M N Gourevitch1, D Hartel, P A Selwyn, E E Schoenbaum, R S Klein. 1. Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10467, USA. mgourevi@montefiore.org
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To define the effectiveness of chemoprophylaxis, outside of a clinical trial setting, in preventing tuberculosis among tuberculin-reactive and anergic HIV-infected drug users at high risk of developing active tuberculosis. DESIGN: An observational cohort study. SETTING: Methadone maintenance treatment program with on-site primary care. PARTICIPANTS: Current or former drug users enrolled in methadone treatment. INTERVENTIONS: Annual skin testing for tuberculosis infection and anergy was performed, and eligible patients were offered daily isoniazid for 12 months and followed prospectively. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The development of active tuberculosis. RESULTS: A total of 155 persons commenced chemoprophylaxis. Among tuberculin reactors, tuberculosis rates were 0.51 and 2.07/100 person-years in those completing 12 months versus those not taking prophylaxis [rate ratio 0.25, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.06-1.01]. Among anergic individuals, comparable rates were 0 and 1.44/100 person-years. Lower tuberculosis rates among completers were not attributable to differences in immune status between the treated and untreated groups. CONCLUSION: The completion of isoniazid chemoprophylaxis was associated with a marked reduction in tuberculosis risk among tuberculin reactors and anergic persons in this high-risk population. These data support aggressive efforts to provide a complete course of preventative therapy to HIV-infected tuberculin reactors, and lend weight to the findings of others that isoniazid can reduce the rate of tuberculosis in high-risk anergic HIV-infected persons.
OBJECTIVE: To define the effectiveness of chemoprophylaxis, outside of a clinical trial setting, in preventing tuberculosis among tuberculin-reactive and anergic HIV-infected drug users at high risk of developing active tuberculosis. DESIGN: An observational cohort study. SETTING:Methadone maintenance treatment program with on-site primary care. PARTICIPANTS: Current or former drug users enrolled in methadone treatment. INTERVENTIONS: Annual skin testing for tuberculosis infection and anergy was performed, and eligible patients were offered daily isoniazid for 12 months and followed prospectively. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The development of active tuberculosis. RESULTS: A total of 155 persons commenced chemoprophylaxis. Among tuberculin reactors, tuberculosis rates were 0.51 and 2.07/100 person-years in those completing 12 months versus those not taking prophylaxis [rate ratio 0.25, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.06-1.01]. Among anergic individuals, comparable rates were 0 and 1.44/100 person-years. Lower tuberculosis rates among completers were not attributable to differences in immune status between the treated and untreated groups. CONCLUSION: The completion of isoniazid chemoprophylaxis was associated with a marked reduction in tuberculosis risk among tuberculin reactors and anergic persons in this high-risk population. These data support aggressive efforts to provide a complete course of preventative therapy to HIV-infected tuberculin reactors, and lend weight to the findings of others that isoniazid can reduce the rate of tuberculosis in high-risk anergic HIV-infectedpersons.
Authors: P Sadaphal; J Astemborski; N M Graham; L Sheely; M Bonds; A Madison; D Vlahov; D L Thomas; T R Sterling Journal: Clin Infect Dis Date: 2001-10-12 Impact factor: 9.079
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Authors: Asuncion Diaz; Mercedes Diez; Maria Jose Bleda; Mikel Aldamiz; Miguel Camafort; Xabier Camino; Concepcion Cepeda; Asuncion Costa; Oscar Ferrero; Paloma Geijo; Jose Antonio Iribarren; Santiago Moreno; Maria Elena Moreno; Pablo Labarga; Javier Pinilla; Joseba Portu; Federico Pulido; Carmen Rosa; Juan Miguel Santamaría; Mauricio Telenti; Luis Trapiella; Monica Trastoy; Pompeyo Viciana Journal: BMC Infect Dis Date: 2010-09-14 Impact factor: 3.090