| Literature DB >> 19925961 |
Stephen D Lawn1, Katharina Kranzer, Robin Wood.
Abstract
Great progress has been made over the past few years in HIV testing in patients who have tuberculosis (TB) and in the scale-up of antiretroviral therapy. More than 3 million people in resource-limited settings were estimated to have started antiretroviral therapy by the end of 2007 and 2 million of these were in sub-Saharan Africa. However, little is known about what impact this massive public health intervention will have on the HIV-associated TB epidemic or how antiretroviral therapy might be used to best effect TB control. This article provides an in-depth review of these issues.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19925961 PMCID: PMC2887494 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccm.2009.08.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Chest Med ISSN: 0272-5231 Impact factor: 2.878
Fig. 1Estimated TB incidence rates by country for 2006. (Reproduced from World Health Organization. Global Tuberculosis Control. Surveillance, planning, and financing. WHO/HTM/TB/2008.393. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2008; with permission.)
Studies (n = 12) reporting the impact of antiretroviral therapy on tuberculosis incidence rates in observational cohorts
| Study | Setting | N | Study Period | Study Design | Impact of ART on TB Incidence Rates | Adjusted Hazards Ratio (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brodt et al, 1997 | Germany | 1003 | 1992–1996 | Cohort of homosexual men 1992–1996 | No change in overall cohort incidence rates (range, 2.1–2.7 cases/100 PY) | – |
| Kirk et al, 2000 | Europe | 6,972 | 1994–1999 | EuroSIDA multicenter cohort 1994–1999 | Overall rate in cohort decreased from 1.8 cases/100 PY to 0.3 cases/100 PY | – |
| Ledergerber et al, 1999 | Switzerland | 2410 | 1995–1997 | Swiss HIV Cohort Study | Rate 0.78 cases/100 PY pre-ART and 0.22 cases/100 PY during first 15 months ART | – |
| Jones et al, 2000 | United States | – | 1992–1998 | Multicenter cohort Adult/Adolescent Spectrum of HIV Disease project | Steep decreases in TB incidence rates | 0.2 (0.1–0.5) |
| Girardi et al, 2000 | Italy | 1360 | 1995–1996 | Multicenter cohort | Not stated | 0.08 (0.01–0.88) |
| Santoro-Lopes et al, 2002 | Brazil | 255 | 1991–1998 | Prospective cohort | Not stated | 0.2 (0.04–1.13) |
| Badri et al, 2002 | South Africa | 1034 | 1992–2001 | Rates compared in separate prospective observational cohorts receiving or not receiving ART | Markedly lower TB rates across a broad spectrum of baseline CD4 counts and WHO stage | 0.19 (0.09–0.38) |
| Golub et al, 2007 | Brazil | 11,026 | 2003–2005 | Multicenter retrospective cohort | Rates among those receiving and not receiving ART were 1.9 and 4.0 cases/100 PY, respectively | 0.46 (0.33–0.63) |
| Miranda et al, 2007 | Brazil | 463 | 1995–2001 | Multicenter retrospective study | Rates among those receiving and not receiving ART were 1.2 and 13.4 cases/100 PY, respectively | 0.2 (0.1–0.6) |
| Muga et al, 2007 | Spain | 2238 | 1980s–2004 | Multicenter seroconverter cohort | Marked reduction in rates after 1995 in all HIV transmission categories | 0.31 (0.17–0.54) |
| Moreno et al, 2008 | Spain | 4268 | 1997–2003 | Multicenter hospital-based cohort | Rates among those receiving and not receiving ART were 0.5 and 1.6 cases/100 PY, respectively | 0.26 (0.16–0.40) |
| Golub et al, 2009 | South Africa | 2778 | 2003–2007 | Retrospective data from two study sites | Rates among those receiving and not receiving ART were 4.6 and 7.1 cases/100 PY, respectively | 0.36 (0.25–0.51) |
Abbreviation: PY, person-years.
Fig. 2TB incidence (cases per 100 person-years) among patients who were HIV-infected in Cape Town, South Africa, who were or were not receiving antiretroviral therapy. Patients were stratified according to baseline CD4 cell count and WHO stage of disease. Overall, TB rates were approximately 80% lower among those receiving ART, which was observed across a broad spectrum of baseline immunodeficiency. (Data from Badri M, Wilson D, Wood R. Effect of highly active antiretroviral therapy on incidence of tuberculosis in South Africa: a cohort study. Lancet 2002;359(9323):2059–64).
Studies (n=14) reporting tuberculosis incidence rates during antiretroviral therapy
| Study | Setting | N | Median / Mean Follow-up (Months) | Median Baseline CD4 Cell Count (Cells/μL) | TB Cncidence, Cases/100 PY (Months of ART) | Estimated National TB Incidence Rate (Per 100 Population) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High-income countries | ||||||
| Girardi et al, 2005 | Germany, Switzerland, France, Netherland, UK, Canada, United States | 17,142 | 25.8 | 280 | 1.31 (0–3) 0.78 (4–6) 0.46 (7–12) 0.33 (13–24) 0.15 (25–36) | 0.005–0.016 |
| Brinkhof et al, 2007 | Europe, North America | 22,217 | 11.0 | 234 | 1.7 (0–3) 1.0 (4–6) 0.6 (7–12) | <0.015 |
| Moreno et al, 2008 | Spain | 4268 | 46.0 | 324 | 0.5 | 0.035 |
| Resource-limited settings | ||||||
| Badri et al, 2002 | South Africa | 1034 | 16.8 | 254 | 2.4 | 0.406 |
| Santoro-Lopes et al, 2002 | Brazil | 284 | 22.0 | – | 8.4 | 0.071 |
| Lawn et al. 2005 | South Africa | 346 | 40.0 | 242 | 3.35 (0–12) 1.56 (13–24) 1.36 (25–36) 0.90 (37–48) 1.01 (49–60) | 0.576 |
| Seyler et al, 2005 | Côte d'Ivoire | 129 | 26.0 | 125 | 4.8 | 0.368 |
| Lawn et al, 2006 | South Africa | 1002 | 0.9 | 96 | 23.0 (0–3)10.7 (4–6) 7.0 (7–12) 3.7 (13–24) | 0.898 |
| Bonnet et al, 2006 | Kenya Malawi Cameroon Thailand Cambodia | 3151 | 3.7 6.7 11.1 3.7 7.3 | – | 17.6 14.3 4.8 10.4 7.6 | 0.419 0.416 0.194 0.142 – |
| Golub et al, 2007 | Brazil | 11,026 | 17.0 | – | 1.90 | 0.053 |
| Miranda et al, 2007 | Brazil | 245 | – | – | 1.2 | 0.064 |
| Brinkhof et al, 2007 | Botswana, Brazil, Côte d'Ivoire, India, Kenya, Nigeria, Malawi, Morocco, Senegal, South Africa, Thailand, Uganda | 4540 | 9.6 | 107 | 10.7 (0–3) 7.5 (4–6) 5.2 (7–12) | 0.055–0.852 |
| Moore et al, 2007 | Uganda | 1044 | 17.0 | 127 | 3.9 (overall) 7.5 (0–6) 2.4 (7–12) 1.9 (13–18) | 0.385 |
| Walters et al, 2008 | South Africa | 290 (pediatric) | – | – | 6.4 | 0.898 |
Abbreviation: PY, person-years.
National TB incidence estimates at the midpoint of the study duration; data sourced from World Health Organization. Global tuberculosis control: epidemiology, strategy, financing. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2009. WHO/HTM/TB/2009.411.
Fig. 3TB incidence rates during ART. The graph shows data from studies included in (see Table 2) in which changing TB incidence rates were calculated according to increasing duration of ART. The two lowest curves present data from studies conducted in high-income countries. The remaining four studies are from South Africa (diamonds and inverted triangles), a range of resource-limited countries (circles), and Uganda (squares).
Fig. 4Decreasing TB incidence rates (cases/100 person-years, white squares) and rising median CD4 cell counts (cells/μL, black diamonds) during the first 3 years of ART. These data are from a community-based ART cohort in a township in Cape Town, South Africa. (Data from Refs.).
Fig. 5Relationship between updated CD4 cell-count measurements made every 4 months during 4.5 years of ART in a treatment cohort in a township in Cape Town, South Africa. Observed rates are shown as diamonds together with 95% confidence intervals indicated by bars. A logarithmic trend line is overlaid (R2 = 0.97). TB incidence rates are seen to fall substantially as CD4 cell counts increase during ART. (Data from Lawn SD, Myer L, Edwards D, et al. Short-term and long-term risk of tuberculosis associated with CD4 cell recovery during antiretroviral therapy in South Africa. AIDS 2009;23(13):1717–25.)
Observational cohort studies (n=8) showing the impact of antiretroviral therapy on mortality among patients who have HIV-associated tuberculosis
| Study | Country | Study Design | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dheda et al, 2004 | United Kingdom | Retrospective study of patients who had HIV-TB (n = 99) treated in pre-ART era and in ART era | Adjusted hazards of death or new AIDS-defining illness was 0.34 (95%CI, 0.18–0.63) during ART era |
| Manosuthi et al, 2006 | Thailand | Retrospective cohort study (n = 1003) comparing mortality in a historic natural- history cohort with rates in an ART cohort | The adjusted hazards of death associated with use of ART was 0.05 (95%CI, 0.02–0.12). |
| Akksilp et al, 2007 | Thailand | Prospective cohort (n = 329) comparing patients receiving and not receiving ART | Adjusted hazards of death was 0.2 (95%CI, 0.1–0.4) |
| Zachariah et al, 2007 | Malawi | Retrospective observational cohort in which a proportion of patients started ART during the continuation phase of TB treatment (n = 658) | No difference in mortality between patients who chose or did not choose to receive ART, but potential allocation bias according to degree of immunodeficiency and most deaths occurred pre-ART during intensive phase |
| Nahid et al, 2007 | United States | Retrospective observational cohort (n = 264) 1990–2001 spanning pre-ART and ART era | Use of ART protected against mortality compared with patients who did not receive ART (hazard ratio 0.36, 95% CI 0.14–0.91) |
| Haar et al, 2007 | Netherlands | Retrospective observational study of national data 1993–2001 spanning pre-ART and ART era | Compared with 1993–1995, adjusted odds of death during 1999–2001 was 0.46 (95%CI, 0.24–0.89), whereas no such change was observed among patients who had TB and were not infected with HIV |
| Varma et al, 2009 | Thailand | Prospective multicenter observational study (n = 667) comparing patients receiving and not receiving ART | Adjusted hazards of death among those who received ART was 0.16 (95%CI, 0.07–0.36) |
| Velasco et al, 2009 | Spain | Retrospective observational cohort 1987–2004 (n = 313) comparing patients receiving and not receiving ART | Compared with no ART, initiation of ART within the first 2 months of TB treatment was associated with an adjusted hazards of death of 0..37 (95%CI, 0.17–0.66) |