| Literature DB >> 24319084 |
Joseph N Jarvis1, Tihana Bicanic, Angela Loyse, Daniel Namarika, Arthur Jackson, Jesse C Nussbaum, Nicky Longley, Conrad Muzoora, Jacob Phulusa, Kabanda Taseera, Creto Kanyembe, Douglas Wilson, Mina C Hosseinipour, Annemarie E Brouwer, Direk Limmathurotsakul, Nicholas White, Charles van der Horst, Robin Wood, Graeme Meintjes, John Bradley, Shabbar Jaffar, Thomas Harrison.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a leading cause of death in individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Identifying factors associated with mortality informs strategies to improve outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Cryptococcus neoformans; HIV; antiretroviral therapy; cryptococcal meningitis; mortality (determinants)
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24319084 PMCID: PMC3922213 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cit794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Component Studies Contributing to the Combined Cohort
| Author and Type of Studya | Site and Year | No. of Subjects | Induction Treatmentb | ART Available | EFA, log10 CFU/mL/d, Mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brouwer et al [ | Thailand 2002 | 64 | AmB 0.7 mg/kg/d (n = 16) | No | −0.31 (0.18) |
| AmB 0.7 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d (n = 16) | −0.54 (0.19) | ||||
| AmB 0.7 mg/kg/d + Fluc 400 mg/d (n = 16) | −0.39 (0.15) | ||||
| AmB 0.7 mg/kg + 5-FC 100 mg/kg + Fluc 400 mg/d (n = 16) (All for 14 d) | −0.38 (0.13) | ||||
| Bicanic et al [ | South Africa 2005 | 54 | AmB 1 mg/kg/d for 7 d then Fluc 400 mg/d (n = 49) | Yes | −0.48 (0.28) |
| Fluc 400 mg/d for 14 d (n = 5) | −0.02 (0.05) | ||||
| Bicanic et al [ | South Africa 2005–2006 | 64 | AmB 0.7 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d (n = 30) | Yes | −0.45 (0.16) |
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d (n = 34) (Both for 14 d) | −0.56 (0.24) | ||||
| Longley et al [ | Uganda 2005–2007 | 60 | Fluc 800 mg/d (n = 30) | Yes | −0.07 (0.17) |
| Fluc 1200 mg/d (n = 30) (Both for 14 d) | −0.18 (0.11) | ||||
| Nussbaum et al [ | Malawi 2008 | 41 | Fluc 1200 mg/d (n = 20) | Yes | −0.11 (0.10) |
| Fluc 1200 mg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d (n = 21) (Both for 14 d) | −0.28 (0.17) | ||||
| Loyse et al [ | South Africa 2006–2008 | 80 | AmB 1 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d (n = 21) | Yes | −0.41 (0.22) |
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d + Fluc 800 mg/d (n = 22) | −0.38 (0.18) | ||||
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d + Fluc 1200 mg/d (n = 24) | −0.41 (0.35) | ||||
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d + Vori 600 mg/d (n = 13) | −0.44 (0.20) | ||||
| Muzoora et al [ | Uganda 2008–2009 | 30 | AmB 1 mg/kg/d for 5 d + Fluc 1200 mg/d for 14 d (n = 30) | Yes | −0.3 (0.11) |
| Jackson et al [ | Malawi 2009–2010 | 40 | AmB 1 mg/kg/d for 7 d + Fluc 1200 mg/d for 14 d (n = 20) | Yes | −0.39 (0.20) |
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d for 7 d + Fluc 1200 mg/d and 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d for 14 d (n = 20) | −0.49 (0.15) | ||||
| Jarvis et al [ | South Africa 2007–2010 | 90 | AmB 1 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d (n = 31) | Yes | −0.49 (0.15) |
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d + IFN-γ 100 µg days 1 & 3 (n = 29) | −0.64 (0.27) | ||||
| AmB 1 mg/kg/d + 5-FC 100 mg/kg/d + IFN-γ 100 µg days 1, 3, 5, 8, 10, & 12 (n = 30) (AmB + 5-FC for 14 d in all arms) | −0.64 (0.22) |
Abbreviations: 5-FC, 5-fluorocytosine; AmB, amphotericin B; ART, antiretroviral therapy; CFU, colony-forming units; EFA, early fungicidal activity; Fluc, fluconazole; IFN, interferon; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SD, standard deviation; Vori, voriconazole.
a The 9 studies were conducted in 5 sites: Sappasitprasong Hospital, Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand; GF Jooste Hospital, Cape Town, and Edendale Hospital, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa; Kamuzu Central Hospital/University of North Carolina Project, Lilongwe, Malawi; and Mbarara University Hospital, Uganda. Exclusion criteria at all clinical trials were an alanine aminotransferase level >5 times the upper limit of normal (>200 IU/mL), neutrophil count <500 × 106 cells/L, platelet count <50 000 × 106 cells/L, pregnancy, lactation, previous serious reaction to study drugs, or concomitant medication contraindicated with study drugs (cisapride and the class of antihistamines including terfenadine and astemizole). Eight hundred ninety-six patients were screened for inclusion in the clinical trials; 523 met eligibility criteria. Reasons for exclusion were ART use in 162, inability to obtain consent in 65 (usually due to reduced Glasgow Coma Score), prior cryptococcal meningitis in 36, patient refusal in 18, death prior to consent in 12, and other reasons including prior antifungal use and study exclusion criteria in 80.
b AmB was administered by intravenous infusion in all studies, and fluconazole by the oral or nasogastric route. Following 2 weeks of induction therapy, patients received 8 weeks of oral fluconazole consolidation therapy (400–800 mg/d), then maintenance therapy (fluconazole 200 mg/d).
Baseline Characteristics of the Cohort
| Characteristic | Variable | No. | % (No.) or Median (IQR) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | Age, y | 499 | 34 (29–39) |
| Sex, male | 501 | 52% (260) | |
| History | Concurrent tuberculosis | 419 | 25% (123) |
| Duration of symptoms, d | 458 | 14 (7–21) | |
| Symptoms | Headache | 496 | 99% (489) |
| Febrile symptoms | 497 | 57% (280) | |
| Visual symptoms | 493 | 51% (250) | |
| Hearing loss | 415 | 14% (60) | |
| Seizures | 496 | 19% (94) | |
| Nausea/vomiting | 494 | 54% (266) | |
| Cough | 494 | 35% (173) | |
| Signs | Fever, >37.5°C | 479 | 23% (112) |
| Tachycardia, >100 bpm | 491 | 19% (91) | |
| Hypotension, <90/50 mm Hg | 485 | 3% (15) | |
| Tachypnea, >20 bpm | 463 | 19% (89) | |
| Altered mental status | 499 | 25% (123) | |
| Meningism | 492 | 75% (369) | |
| Papilledema | 311 | 12% (36) | |
| Decreased visual acuity, <6/6 | 361 | 39% (141) | |
| Cranial nerve lesion | 434 | 13% (57) | |
| Investigations | Raised OP >25 cm CSF | 450 | 51% (230) |
| Raised OP >30 cm CSF | 450 | 38% (173) | |
| CSF white cell count, ×106/L | 461 | 15 (1–57) | |
| CSF protein, g/dL | 392 | 0.7 (0.4–1.3) | |
| CSF glucose, mg/dL | 374 | 39.6 (25.2–50.5) | |
| CSF CRAG, titera | 247 | 1:1024 (1:512–4096) | |
| QCC, log10 CFU/mLa | 496 | 5.30 (4.5–5.9) | |
| CD4, cells/µL | 456 | 24 (10–50) | |
| Log10 VL, copies/mL | 368 | 5.15 (4.7–5.5) | |
| Outcomes | 2-week mortality | 492 | 17% (82) |
| 10-week mortality | 484 | 34% (163) | |
| Time admission to death, d | 161 | 13 (5–310) |
Abbreviations: CFU, colony-forming units; CRAG, cryptococcal antigen; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; IQR, interquartile range; OP, opening pressure; QCC, quantitative cryptococcal culture; VL, HIV load.
a See Supplementary Figure 1 for a description of the relationship between CSF CRAG and QCC.
Associations Between Baseline Variables and 2-Week Mortality
| Variable | Category | No. | 2-wk Mortality | OR (95% CI), Univariable | AOR (95% CI), Multivariablea,b | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | <50 y | 462 | 16% (73) | 1 | .009 | 1 | .02 |
| ≥50 y | 24 | 38% (9) | 3.2 (1.3–7.8) | 3.9 (1.4–11.1) | |||
| Sex | Female | 237 | 15% (36) | 1 | .5 | ||
| Male | 255 | 18% (46) | 1.2 (.7–2.0) | ||||
| Seizures | No | 397 | 14% (56) | 1 | .007 | ||
| Yes | 91 | 27% (25) | 2.2 (1.2–3.9) | ||||
| Mental status | Normal | 372 | 11% (39) | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
| Abnormal | 119 | 36% (43) | 4.8 (2.9–8.0) | 3.1 (1.7–5.9) | |||
| Weight | <50 kg | 175 | 17% (30) | 1 | .13 | ||
| ≥50 kg | 282 | 10% (30) | 0.7 (.4–1.1) | ||||
| Pulse | ≤100 bpm | 395 | 15% (58) | 1 | .033 | ||
| >100 bpm | 88 | 24% (21) | 1.9 (1.1–3.3) | ||||
| Respiratory rate | ≤20 bpm | 368 | 13% (49) | 1 | .002 | ||
| >20 bpm | 87 | 26% (23) | 2.6 (1.4–4.7) | ||||
| CD4 cell count | <25 cells/µL | 229 | 17% (39) | 1 | .05 | 1 | .07 |
| 25–49 cells/µL | 106 | 8% (8) | 0.4 (.2–.9) | 0.4 (.2–.9) | |||
| 50–99 cells/µL | 74 | 7% (5) | 0.4 (.1–.9) | 0.5 (.2–1.4) | |||
| ≥100 cells/µL | 39 | 13% (5) | 0.7 (.3–1.9) | 1.1 (.4–3.2) | |||
| Hemoglobin | ≥7.5 g/dL | 429 | 15% (65) | 1 | .02 | ||
| <7.5 g/dL | 28 | 32% (9) | 2.8 (1.2–6.7) | ||||
| White blood cell count | ≤10 × 109/L | 382 | 14% (53) | 1 | <.001 | 1 | .002 |
| >10 × 109/L | 21 | 48% (10) | 6.7 (2.6–17.7) | 8.7 (2.5–30.2) | |||
| CSF opening pressure | ≤25 cm CSF | 216 | 18% (38) | 1 | .488 | ||
| >25 cm CSF | 226 | 16% (37) | 0.8 (.5–1.4) | ||||
| CSF white cell count | ≤20 × 106/L | 272 | 20% (54) | 1 | .017 | ||
| >20 × 106/L | 183 | 11% (20) | 0.5 (.3–0.9) | ||||
| QCC | 1st tertile | 163 | 9% (15) | 1 | <.001 | 1.4 (1.0–1.8) | .02 |
| 2nd tertile | 162 | 14% (22) | 1.5 (.8–3.1) | (per log10 CFU/mL increase)c | |||
| 3rd tertile | 163 | 27% (44) | 3.6 (1.9–6.8) | ||||
| Treatment | Fluconazole | 99 | 26% (26) | 1 | .005 | 1 | .05 |
| Amphotericin | 393 | 14% (56) | 0.5 (.3–.8) | 0.5 (.3–1.0) |
Abbreviations: AOR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; CFU, colony-forming units; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; OR, odds ratio; QCC, quantitative cryptococcal culture.
ORs and 95% CIs for both univariable and multivariable associations are adjusted for clustering by study using a random-effects term for “study” in a hierarchical mixed-effects logistic regression model. There was very little evidence for significant clustering by study in either the 2-week or 10-week model (likelihood-ratio test of ρ = 0, P = .498 at both 2 and 10 weeks).
Numbers of patients included in each analysis are indicated in the table. A complete records analysis was performed rather than multiple imputation as there were relatively few missing data points in the key exposure and outcome variables, and missing variables in important exposure variables such as CD4 cell count were thought to be missing not at random, meaning imputation would not provide less biased results. It was suspected that lower values were associated with more advanced disease and that blood tests were deferred in the sickest patients until they could consent to CD4 testing, meaning patients with the lowest values may have been less likely to have a baseline test. A sensitivity analysis in which all patients lost to follow-up were assumed to be either alive or dead did not alter the findings of either the 2 or 10-week model.
a Only variables included in the multivariable model are shown. Adjusted for treatment, CD4 count, age, mental status, and fungal burden (see footnote b). Number included in final model = 445.
b Peripheral white cell count was significantly associated with 2-week mortality after adjustment, but was not included in the final model as observations were missing for 90 patients. Its inclusion in a model considering only the patients with complete data (n = 370) did not alter the magnitude or significance of the associations seen in the full model.
c QCC is shown in the univariable analysis as a categorical variable for ease of interpretation, but was included in the multivariable model as a continuous variable to give a better fit.
Associations Between Baseline Variables and 10-Week Mortality
| Variable | Category | No. | 10-wk Mortality | OR (95% CI), Univariable | AOR (95% CI), Multivariablea,b | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | <50 y | 454 | 33% (148) | 1 | .014 | 1 | .009 |
| ≥50 y | 24 | 58% (14) | 2.9 (1.2–6.8) | 4.0 (1.4–11.4) | |||
| Sex | Female | 231 | 34% (79) | 1 | .815 | ||
| Male | 250 | 34% (84) | 1.0 (.6–1.4) | ||||
| Seizures | No | 389 | 33% (127) | 1 | .912 | ||
| Yes | 91 | 37% (34) | 1.0 (.6–1.6) | ||||
| Mental status | Normal | 366 | 25% (90) | 1 | <.001 | 1 | <.001 |
| Abnormal | 117 | 62% (73) | 5.2 (3.3–8.3) | 2.8 (1.6–4.7) | |||
| Weight | <50 kg | 173 | 39% (68) | 1 | .003 | 1 | .004 |
| ≥50 kg | 277 | 25% (68) | 0.5 (.3–.8) | 0.6 (.4–1.0) | |||
| Pulse | ≤100 bpm | 389 | 31% (121) | 1 | .010 | ||
| >100 bpm | 86 | 45% (39) | 1.9 (1.2–3.1) | ||||
| Respiratory rate | ≤20 bpm | 363 | 30% (110) | 1 | .006 | ||
| >20 bpm | 84 | 45% (38) | 2.0 (1.2–3.4) | ||||
| CD4 cell count | <25 cells/µL | 226 | 35% (80) | 1 | .03c | 1 | .781 |
| 25–49 cells/µL | 102 | 30% (30) | 0.7 (.4–1.2) | 0.8 (.5–1.4) | |||
| 50–99 cells/µL | 73 | 23% (17) | 0.6 (.3–1.0) | 0.8 (.4–1.5) | |||
| ≥100 cells/µL | 39 | 23% (9) | 0.5 (.2–1.2) | 0.7 (.3–1.9) | |||
| Hemoglobin | ≥7.5 g/dL | 423 | 31% (133) | 1 | .008 | 1 | .02 |
| <7.5 g/dL | 27 | 56% (15) | 3.0 (1.3–6.4) | 3.0 (1.2–7.4) | |||
| White blood cell count | ≤10 × 109/L | 377 | 30% (114) | 1 | .001 | 1 | .02 |
| >10 × 109/L | 21 | 63% (13) | 4.7 (1.8–12.2) | 4.0 (1.3–12.6) | |||
| CSF opening pressure | ≤25 cm CSF | 213 | 39% (83) | 1 | .009 | 1 | .002 |
| >25 cm CSF | 223 | 30% (66) | 0.6 (.4–.9) | 0.4 (.3–.7) | |||
| CSF white cell count | ≤20 × 106/L | 268 | 35% (93) | 1 | .461 | ||
| >20 × 106/L | 179 | 31% (55) | 0.9 (.6–1.3) | ||||
| QCC | 1st tertile | 161 | 24% (38) | 1 | <.001 | 1.3 (1.1–1.7) | .007 |
| 2nd tertile | 161 | 32% (52) | 1.5 (.9–2.4) | (per log10 CFU/mL increase)d | |||
| 3rd tertile | 158 | 46% (72) | 2.8 (1.7–4.5) | ||||
| Treatment | Fluconazole | 99 | 53% (52) | 1 | <.001 | 1 | .02 |
| Amphotericin | 385 | 29% (111) | 0.4 (.2–.6) | 0.5 (.3–.9) |
Abbreviations: AOR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; CFU, colony-forming units; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; OR, odds ratio; QCC, quantitative cryptococcal culture.
ORs and 95% CIs for both univariable and multivariable associations are adjusted for clustering by study using a random-effects term for “study” in a hierarchical mixed-effects logistic regression model. There was very little evidence for significant clustering by study in either the 2-week or 10-week model (likelihood-ratio test of ρ = 0, P = .498 at both 2 and 10 weeks).
Numbers of patients included in each analysis are indicated in the table. A complete records analysis was performed rather than multiple imputation as there were relatively few missing data points in the key exposure and outcome variables, and missing variables in important exposure variables such as CD4 cell count were thought to be missing not at random, meaning imputation would not provide less biased results. It was suspected that lower values were associated with more advanced disease, and that blood tests were deferred in the sickest patients until they could consent to CD4 testing, meaning patients with the lowest values may have been less likely to have a baseline test. A sensitivity analysis in which all patients lost to follow-up were assumed to be either alive or dead did not alter the findings of either the 2 or 10-week model.
a Only variables included in the multivariable model are shown. Adjusted for treatment, CD4 count, age, mental status, weight and fungal burden (see footnote b). Number included in final model = 413.
b Peripheral white cell count, anemia, and raised CSF opening pressure were significantly associated with 10-week mortality after adjustment, but not included in the final model to prevent missing observations, markedly limiting the size of the model. Inclusion in a model considering only the patients with complete data (n = 391 for hemoglobin, n = 343 for peripheral white count, and n = 374 for raised CSF opening pressure) did not alter the magnitude or significance of the associations seen in the full model.
c Test for trend.
d QCC is shown in the univariable analysis as a categorical variable for ease of interpretation, but was included in the multivariable model as a continuous variable to give a better fit.
Figure 1.Associations between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) interferon gamma (IFN-γ) concentrations and baseline fungal burden, rate of clearance of infection (EFA), and 2-week mortality in the 243 Thai and South African patients with CSF cytokine measurements. CSF IFN-γ concentration was strongly associated with rate of clearance of infection, with a 0.10 log10 CFU/mL/day (95% confidence interval, .06–.15) increase in EFA for every log10 picogram increment in IFN-γ concentration. Abbreviations: CFU, colony-forming units; EFA, early fungicidal activity; IFN, interferon; QCC, quantitative cryptococcal culture.
Correlations Between Baseline Cerebrospinal Fluid Fungal Burden, Derived From Quantitative Cryptococcal Culturesa
| Correlation With QCCb | No. | Correlation Coefficient ( | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD4 cell count (cells/µL) | 452 | −0.24 | −.33 to −.15 | <.001 |
| CSF opening pressure (cm CSF) | 446 | 0.05 | −.05 to .14 | .330 |
| CSF white cell count (×106/L) | 458 | −0.30 | −.39 to −.21 | <.001 |
| CSF protein (g/dL) | 389 | −0.29 | −.38 to −.19 | <.001 |
| CSF TNF-α (log10 pg/mL) | 242 | −0.20 | −.32 to −.07 | .002 |
| CSF IL-6 (log10 pg/mL) | 241 | −0.15 | −.27 to −.02 | .024 |
| CSF IFN-γ (log10 pg/mL) | 243 | −0.40 | −.50 to −.29 | <.001 |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; IFN, interferon; IL-6, interleukin 6; QCC, quantitative cryptococcal culture; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
a Log10 colony-forming units per milliliter CSF.
bCorrelations were assessed using Spearman log-rank test for CD4 count, CSF opening pressure, CSF white cell count, and CSF protein; and Pearson correlation coefficient for TNF-α, IL-6, and IFN-γ, which were approximately normally distributed when log transformed.
Figure 2.Kaplan-Meier survival curves. A, Survival in the 263 South African amphotericin B (AmB)–treated patients followed up for 1 year. B, Survival from enrollment in the subset of patients who started antiretroviral therapy (ART), stratified by ART timing (before and after the median of 31 days; P = .15). Only patients surviving to ART initiation are shown. C, Cause of death data (as determined by study clinicians) in the cohort of 263 South African AmB-treated patients followed up for 1 year, split by time from diagnosis. “Other” included tuberculosis (n = 11), bacterial sepsis (n = 8), bacterial pneumonia (n = 7), nonspecified infections (n = 9), Kaposi sarcoma (n = 2), lymphoma (n = 1), non–cryptococcal meningitis immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (n = 3), ART toxicity (n = 2), diarrhea/wasting syndrome (n = 4), and decompensation of chronic liver disease (n = 1). Abbreviations: ART, antiretroviral therapy; CM, cryptococcal meningitis; IRIS, immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome.