Abstract
Background Management of patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis is highly complicated because of the longer treatment time, lesser effectiveness of second-line antituberculosis drugs, more side-effects, and a significant financial burden on tuberculosis control programs. This study aimed to identify predictors of drug-resistant tuberculosis.
Materials and methods It was a case-control record study conducted in an antituberculosis center in a government hospital in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. Cases were pulmonary tuberculosis patients with antituberculosis drug resistance (n = 80), and controls were pulmonary tuberculosis patients without drug resistance (n = 101). Data were collected from patients' records during the period from January 2008 to February 2013.
Results Male sex [odds ratio (OR)= 5.764; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.024-16.421], smoking (OR = 4.605; 95% CI 1.864-11.378), and positive Acid Fast Bacilli smear on admission (OR = 40.149; 95% CI 9.010-178.914) were the risk factors for developing drug resistance (P<0.05 for each) in the sample.
Conclusion and recommendations Positive AFB smear on admission, male sex, and smoking are risk factors for developing drug-resistant TB. These predictors should be used to formulate a health policy to monitor tuberculosis patients so as to prevent drug resistance.