| Literature DB >> 35162131 |
Temitope Ojo1, Christina Ruan1, Tania Hameed1, Carly Malburg1, Sukruthi Thunga1, Jaimie Smith1, Dorice Vieira1,2, Anya Snyder1, Siphra Jane Tampubolon1, Joyce Gyamfi1, Nessa Ryan1, Sahnah Lim3, Michele Santacatterina4, Emmanuel Peprah1.
Abstract
The double burden of HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis (TB), coupled with endemic and problematic food insecurity in Africa, can interact to negatively impact health outcomes, creating a syndemic. For people living with HIV/AIDS (PWH), food insecurity is a significant risk factor for acquiring TB due to the strong nutritional influences and co-occurring contextual barriers. We aim to synthesize evidence on the syndemic relationship between HIV/AIDS and TB co-infection and food insecurity in Africa. We conducted a scoping review of studies in Africa that included co-infected adults and children, with evidence of food insecurity, characterized by insufficient to lack of access to macronutrients. We sourced information from major public health databases. Qualitative, narrative analysis was used to synthesize the data. Of 1072 articles screened, 18 articles discussed the syndemic effect of HIV/AIDS and TB co-infection and food insecurity. Reporting of food insecurity was inconsistent, however, five studies estimated it using a validated scale. Food insecure co-infected adults had an average BMI of 16.5-18.5 kg/m2. Negative outcomes include death (n = 6 studies), depression (n = 1 study), treatment non-adherence, weight loss, wasting, opportunistic infections, TB-related lung diseases, lethargy. Food insecurity was a precursor to co-infection, especially with the onset/increased incidence of TB in PWH. Economic, social, and facility-level factors influenced the negative impact of food insecurity on the health of co-infected individuals. Nutritional support, economic relief, and psychosocial support minimized the harmful effects of food insecurity in HIV-TB populations. Interventions that tackle one or more components of a syndemic interaction can have beneficial effects on health outcomes and experiences of PWH with TB in Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; HIV/AIDs; food insecurity; syndemics; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162131 PMCID: PMC8834641 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA study flowchart. This chart shows the systematic screening of studies, using inclusion and exclusion criteria to advance or eliminate studies for the review. Two stages of screening occurred: first, titles and abstracts were screened for 1072 studies, excluding 842 records; second, full texts were retrieved and screened for 215 out of 230 studies. Of these 215 studies, 18 studies made it to the final review. * Consider, if feasible to do so, reporting the number of records identified from each database or register searched (rather than the total number across all databases/registers). ** If automation tools were used, indicate how many records were excluded by a human and how many were excluded by automation tools.
Description of included studies.
| Author (Year) | Location/Setting and Population | Study Objective | Study Duration (months) | Total Sample Size | Number of Patients with HIV and TB Co-Infection | Study Design | Delivery/Administration Method | Primary Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bakari et al. (2013) [ | Location: Urban primary health center in Tanzania | “Determine the prevalence of low BMI in co-infected TB-HIV women | 12 | 43 | 43 | Pre–post anti-TB treatment study | Research staff | “HIV-positive women with TB have substantial 24-h deficits in energy and protein intake, report significant food insecurity and gain minimal weight on anti-tuberculosis treatment”. |
| Benzekri et al. (2019) [ | Location: | “Compare the feasibility, acceptability, and potential impact of implementing two different forms of nutrition support for HIV-TB co-infected adults”. | 13 | 26 | 26 | Randomized controlled trial | Nurses, physicians, non-healthcare individuals | “Temporary nutrition support during the critical months of treatment against active TB, could contribute to improved adherence and treatment completion, and subsequently, improved clinical and socioeconomic outcomes”. |
| Bongongo et al. (2020) [ | Location: Sub-district community-level hospitals in South Africa | “Determine the influence of patients’ living conditions on TB treatment outcomes”. | Not stated | 180 | 83 | Cross-sectional study | Research staff | “Tuberculosis treatment outcomes showed very little difference between where food security was and where there was little or no food security. This survey shows a high death rate (26.5%) and also a high default rate (31.3%) amongst TB respondents that are HIV-positive”. |
| Burke et al. (2014) [ | Location: | Authors hypothesized that in the setting of high HIV prevalence, “widespread food insecurity would lead to a rise in TB incidence in Zimbabwe, as such performed an ecological analysis of the TB incidence during crisis year (2008–2009)”. | 144 | 11,784 | 8838 | Ecological study | Research staff | Incidence of TB increased during crises or the dry season when food insecurity was highest. |
| Chileshe et al. (2010) [ | Location: | “Highlight barriers that poor rural Zambians co-infected with tuberculosis (TB) and HIV and their households face in accessing ART Account for patient outcomes by the end of TB treatment and beyond”. | 10 | 9 | 7 | Ethnographic case study | Research staff, nurses, counselors | Economic barriers included: “being pushed into deeper poverty by managing TB, rural location, absence of any external assistance, and mustering time and extended funds for transport and ‘special food’ during and beyond the end of TB. In the case of death, funeral costs were astronomical” [ |
| Chintu et al. (1995) [ | Location: Hospitals in urban settings in Zambia | “Assess the impact of HIV-1 on common childhood diseases | 9 | 42 | 42 | Cross-sectional Study | Research staff | Prevalence of common childhood diseases and death caused by HIV status among children with any of the recorded childhood diseases. |
| Gebremichael et al. (2018) [ | Location: | “Determine food insecurity and nutritional status and contextual determinants of malnutrition among people living with HIV/AIDS”. | 2 | 512 | 63 | Cross-sectional study | Community health workers | The findings revealed a high prevalence of malnutrition and household food insecurity among people living with HIV/AIDS on antiretroviral therapy. |
| Hanifa et al. (2018) [ | Location: | Identify the causes of symptoms suggestive of TB among people living with HIV. | 3 | 103 | 14 | Cohort study | Research staff, physicians | Post-TB chronic lung disease and food insecurity were the main diagnoses for symptoms suggestive of TB in our population of HIV clinic attendees, and diagnoses were assigned for more than 90% of participants. |
| Kelly et al. (2002) [ | Location: Rural communities in Zambia | To examine the relationship between morbidity, nutritional impairment, and CD4 count in patients with HIV infection. | 2 | 186 | 11 | Cross-sectional study | Research staff | The findings suggest that “effective treatment of opportunistic infection is likely to be important in preventing or reversing nutritional failure, even when food availability is limited”. |
| LaCourse et al. (2014) [ | Location: Hospitals in peri-urban settings of Malawi | Determine pulmonary tuberculosis prevalence among the hospitalized severely malnourished. | 2 | 300 | 52 | A prospective observational study | Hospital staff and patient guardians | Only 2 of 300 screened patients had a positive cultured confirmed positive pulmonary TB diagnosis. |
| Madebo et al. (1997) [ | Location: Hospital in an urban setting in Ethiopia | Examine the influence of HIV infection and malnutrition on the radiological and clinical features of pulmonary TB. | 6 | 239 | 48 | Cross-sectional study | Research staff | “HIV-positive TB patients had significantly more oral candidiasis, diarrhea, generalized lymphadenopathy, skin disorders, neuropsychiatric illness, hilar lymphadenopathy, but less cavitation and upper lung lobe involvement. The size of the Mantoux was associated with HIV infection and malnutrition. Malnutrition and HIV infection both contribute to the atypical presentation of pulmonary tuberculosis. The risk of such atypical presentation is particularly high among the severely malnourished HIV-infected patients”. |
| Meressa et al. (2015) [ | Location: | “Determine the patient-related (or clinical) and programmatic factors associated with successful multidrug-resistant TB treatment outcomes in a highly resource-constrained setting”. | 60 | 612 | 133 | Cohort study | Existing nurses, clinical staff of the health facilities, and family treatment supporters | “Though nearly half of the cohort had severe malnutrition (BMI < 16), overall, 64.7% were cured, and 13.9% completed treatment for a combined treatment success of 78.6%”. |
| Mupere et al. (2012) (Low Nutrient) [ | Location: Hospitals in an urban setting in Uganda | This cross-sectional study “was conducted to establish the relationship between nutrient intake and body wasting and between nutrient intake and severity of tuberculosis disease at the time of tuberculosis diagnosis”. | 7 | 131 | 31 | Cross-sectional study | Research staff, health facility staff, nurses, nutritionists | The study found that “the average 24-h nutrient intake varied by the severity of tuberculosis disease, but not by tuberculosis disease or HIV status nor by nutritional status”. The findings also suggest that “in the face of tuberculosis disease, nutrient intake is reduced among patients with more severe disease regardless of HIV infection. In the absence of tuberculosis, nutrient intake was affected by gender, and not HIV infection”. |
| Mupere et al. (2012) (Lean Tissue) [ | Location: Community clinics in the Kampala District of Uganda | “The study was conducted to assess the impact of wasting on survival in tuberculosis and HIV patients using precise height-normalized lean tissue mass index (LMI) estimated by bioelectrical impedance analysis and BMI”. | 204 | 747 | At least 99 | Retrospective cohort study | Research staff | “Both low BMI and low LMI at tuberculosis diagnosis were associated with poor survival in univariate and multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression analyses”. |
| Rudolph et al. (2013) [ | Location: Community-level primary health centers in the urban setting of South Africa | “The aims of this 3-month pilot study with crèche children and adult TB patients in Alexandra, South Africa, were to generate baseline data on nutritional status, assess the impact of a fortified supplementary food (e’Pap) on nutritional status, and to evaluate the sensitivity and validity of non-invasive indicators of nutritional status”. | 3 | 153 | 58 | Pre–post pilot study | Research and health facility staff, community health workers | “Adult females were younger (mean age 34 years, STD 10 years) than males (mean age 40 years, STD 9 years). The mean age for female children was 4.6 years (STD 0.8 years) and for male children 4.7 years (STD 0.9 years). The median household size was 4 (Q1–Q3 3–4)”. |
| Sattler et al. (2018) [ | Location: | This study “hypothesized that greater malnutrition and/or inflammation when initiating treatment is associated with an increased risk for death”. | 12 | 51 | 51 | Retrospective case–cohort study | Research staff | “For the cohort of 51 participants, the 33 who survived were not different from the 18 who died. 14% of participants had BMI < 16.5 kg/m2 and 33% had BMI 16.5–18.5 kg/m2. The causes of death and week of death (in parentheses) in the ensuing year after randomization were disseminated: tuberculosis (2, 4), gastroenteritis (3, 5, 11), pulmonary tuberculosis (4, 10), acute renal failure (5), bacterial pneumonia (8, 34), cryptococcal meningitis (9), bacterial meningitis (13), bacterial sepsis (14), peritonitis |
| Schact et al. (2019) [ | Location: Primary health centers in rural settings in Mozambique | “The purpose of this study was to elicit Mozambican patients with drug-sensitive TB (DS-TB), TB/HIV and Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) understanding and assessment of the quality of care for DS-TB, HIV/TB and MDR-TB services in Mozambique, along with challenges to effectively preventing, diagnosing, and treating TB”. | 1 | 51 | 19 | Qualitative study | Research staff | Themes from focus groups were classified under “(1) TB knowledge; (2) barriers to accessing services (including treatment); (3) barriers to treatment adherence, and (4) Suggestions for improvement for TB”. |
| Wang et al. (2020) [ | Location: | “To determine the association between food insecurity and HIV infection with depression and anxiety among new tuberculosis (TB) patients”. | 12 | 180 | 99 | Cross-sectional study | Research staff | “Among those who were HIV co-infected, the median duration since HIV diagnosis was 43 months, and 31(31.3%) had never taken ART, of whom 90% were newly diagnosed with HIV at or within one month of study enrolment”. |
Evidence and related outcomes of food insecurity among PWH with TB.
| Author (Year) | Food Insecurity-Related Reports | HIV-Related Health Outcomes | TB-Related Health Outcomes | Medication/Treatment Adherence or Behavior | Economic Drivers Influencing Food Insecurity | Was Intervention Successful (Y/N/NA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bakari et al. (2013) [ | HFIAS average score 6 (range: 1–14) | “There was one reported death: a patient with a baseline BMI 21 kg/m2 and CD4 120 cells/μL who had gained 4 kg at 4 months, but remained sputum-positive, died at 5 months due to an undiagnosed febrile illness”. | NR | Twenty women (47%) were on ART but adherence was not reported. | NR | NA |
| Benzekri et al. (2019) [ | Used HFIAS and indicators of nutritional status included weight, BMI, and percent malnourished. “The median weight increased from 50 kg at enrollment to 55 kg at month 6 and the median BMI increased from 17.3 kg/m2 to 19.3 kg/m2. At enrollment, 58% of subjects were malnourished versus 35% at month 6”. | NR | NR | “Overall, 7-day adherence, 4-week adherence, and medication possession exceeded 95% for both ART and TB treatment. Adherence did not differ between those who received ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) and those who received food baskets”. | NR | Y |
| Bongongoet al. (2020) [ | Had sufficient food daily for the past 12 months. “More participants ( | “More HIV negative participants ( | “57 participants (45.9%) amongst those who had food were cured. Whilst comparing the TB treatment outcomes and food security, an association of statistical significance in the group of relapses was noted, with | “More deaths ( | NR | NA |
| Burke et al. (2014) [ | “Nutritional deficiencies reported include: The prevalence of kwashiorkor most significantly increased between 2001 (130 cases) and 2008 (239 cases) ( | “Antenatal clinic HIV seroprevalence at HH decreased between 2001 (23%) to 2011 (11%) ( | “At the Howard Hospital (HH) in northern Zimbabwe, TB incidence increased 35% in 2008 from baseline rates in 2003–2007 ( | NR | Economic collapse and crisis, declining GDP per capita, a high prevalence of HIV. | NA |
| Chileshe et al. (2010) [ | Narrated description: | Out of the seven co-infected patients, two died before completing TB treatment. | “By the end of TB treatment, outcomes were mixed; two co-infected patients had died, three had started ART and two had yet to start ART”. | “Despite the free provision of both TB treatment and ART through government health services, co-infected patients faced economic, social, and health service facility barriers to accessing ART. In the study, two individuals reported being on ART but one stopped in 2008”. “Several of the participants reported not being able to access and adhere to treatment due to difficulty in being able to make it to the ART clinic due to family disapproval and transportation/economic barriers”. | “The food insecurity of all six households had deepened by a period managing TB owing to loss of livelihood, assets, and income, a dip in productivity, mounting debt, and the cost of transport and requirements for ‘special food’. Six of the seven co-infected participants had relocated whilst sick, five moving from town and having to leave their livelihoods behind. All TB patients were unable to contribute to the household living during their search for a diagnosis (which took between 220 months) and for at least four months into TB treatment; primary caregivers often found it hard to make a living just before and after TB diagnosis when patients were often extremely sick and required constant care or were admitted into the hospital. Five of the six households said that TB illness had disrupted their farming activities and made them less productive, with three households recording a drop in the maize they harvested and two households recording no harvest in 2006–2007”. | NA |
| Chintu et al. (1995) [ | Use of nutritional metrics. | “94 children (40.5%) with malnutrition had HIV, 42 children (68.9%) with TB had HIV. 34/94 (36.2%) of children with malnutrition died from HIV; 7/42 (16.7%) of children with TB. | 61 children with TB died. | NR | NR | NA |
| Gebremichael et al. (2018) [ | HFIAS score 27 | HIV-induced immune impairment, increased risk of opportunistic | Appetite loss, weight loss, wasting. | NR | “This study revealed that unemployed PWH were more likely to be undernourished compared with employed counterparts. The higher risk of developing malnutrition in unemployed subjects found in this study is supported by findings of other studies where unemployment promotes poverty, which in turn limits the ability of an individual to expend money for food consumption due to low income”. | NA |
| Hanifa et al. (2018) [ | “HFIAS score: 50% (53 individuals) had severe food insecurity; On ART = 23 (46.0%); Not on ART = 30 (56.6%) Total average = 53 (51.5) | “50/103 were pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) and 53/103 were on ART; Seventy-two (70%) had 75% measured weight loss and 50 (49%) had cough. The most common final diagnoses were weight loss due to severe food insecurity ( | Post-TB lung disease ( | NR | NR | NA |
| Kelly et al. (2002) [ | “Height and BMI were low by comparison with norms in industrialized countries (Lentner, 1984), suggesting lifelong undernutrition in the population as a whole. Mean height was 1.58 m in women and 1.69 m in men ( | “65 participants were HIV positive; HIV seroprevalence was comparable to previous estimates of 22–35% for Lusaka. 33 (51%) of 65 HIV seropositive adults reported symptoms compared to 39 (32%) of 121 HIV seronegative adults (OR 2.2, 95%CI 1.1–4.2; | “The most frequently diagnosed clinical conditions in HIV-infected individuals were TB ( | NR | NR | NA |
| LaCourse et al. (2014) [ | “Enrollees were required to meet WHO severe acute malnutrition criteria for children aged 6–60 months with weight-for-height z-score ≤−3 standard deviations below the median, mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) ≤115 mm, or bilateral pedal edema”. | NR | Lethargy/fatigue | NR | NR | NA |
| Madebo et al. (1997) [ | “187 (77.9%) of the patients had a BMI < 18.5. Based on BMI assessment, 44 (18.2%)) were mildly, 39 (16.1%) moderately and 104 (43%) were severely malnourished. Based on MUAC assessment 161/167 (96.4) of men (MUAC ≤ 24 cm) and 71/75 (94.7%) of women (MUAC ≤ 23 cm) were malnourished. The mean BMI was 16.2 (SD 2.6) and 16.6 (SD 2.4) for HIV-positive and -negative patients, respectively”. | NR | NR | NR | NR | NA |
| Meressa et al. (2015) [ | “Provision of a monthly food basket and in some extreme cases of poverty, provision of economic assistance for transport, additional food, and house rent if needed throughout Therapy. The median body mass index (BMI) was 16.6 (IQR 14.8–19.1). Treatment failure or death among MDR-TB patients was higher in patients who had severe malnutrition (BMI < 16 kg/m2) (15.1% vs. 6.8%, | “Treatment success rates were higher for HIV-uninfected compared with HIV-infected individuals (81.0% vs. 69.9%, | NR | “Of the 133 HIV-co-infected patients, 120 had begun ART before enrolment. Eleven patients were started on ART after initiation of MDR TB treatment and two declined ART. ART regimen data were available for 115 patients. The median duration of injectable use for the TB meds was 9.6 months (IQR 8.1–11.0 months)”. | “Extreme poverty was addressed by initiating monthly home visits and monthly patient visits to the treatment initiation site’s outpatient department, identification of a patient supporter to assist with DOT, psychosocial support, monthly food baskets, and social support for the most destitute patients. | Y |
| Mupere et al. (2012) | Use of nutritional metrics such as BMI and weight to estimate food insecurity-related malnutrition, body wasting of participants using body mass index (BMI), and height-normalized indices (adjusted for height) for body composition of lean mass index (LMI) and fat mass index (FMI) [ | “There were no differences in average 24-h nutrient intake by Tuberculosis disease and HIV status”. | “There were no differences in average 24-h nutrient intake by Tuberculosis disease and HIV status. Loss of appetite, vomiting, fainting, loss of body mass, wasting, death”. | NR | NR | NA |
| Mupere et al. (2012) | “Nutritional status was assessed using baseline height and weight anthropometric measurements and BIA before initiation of tuberculosis therapy. Lean tissue mass was calculated from BIA measurements using equations that were previously cross-validated in a sample of patients with and without HIV infection and have been applied elsewhere in African studies. Fat mass was calculated as body weight minus fat-free mass. Baseline wasting was defined using BMI and height-normalized indices (adjusted for height) for lean tissue mass and fat mass as measured by BIA. BMI can be partitioned into height-normalized indices of lean tissue mass index (LMI) and fat mass index (FMI), i.e., BMI = LMI + FMI as previously reported using BMI cutoff for malnutrition < 18.5 kg/m2. The cutoffs for low LMI and FMI corresponding to a BMI < 18.5 kg/m were as follows: LMI < 16.7 (kg/m2) for men and <14.6 (kg/m2) for women with corresponding FMI < 1.8 (kg/m2) for men and <3.9 (kg/m2) for women. LMI and FMI have the advantage of compensating for differences in height and age”. | Higher hazard of death among HIV seropositive participants. | “Loss of appetite, vomiting, fainting, loss of body mass, wasting, death”. | NR | NR | NA |
| Rudolph et al. (2013) [ | “Nearly all adults (97% of females and 96% of males) reported being food insecure. Food insecurity was also relatively high (57%) among children as reported by parents/guardians. Reported levels of food security did not change throughout the study [ | “67% of the adult TB patients (76% of females; 54% of males) self-reported as being HIV positive. There were no reports of HIV-positive serology in the child cohort. HIV negative adults showed greater improvement (mean change of 0.013, 95% CI −0.020–0.006) over three months than HIV positive adults (mean change of 0.007, 95% CI −0.021–0.082)”. | NR | NR | “The high rates of unemployment and self-reported HIV positive status among the adult cohort are above the national averages, but these findings are not surprising in the resource-poor setting of Alexandra and context of widespread co-infection with HIV and TB”. | Y |
| Sattler et al. (2018) [ | “Of note, 7 (14%) participants had BMI < 16.5 kg/m2 and 17 (33%) had BMI 16.5–18.5 kg/m2”. | NR | “For the cohort of 51 participants, the 33 who survived were not different from the 18 who died”. | NR | NR | NA |
| Schact et al. (2019) [ | A narrated description of food insecurity was used. The effect of treatment for HIV/AIDS is being hungry and this is a problem if no food at home. | NR | NR | Social-level barriers: stigma. | NR | NA |
| Wang et al. (2020) [ | Used the HFIAS. “Over half of all participants reported being food secure, and 15 (8.4%), 17 (9.5%) and 52 (29.0%) reported experiencing mild insecurity, moderate insecurity, and severe insecurity, respectively”. | NR | NR | “Among those who were HIV co-infected, the median duration since HIV diagnosis was 43 months, and 31(31.3%) had never taken ART, of whom 90% were newly diagnosed with HIV at or within one month of study enrolment ”. | NR | NA |
NR—Not Reported; NA—Not Applicable.
Figure 2(a) Risk of bias assessment of cross-sectional studies (n = 7). At least 75% of all cross-sectional studies had a low risk of bias across all indicators for the quality of evidence gathered in the studies. (b) Risk of bias assessment of cohort studies (n = 3). Two of the three cohort studies exhibited a low risk of bias across all indicators for assessing the quality of evidence for cohort studies. (c) Risk of bias assessment of qualitative studies (n = 2). Across all indicators for assessing the quality of evidence, 100% of the qualitative studies had a low risk of bias in the evidence reported. (d) Risk of bias assessment of a randomized implementation study (n = 1). The singular randomized study only had a low risk of bias for 3 indicators (allocation concealment, blinding of participants, and blinding of personnel) out of 7 total indicators for assessing the quality of evidence. (e) Risk of bias assessment of a mixed methods study (n = 1). The singular mixed methods study had a low risk of bias across all indicators for assessing the quality of evidence for this type of study design.