| Literature DB >> 35784278 |
Taif Shah1, Zahir Shah2, Nafeesa Yasmeen3, Zulqarnain Baloch1, Xueshan Xia1.
Abstract
Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19), caused by SARS-CoV-2, is an infectious disease that poses severe threats to global public health and significant economic losses. The COVID-19 global burden is rapidly increasing, with over 246.53 million COVID-19 cases and 49.97 million deaths reported in the WHO 2021 report. People with compromised immunity, such as tuberculosis (TB) patients, are highly exposed to severe COVID-19. Both COVID-19 and TB diseases spread primarily through respiratory droplets from an infected person to a healthy person, which may cause pneumonia and cytokine storms, leading to severe respiratory disorders. The COVID-19-TB coinfection could be fatal, exacerbating the current COVID-19 pandemic apart from cellular immune deficiency, coagulation activation, myocardial infarction, and other organ dysfunction. This study aimed to assess the pathogenesis of SARS-CoV-2-Mycobacterium tuberculosis coinfections. We provide a brief overview of COVID19-TB coinfection and discuss SARS-CoV-2 host cellular receptors and pathogenesis. In addition, we discuss M. tuberculosis host cellular receptors and pathogenesis. Moreover, we highlight the impact of SARS-CoV-2 on TB patients and the pathological pathways that connect SARS-CoV-2 and M. tuberculosis infection. Further, we discuss the impact of BCG vaccination on SARS-CoV-2 cases coinfected with M. tuberculosis, as well as the diagnostic challenges associated with the coinfection.Entities:
Keywords: BCG vaccination; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2-M. tuberculosis pathogenesis; coinfection; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35784278 PMCID: PMC9246416 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.909011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Studies assessing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on TB patients.
| Country | Number of COVID-19-TB cases | Clinical features | Main outcomes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 49 COVID-19-TB patients | COVID-19 cases: 5 asymptomatic, 43 symptomatic, (36 pulmonary TB, 13 extrapulmonary TB) | After treatment, 18 recovered, 25 were under treatment with follow-up, while six patients died | ( |
|
| Three COVID-19-TB cases | Respiratory distress, hypoxia, hemoptysis, low peripheral blood count, reduced immunity, CT scan showed significant ground-glass opacities in lungs | After 14 days of treatment, all three patient’s conditions were stabilized and discharged | ( |
|
| Three COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, chest tightness/pain, dyspnea | After 24–37 days of treatment, all three patients were recovered and discharged | ( |
|
| 15 COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, dyspnoea, chest pain, headache, fatigue | After treatment, ten patients recovered while the rest five died | ( |
|
| Four COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, chest distress, myalgia, shortness of breath | One died while the rest three health status was recovered | ( |
|
| Eight COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, fatigue, sputum production, cough, dyspnoea | After treatment, all eight patients were recovered | ( |
|
| Nine COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, fatigue, cough, dyspnea, chest tightness | Four severe and five mild cases were hospitalized for treatment | ( |
|
| Three COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, fatigue, wheeze, weight loss, etc. | One severely ill patient died of respiratory and circulatory failure, and two recovered | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, cough, shortness of breath, etc. | Anti-TB medications; however, the patient’s health status deteriorated with increased dyspnoea worse respiration and died | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, cough, chills, night sweats, loss of appetite, chest pain, breathlessness | The patient was given anti-TB treatment and is under treatment | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Headache, dizziness, vomiting, CNS TB | The patient was discharged after 28 days of anti-TB medications; he was asymptomatic on the second visit after two weeks. Rifampicin, isoniazid, and pyridoxine were continued | ( |
|
| 22 COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, breathlessness | After treatment, sixteen cases recovered and were discharged follow-up, while six died | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, cough, hypertension, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, increased leukocytosis, high inflammatory markers, CRP, IL6, LDH, ferritin, fibrinogen | After 51 days of anti-TB drugs treatment, the patient was recovered and discharged | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, headache | Death of brain herniation | ( |
|
| 69 COVID-19-TB cases (60 were migrants and 9 were Italian) | The majority were elderly with comorbidities, hypertension, prostatic hypertrophy, liver disease, fever, cough, vomit, etc. | After treatment, eight died, and 61 recovered and were discharged with follow-up | ( |
|
| 20 COVID-19-TB patients | Fever, cough, chest pain, and dyspnoea were common among patients | After treatment, twelve recovered along with a case with chest pain, and vomit was unchanged, while seven severe cases were treating | ( |
|
| Two COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, mild respiratory distress, myalgia, headache | After anti-TB medications for one week without giving antiretroviral therapy, all the patients were clinically stable and discharged with follow-up | ( |
|
| Six COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, fatigue, cough, myalgia | After treatment, patients were recovered and discharged with follow-up | ( |
|
| 113 COVID-19-TB patients | Of the total, 22 suffered from hypertension, 14 diabetes, 5 cancers, 8 cardiac diseases, 4 asthma, and 3 COPD | Of the 70 hospitalized, 22 non hospitalized, and 21 unknown, 32 died, and 57 recovered | ( |
|
| 115 COVID-19 with HIV 510 COVID-10 without HIV | Most individuals suffer from hypertension, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, chronic lung diseases, previous TB, current TB, HIV, etc. | of the 115 COVID-19 diseased combined with HIV, 42 had previous TB history and 16 current TB, whereas, among 510 COVID-10 without HIV, 45 had previous TB history and 10 current TB | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-MDR-TB case | Isoniazid and rifampin resistance was evident; chest radiograph revealed a large lobe cavity with lobe opacity; before hospitalization and treatment, the patient left and was not followed up | unknown | ( |
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| Four COVID-19-TB cases | Fever, cough, dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain | After treatment, the patient was stabilized and discharged | ( |
|
| Two COVID-19-TB cases | Pneumonia, confusion, urea, respiratory rate, blood pressure, mild neutrophilia, anemia, and CRP, ferritin, and procalcitonin levels were increased | After 14 days of treatment, both patients recovered and were discharged with follow-up | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, acute/severe respiratory disorders | After 14 days of treatment, the patient recovered and discharged | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, cough | The patient received oral prednisone doses and is under-observation | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Hydrocephalus, arterial ischemic stroke, extensive cerebral sinus venous thrombosis, induced pro-inflammatory cytokines response, d-dimers, fibrinogen, and ferritin | Required neuro-rehabilitation for a month. after treatment, the patient was recovered, discharged with home occupational and physiotherapy | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Hypertension, diabetic, severe/acute pneumonia | After anti-TB medications for four months along with oxygen supportive care, the patient recovered and was discharged with followed-up | ( |
|
| Single COVID-19-TB case | Fever, cough, elevated neutrophil count, creatinine, d-dimer levels | After administration of multi-task clinical management approaches (including antiretroviral and anti-TB medications), the patient recovered | ( |
Figure 1Pathophysiological effect of SARS-CoV-2 and M. tuberculosis on the host cell. SARS-CoV-2 enters the host via aerosol, travels to the alveoli, and interacts with the host’s innate immune cells. SARS-CoV-2 and M. tuberculosis-infected alveolar macrophages secrete cytokines to activate other immune cells, i.e., monocytes, macrophages, CD4+, CD8+ lymphocytes, neutrophils, dendritic cells, and natural killer cells to the infected site. (A) In severe COVID-19 infections, the exuberant pro-inflammatory cytokine response may result in lung injury. The lungs of severely infected COVID-19 patients showed an elevated immune response, which resulted in pneumonia, respiratory distress, lung fibrosis, and lymphocytopenia (decreased lymphocyte count). SARS-CoV-2 virulence factors interact with the host lungs, eliciting an immune response. These interactions may weaken the innate immune response, leading to increased mycobacterial attachment, growth, and dissemination. (B) In severe TB infection, activated lymphocytes produce excessive pro-inflammatory cytokines response called cytokine storms. Infection with M. tuberculosis causes symptomatic TB in people who have weakened immune systems or are immune-compromised. Cytokine storm-mediated inflammation causes multiple organ dysfunctions. M. tuberculosis infection and colonization may predispose the lungs to SARS-CoV-2 by down-regulating the host immune responses, allowing virus survival, growth, and pathogenesis. The suppressed host immune response in COVID-19-TB coinfection may cause exacerbated TB. In addition, reactivation of latent to active TB indicates that SARS-CoV-2 infection can exacerbate M. tuberculosis pathogenesis.