 1.33–20.64), and known TB contact (AOR: 8.89, 95% CI: 2.46–32.15) were significantly associated with MDR-TB. Cardiometabolic risk factors were not significantly associated.

Conclusion

Known TB contact and unemployment were significantly associated with MDR-TB, while the cumulative effect of cardiometabolic risk factors showed no significant impact, indicating that interventions should prioritize established TB-related risk factors.

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