| Literature DB >> 29587840 |
Yong-Jia Ji1, Pei-Pei Liang1, Jia-Yin Shen1, Jian-Jun Sun1, Jun-Yang Yang1, Jun Chen1, Tang-Kai Qi1, Zhen-Yan Wang1, Wei Song1, Yang Tang1, Li Liu1, Ren-Fang Zhang1, Yin-Zhong Shen1, Hong-Zhou Lu2,3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis infection still places a great burden on HIV-infected individuals in China and other developing countries. Knowledge of the survival of HIV-infected patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) would provide important insights for the clinical management of this population, which remains to be well described in current China.Entities:
Keywords: Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome; HIV infections; Pulmonary tuberculosis; Survival analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587840 PMCID: PMC5870507 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-018-0405-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Demographics and clinical characteristics of HIV-infected patients with PTB
| Overall | Survivals | Deaths | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Years, median (IQR) | 39 (31,52) | 39 (29,48) | 49 (35,63) | < 0.001 |
| Male gender | 325 (90.53%) | 254 (90.71%) | 48 (90.57%) | 1.000 |
| On cART | 98 (27.30%) | 83 (29.64%) | 8 (15.09%) | 0.029 |
| Diagnostic delaya
| 153 (42.60%) | 106 (37.86%) | 36 (67.92%) | < 0.001 |
| Extrapulmonary Involvement | 49 (13.65%) | 35 (12.50%) | 12 (22.64%) | 0.052 |
| Clinical symptoms | ||||
| Fever (> 39 °C) | 263 (73.26%) | 207 (73.93%) | 32 (60.38%) | 0.044 |
| Cough | 181 (50.42%) | 144 (51.43%) | 28 (52.83%) | 0.851 |
| Expectoration | 82 (22.84%) | 61 (21.79%) | 17 (32.08%) | 0.105 |
| Anorexia | 81 (22.56%) | 60 (21.45%) | 13 (24.53%) | 0.617 |
| Dyspnea | 69 (19.22%) | 49 (17.50%) | 16 (30.19%) | 0.033 |
| Complications | ||||
| Bacterial pneumonia | 32 (8.91%) | 18 (6.43%) | 14 (26.42%) | < 0.001 |
| HBV/HCV co-infection | 25 (6.96%) | 19 (6.79%) | 6 (11.32%) | 0.387 |
| Syphilis | 33 (9.19%) | 30 (10.71%) | 1 (1.89%) | 0.077 |
| Diabetes | 14 (3.90%) | 11 (3.93%) | 2 (3.77%) | 1.000 |
| Hypertension | 12 (3.345%) | 9 (3.21%) | 2 (3.77%) | 1.000 |
| Laboratory examination | ||||
| Sputum smear positive | 156 (43.45%) | 126 (45.00%) | 21 (39.62%) | 0.470 |
| Sputum culture positive | 180 (50.14%) | 141 (50.36%) | 23 (43.40%) | 0.353 |
| T-spot. TB test positive | 227 (63.23%) | 181 (64.64%) | 30 (56.60%) | 0.265 |
| HIV RNA lg copies/ml median (IQR) | 5.17 (3.91,5.66) | 5.14 (3.83,5.65) | 5.32 (4.61,5.79) | 0.354 |
| CD4+ T cell/mm3 median (IQR) | 51 (23 116) | 55 (27 122) | 24.5 (10,86) | 0.001 |
| Manifestation of lung CT scan | ||||
| Extensive pulmonary lesionb
| 218 (60.72%) | 160 (57.14%) | 41 (77.36%) | 0.006 |
| Pulmonary cavity | 36 (10.03%) | 25 (8.93%) | 9 (16.98%) | 0.076 |
| Pulmonary atelectasis | 31 (8.64%) | 20 (7.14%) | 9 (16.98%) | 0.039 |
aDiagnostic delay was defined as the pulmonary TB was diagnosed in more than four weeks after the onset of symptoms
bExtensive pulmonary lesion was defined as TB lesions involved more than 3 pulmonary lobes by chest CT scan
Fig. 1Flow chart showing study subject identification
Fig. 2Cumulative survival rate among HIV-infected patients with PTB
Risk factors associated with the mortality of HIV infected patients with PTBa
| Risk factor | Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HRb (95% | HRb (95% | |||
| Age > 60 | 3.31 (1.80–6.10) | < 0.001 | 3.18 (1.66–6.10) | 0.001 |
| Male gender | 0.97 (0.39–2.43) | 0.942 | ||
| Not on cART | 2.17 (1.03–4.61) | 0.043 | 1.48 (0.67–3.25) | 0.332 |
| Diagnosis delay | 3.05 (1.71–5.44) | < 0.001 | 2.60 (1.42–4.78) | 0.002 |
| Clinical symptoms | ||||
| Fever (> 39 °C) | 0.56 (0.32–0.97) | 0.037 | 0.54 (0.30–0.96) | 0.037 |
| Cough | 1.05 (0.61–1.81) | 0.850 | ||
| Expectoration | 1.58 (0.89–2.81) | 0.122 | ||
| Anorexia | 1.14 (0.61–2.12) | 0.690 | ||
| Dyspnea | 1.88 (1.04–3.37) | 0.036 | 1.03 (0.53–1.97) | 0.941 |
| Extrapulmonary Involvement | 1.83 (0.96–3.48) | 0.066 | ||
| CD4+ T cell count < 50 cells/mm3 | 2.70 (1.48–4.90) | 0.001 | 2.38 (1.27–4.43) | 0.007 |
| Comorbidities | ||||
| Bacterial pneumonia | 4.07 (2.21–7.52) | < 0.001 | 2.64 (1.30–5.35) | 0.007 |
| HBV/HCV co-infection | 1.57 (0.67–3.68) | 0.298 | ||
| Syphilis | 0.18 (0.03–1.32) | 0.093 | ||
| Diabetes | 0.96 (0.23–3.92) | 0.949 | ||
| Hypertension | 1.13 (0.27–4.62) | 0.871 | ||
| Manifestation of lung CT scan | ||||
| Extensive pulmonary lesion | 2.39 (1.26–4.55) | 0.008 | 1.76 (0.90–3.44) | 0.100 |
| Pulmonary cavity | 2.00 (0.98–4.10) | 0.058 | ||
| Pulmonary atelectasis | 2.29 (1.12–4.70) | 0.023 | 2.20 (1.05–4.60) | 0.037 |
aStatistical analysis was performed by the Cox proportional-hazards model
bHR indicated relative mortality risk for cases with the specific risk factor referred to cases without the corresponding risk factor
Fig. 3Kaplan-Meier curves comparing the outcomes affected by risk factors (a, age > 60 years; b, diagnosis delay; c, high fever; d, CD4+ T cell count < 50 /mm3; e, bacterial pneumonia; f, pulmonary atelectasis)
Fig. 4Kaplan-Meier curves comparing the outcomes affected by the timing of cART initiation after starting anti-TB treatment
Survival differences among patients with different timing of cART initiation after staring anti-TB treatmenta
| Timing of cART initiation since starting anti-TB treatment | Mortality rate | OR (95% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤4 weeks | 8.47% (16/189) | 1 | |
| 4–8 weeks | 0% (0/14) | NAb | 0.257 |
| ≥8 weeks | 28.57% (4/14) | 4.33 (1.22–15.36) | 0.015 |
aStatistical analysis was performed by the chi-square test
bDue to the value of variable is zero, OR could not be calculated