Neste estudo, descreveram-se as características dos 14.419 pacientes com insuficiência renal crônica tratados por hemodiálise no Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil, e analisou-se o tempo até a primeira realização do transplante no período de 1998 a 2002. Técnicas de análise de sobrevida como a análise não paramétrica de Kaplan-Meier e a modelagem semiparamétrica com o modelo de riscos proporcionais de Cox foram utilizadas. Além do modelo de sobrevida para transplante, o tempo até o óbito foi estimado para a comparação das estimativas dos dois modelos. Os resultados mostraram que, no período estudado, apenas 6,3% dos pacientes foram transplantados, 32,4% foram indicados e 6,3% inscritos na lista de espera. Observa-se que a probabilidade de transplante dos pacientes indicados, inscritos para o transplante e os que estão em uma faixa etária reduzida é maior. A diabetes mellitus possui um efeito redutor de 35% no risco de realização de transplante. Todas as estimativas apresentaram direções contrárias às obtidas pelo modelo de sobrevida para óbito.
Objective Evaluating the association between TB and AIDS and estimating the determinant effects and factors for TB incidence rates in Brazilian metropolitan regions from 2001 to 2003. Methods A Poisson longitudinal multilevel model was fitted to the annual TB case number by municipality and year, including the population as an offset variable, and AIDS incidence by metropolitan region, percentage low-income households, demographic density and TB cure rate by municipality and Brazilian geographic area as independent variables. Results All variables were found to be significantly associated with tuberculosis (except for cure rate %): low income, demographic density, AIDS and Brazilian area. Interaction between AIDS and low income was significant and modified the effect of AIDS on TB incidence. Empty model and full model variance reduction percentages from first to third levels were 40.2 %, 42.2 % and 77.3 %, respectively. Conclusions AIDS has become an impressive morbidity factor due to tuberculosis; this has not been found in previous studies in Brazil. The interaction between income and AIDS and the metropolitan regions' important contribution towards tuberculosis distribution were heterogeneously manifest amongst large Brazilian areas.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations –citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.