Long-term mortality of patients with tuberculosis in Korea
S C Park, Minjin Kang, Cong Han, S. M. Lee, C J Kim, Jeonghun Lee, Young Ae Kang
The International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease · 2020-05
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Long-term mortality following tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis in Korea remains unclear. METHODS: The present study used data from the National Health Insurance Service database, an extensive health-related database including most Korean residents. TB patients were identified using International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision coding (A15-19, U88.0-88.1) and the type of anti-TB drug(s) between 2003 and 2016. Long-term mortality and causes of death in TB patients were analysed. RESULTS: A total of 357 211 individuals had TB over the period from 2003 to 2016 and 103 682 died. The mean age of the cohort was 54.7 ± 20.7 years, and 59.8% were male. The survival probability of TB patients at 1, 5, and 10 years after diagnosis was 87.8%, 75.3%, and 63.3%, respectively. High mortality and TB-related death rates were especially prominent in the early stages after TB diagnosis. The overall standardized mortality ratio of TB patients to the general Korean population was 3.23 (95% confidence interval 3.21–3.25). CONCLUSION: Mortality in TB patients was especially high in the early stages of disease after TB diagnosis, and mostly due to TB. This figure was approximately three-times higher than the mortality rate in the general population.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Standardized mortality ratio
- Mortality rate
- Confidence interval
- Cohort
- Demography
- Population
- Cause of death
- Disease
- Pediatrics
- Cohort study
- Internal medicine