2.TB Control in Singapore: the high price of diagnostic delay.
Cynthia B E CHEE ; Suay Hong GAN ; Angeline P G CHUA ; Yee Tang WANG
Singapore medical journal 2012;53(8):505-507
Singapore has experienced a rise in the tuberculosis (TB) incidence rate among her local population since 2008, which we believe, is contributed in no small part to a recent increase in community transmission due to delayed diagnosis of infectious pulmonary TB cases. Data from the TB notification registry showed an increase from 2004 to 2008 in the number and proportion of sputum acid-fast bacilli smear-positive pulmonary TB cases with prolonged cough. Two surveys at the TB Control Unit showed that healthcare system delays exceeded patient delay in seeking medical consultation. There is thus an urgent need to heighten TB awareness among the public and the medical community in order to reduce the time taken to diagnose infectious TB cases in Singapore.
Delayed Diagnosis
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Humans
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Incidence
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Infection Control
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methods
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Lung
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diagnostic imaging
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Radiography
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Referral and Consultation
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Singapore
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epidemiology
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
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diagnosis
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epidemiology
3.Managing a case of extensively drug-resistant (XDR) pulmonary tuberculosis in Singapore.
Chee Kiang PHUA ; Cynthia B E CHEE ; Angeline P G CHUA ; Suay Hong GAN ; Aneez D B AHMED ; Yee Tang WANG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2011;40(3):132-135
INTRODUCTIONExtensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) is an emerging global health risk. We present the first case report of XDR-TB in Singapore.
CLINICAL PICTUREA 41-year-old Indonesian lady with previously treated pulmonary tuberculosis presented with chronic cough. Her sputum was strongly acid-fast bacilli positive and grew Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex resistant to first and second-line TB medications.
TREATMENTShe received 5 months of intensive multidrug treatment without sputum smear conversion. She then underwent resection of the diseased lung. The total cost incurred amounted to over S$100,000.
OUTCOMEShe achieved sputum smear/culture conversion post-surgery, but will require further medical therapy for at least 18 months.
CONCLUSIONXDRTB is poorly responsive to therapy and extremely expensive to manage. Its prevention by strict compliance to therapy is paramount.
Adult ; Antitubercular Agents ; therapeutic use ; Delirium ; drug therapy ; etiology ; Directly Observed Therapy ; Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ; drug effects ; Drug Therapy, Combination ; Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis ; drug therapy ; Female ; Humans ; Microbial Sensitivity Tests ; Mycobacterium tuberculosis ; drug effects ; isolation & purification ; Singapore ; Sputum ; microbiology ; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary ; drug therapy