Recommendations for Use of Video Directly Observed Therapy During Tuberculosis Treatment - United States, 2023
Mangan JM, Woodruff RS, Winston CA, Nabity SA, Haddad MB, Dixon MG, Parvez FM, Sera-Josef C, et al. (10 authors)
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report · 2023-03
Abstract
U.S. clinical practice guidelines recommend directly observed therapy (DOT) as the standard of care for tuberculosis (TB) treatment (1). DOT, during which a health care worker observes a patient ingesting the TB medications, has typically been conducted in person. Video DOT (vDOT) uses video-enabled devices to facilitate remote interactions between patients and health care workers to promote medication adherence and clinical monitoring. Published systematic reviews, a published meta-analysis, and a literature search through 2022 demonstrate that vDOT is associated with a higher proportion of medication doses being observed and similar proportions of cases with treatment completion and microbiologic resolution when compared with in-person DOT (2-5). Based on this evidence, CDC has updated the recommendation for DOT during TB treatment to include vDOT as an equivalent alternative to in-person DOT. vDOT can assist health department TB programs meet the U.S. standard of care for patients undergoing TB treatment, while using resources efficiently.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis
- Antitubercular Agents
- Directly Observed Therapy
- Telemedicine
- United States
- Medication Adherence