| Literature DB >> 24564453 |
Elisabetta Venturini, Anna Turkova, Elena Chiappini, Luisa Galli, Maurizio de Martino, Claire Thorne.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: HIV is the top and tuberculosis is the second leading cause of death from infectious disease worldwide, with an estimated 8.7 million incident cases of tuberculosis and 2.5 million new HIV infections annually. The World Health Organization estimates that HIV prevalence among children with tuberculosis, in countries with moderate to high prevalence, ranges from 10 to 60%. The mechanisms promoting susceptibility of people with HIV to tuberculosis disease are incompletely understood, being likely caused by multifactorial processes. Paediatric tuberculosis and HIV have overlapping clinical manifestations, which could lead to missed or late diagnosis. Although every effort should be made to obtain a microbiologically-confirmed diagnosis in children with tuberculosis, in reality this may only be achieved in a minority, reflecting their paucibacillary nature and the difficulties in obtain samples. Rapid polymerase chain reaction tests, such as Xpert MTB/RIF assay, are increasingly used in children. The use of less or non invasive methods of sample collection, such as naso-pharyngeal aspirates and stool samples for a polymerase chain reaction-based diagnostic test tests and mycobacterial cultures is promising technique in HIV negative and HIV positive children. Anti-tuberculosis treatment should be started immediately at diagnosis with a four drug regimen, irrespective of the disease severity. Moreover, tuberculosis disease in an HIV infected child is considered to be a clinical indication for initiation of antiretroviral treatment. The World Health Organization recommends starting antiretroviral treatment in children as soon as anti-tuberculosis treatment is tolerated and within 2- 8 weeks after initiating it. The treatment of choice depends on the child's age and availability of age-appropriate formulations, and potential drug interactions and resistance. Treatment of multidrug resistant tuberculosis in HIV-infected children follows same principles as for HIV uninfected children. There are conflicting results on effectiveness of isoniazid preventive therapy in reducing incidence of tuberculosis disease in children with HIV.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24564453 PMCID: PMC4016474 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-S1-S5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Prevalence of HIV among children with TB [14-21]
| Study setting | Year | Study population | HIV prevalence | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zambia | 1994 | Children with clinical TB diagnosis (n=120) | 56% | Luo et al |
| Johannesburg, South Africa | 2008 | Cultured confirmed cases of TB in children aged <14 years (n=1317) | 52% in children with drug-susceptible TB; 53% in the 13 with MDR-TB | Fairlie et al |
| Mumbai, India | 2002 | Children with disseminated TB (n=68) | 16% | Karande et al |
| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 1999-2008 | Children attending a reference hospital (n=473) | 17% (but only 56% tested for HIV) | Matos et al |
| Cape Town, South Africa | 1999-2004 | Children born in 1999 and diagnosed with TB in public health facilities up to 2004 (n=1607) | 37% (but only 16% had HIV test results available) | Moyo et al |
| Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic | 1996 | Children aged 18-59 months with clinical TB diagnosis (n=189) | 5.8% | Espinal et al |
| Durban, South Africa | 1998-1999 | Hospitalised children with culture-confirmed TB aged <13 years (n=118) | 48% | Jeena et al |
| Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire | 1994-1995 | Children aged 0-9 years with newly diagnosed TB (out- and in-patients) (n=161) | 19% | Mukadi et al |