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1.
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-195996

ABSTRACT

Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among HIV-infected patients while HIV remains a key risk factor for the development of active TB infection. Treatment integration is a key in reducing mortality in patients with HIV-TB co-infection. However, this opportunity to improve outcomes of both infections is often missed or poorly implemented. Challenges in TB-HIV treatment integration range from complexities involving clinical management of co-infected patients to obstacles in health service-organization and prioritization. This is evident in high prevalence settings such as in sub-Saharan Africa where TB-HIV co-infection rates reach up to 80 per cent. This review discusses published literature on clinical trials and cohort studies of strategies for TB-HIV treatment integration aimed at reducing co-infection mortality. Studies published since 2009, when several treatment guidelines recommended treatment integration, were included. A total of 43 articles were identified, of which a total of 23 observational studies and nine clinical trials were informative on TB-HIV treatment integration. The data show that the survival benefit of AIDS therapy in patients infected with TB can be maximized among patients with advanced immunosuppression by starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) soon after TB treatment initiation, i.e. in patients with CD4+ cell counts <50 cells/?l. However, patients with greater CD4+ cell counts should defer initiation of ART to no less than eight weeks after initiation of TB treatment to reduce the occurrence and extent of immune reconstitution disease and subsequent hospitalization. Addressing operational challenges in integrating TB-HIV care can significantly improve patient outcomes, generate substantial public health impact by decreasing morbidity and death in settings with a high burden of HIV and TB.

2.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 42(2): 119-125, Mar.-Apr. 2009. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-512913

ABSTRACT

Investigou-se a tuberculose quanto à apresentação clínica, desfecho de tratamento e perfil sociodemográfico dos infectados pelo vírus da imunodeficiência humana atendidos em 2003-2005 em um serviço de referência sulmatogrossense. Analisaram-se 66 prontuários de pacientes maiores de 14 anos e informações do Sistema de Informação Nacional de Agravos de Notificação para Tuberculose e do Sistema de Informações de Mortalidade. Predominaram indivíduos do sexo masculino, cor branca, pouca escolaridade e procedência do meio urbano. Identificou-se incremento da apresentação clínica extrapulmonar e sua relação com o comprometimento imunológico. Sobressaíram-se como formas de encerramento da tuberculose a cura (alcançada com acompanhamento mais longo que o previsto) e o óbito (de seis pacientes no início do tratamento da tuberculose). Observaram-se lacunas de preenchimento nas notificações de tuberculose e nos prontuários. Detectou-se a necessidade de diagnosticar precocemente a tuberculose em soropositivos para HIV, de aperfeiçoar os registros nos prontuários e de acompanhar os casos além do período recomendado, por alteração da evolução clínica da tuberculose em co-morbidade com a infecção pelo vírus da imunodeficiência adquirida.


Tuberculosis was investigated regarding its clinical presentation, treatment outcome and sociodemographic profile among HIV patients attended at a referral center in Mato Grosso do Sul, in 2003-2005. Sixty-six medical files on patients over 14 years of age and data from the Brazilian National Information System for Notifiable Diseases relating to tuberculosis and from the Mortality Information System were analyzed. Most of the patients were male, white, of low schooling level and from urban areas. Increased extrapulmonary clinical presentation was found and it correlated with the degree of immunological competence. The main reasons for ceasing treatment were cure (reached after longer-than-expected follow-up) and death (of six patients at the beginning of the tuberculosis treatment). Information gaps were found in the tuberculosis notification records and medical files. The study revealed the need for early diagnosis of tuberculosis among HIV-positive patients, improvements in medical records and follow-up beyond the recommended duration, because of changes to the clinical evolution of tuberculosis in cases of comorbidity with HIV.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult , AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections , Tuberculosis , AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/diagnosis , AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/drug therapy , AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/epidemiology , Antitubercular Agents/therapeutic use , Brazil/epidemiology , Disease Notification , Follow-Up Studies , Socioeconomic Factors , Tuberculosis/diagnosis , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Tuberculosis/epidemiology , Young Adult
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