| Literature DB >> 27751168 |
Simon Mutembo1, Jane N Mutanga2, Kebby Musokotwane2, Lutangu Alisheke2, Christopher C Whalen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Co-infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among HIV infected individuals especially in developing countries. Early initiation of cART in these patients when CD4+ T cell count is less than 200cells/mm3 has reduced disease progression and mortality. However for patients with higher CD4+ T cell counts greater than 350cells/mm3 evidence is conflicting. In this study we seek to evaluate the effectiveness of cART in reducing mortality among TB-HIV co-infected patients with CD4 + T cells above 350cells/mm3 at the time of TB diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy; CD4+ T-cell count > 350cells/mm3; HIV; Survival; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27751168 PMCID: PMC5067898 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1916-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Summary of study enrolment, analysis and outcomes of the 2 cohorts
Baseline characteristics among TB/HIV co-infected patients with CD4+ T cell count more than 350cells/mm3, for those initiated on cART and those who were not on cART
| Clinical characteristic | No cART ( | cART ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
| Sex a | Male | 41 (51) | 106 (41) |
| Female | 36 (49) | 147 (57) | |
| TB Microscopy | Sputum smear positive | 23 (29) | 43 (17) |
| Sputum smear negative | 30 (38) | 136 (53) | |
| Extra pulmonary | 21 (26) | 43 (17) | |
| Not stated | 6 (8) | 35 (14) | |
| Functional state | Healthy, able to work | 30 (38) | 103 (40) |
| Ill, able to work | 9(22) | 43 (17) | |
| Unable to work | 6 (8) | 13 (5) | |
| Unknown | 35 (44) | 98 (38) | |
|
| |||
| Age, years | 35 (28, 39) | 36 (30, 44) | |
| CD4+ T cell count, cells/mm3 | 465 (391, 580) | 468 (397, 611) | |
| Hemoglobin, mg/dl | 11 (10, 14) | 12 (10, 13) | |
| Weight, kg | 54 (45, 65) | 54 (46, 54) | |
a Sex was not recorded in 7 participants
Fig. 2Kaplan Meier survival analysis for entire cohort and propensity score analysis cohort. a Entire cohort (cART: n = 257; no cART: n = 80). b Propensity score generated cohort (n = 132)
Adjusted Hazard ratios for overall cohort and propensity score matched cohort using Cox proportional hazards model
| Overall cohort ( | Propensity score matched cohort ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| cART | Yes | 0 · 22 (0 · 09, 0 · 52) | 0 · 37 (0 · 15, 0 · 93) |
| No | 1 · 0 | 1 · 0 | |
| Cotrimoxazole | Yes | 0 · 03 (0 · 01, 0 · 15) | 0 · 09 (0 · 02, 0 · 43) |
| No | 1 · 0 | 1 · 0 | |
| TB cure | Yes | 0 · 34 (0 · 16, 0 · 74) | 0 · 28 (0 · 12, 0 · 68) |
| No | 1 · 0 | 1 · 0 | |
Adjusted hazard ratios under two scenarios of follow-up using Cox proportional hazards model
| Full follow-up scenario | Early mortality scenario | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| cART | Yes | 0 · 41 (0 · 18, 0 · 92) | 0 · 28 (0 · 16, 0 · 49) |
| No | 1 · 0 | 1 · 0 | |
| Cotrimoxazole | Yes | 0 · 06 (0 · 01, 0 · 26) | 0 · 02 (0 · 01, 0 · 07) |
| No | 1 · 0 | 1 · 0 | |
| TB cure | Yes | 0 · 38 (0 · 18, 0 · 84) | 0 · 66 (0 · 38, 01 · 13) |
| No | 1 · 0 | 1 · 0 | |
Assumptions: Full follow up scenario—All patients who were lost to follow-up survived until the end of the observation period (August 2012). Early Mortality scenario—individuals lost to follow-up died within 90 days of the date last seen