Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) incidence peaks in women during their reproductive years and is a leading cause of maternal mortality. Pregnant women with TB have a high risk of failure to initiate TB treatment and poor TB treatment and pregnancy outcomes. We determined the time to treatment initiation in pregnant women diagnosed with TB in a routine programmatic setting. METHODS: Using routine linked electronic data, we identified women 15-45 years of age with laboratory-confirmed and/or clinically diagnosed TB, October 2018-December 2020, in two high-burden sub-districts in Cape Town, South Africa. We compared demographic and clinical characteristics in women with TB by pregnancy status, used time-to-event analysis to determine the time from TB diagnosis to initiation of antituberculosis treatment and Cox regression to assess determinants of treatment initiation. RESULTS: Of 5,459 women diagnosed with TB, 292 (5.3%) were pregnant. The median age for pregnant women was 28.6 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 23.7-33.7) and non-pregnant women 31 years (IQR:25.2-36.5). HIV prevalence was similar in pregnant (177/292; 60.6%) vs non-pregnant (3200/5167; 61.9%) women. Median time to treatment initiation was two days for pregnant and non-pregnant women. Most women initiated treatment within the first month after their TB diagnosis, after which the rate plateaued in both groups. Time to treatment initiation over 6 months was statistically different (Kaplan Meier Log-rank test, p = 0.0064) with pregnant women lagging behind non-pregnant women. CONCLUSIONS: More than 5% of women diagnosed with TB were pregnant at the time of TB diagnosis. While pregnant women with TB were appropriately initiated on treatment, almost 15% were never started on treatment and there were delays in treatment initiation. While strategic interventions to prioritise early treatment initiation are needed, there should be a specific focus on pregnant women who have not initiated treatment within one month after TB diagnosis.