Wellcome Trust Centre for Research in Clinical Tropical Medicine, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2013 Aug 2;8(8):e69969. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069969. Print 2013.
Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP), the commonest opportunistic infection in HIV-infected patients in the developed world, is less commonly described in tropical and low and middle income countries (LMIC). We sought to investigate predictors of PCP in these settings.
Systematic review and meta-regression.
Meta-regression of predictors of PCP diagnosis (33 studies). Qualitative and quantitative assessment of recorded CD4 counts, receipt of prophylaxis and antiretrovirals, sensitivity and specificity of clinical signs and symptoms for PCP, co-infection with other pathogens, and case fatality (117 studies).
The most significant predictor of PCP was per capita Gross Domestic Product, which showed strong linear association with odds of PCP diagnosis (p<0.0001). This was not explained by study design or diagnostic quality. Geographical area, population age, study setting and year of study also contributed to risk of PCP. Co-infection was common (444 episodes/1425 PCP cases), frequently with virulent organisms. The predictive value of symptoms, signs or simple tests in LMIC settings for diagnosis of PCP was poor. Case fatality was >30%; treatment was largely appropriate. Prophylaxis appeared to reduce the risk for development of PCP, however 24% of children with PCP were receiving prophylaxis. CD4 counts at presentation with PCP were usually <200×10(3/)ml.
There is a positive relationship between GDP and risk of PCP diagnosis. Although failure to diagnose infection in poorer countries may contribute to this, we also hypothesise that poverty exposes at-risk patients to a wide range of infections and that the relatively non-pathogenic P. jirovecii is therefore under-represented. As LMIC develop economically they eliminate the conditions underlying transmission of virulent infection: P. jirovecii, ubiquitous in all settings, then becomes a greater relative threat.
在发达国家,艾滋病毒感染者中最常见的机会性感染是卡氏肺孢子虫肺炎(PCP),但在热带地区和低收入及中等收入国家(LMIC)中则较少描述。我们试图研究这些环境中 PCP 的预测因素。
系统评价和荟萃回归。
荟萃回归分析 PCP 诊断的预测因素(33 项研究)。记录 CD4 计数、预防和抗逆转录病毒治疗的接受情况、PCP 的临床体征和症状的敏感性和特异性、与其他病原体的合并感染以及病死率(117 项研究)的定性和定量评估。
PCP 的最显著预测因素是人均国内生产总值,该因素与 PCP 诊断的几率呈强烈线性关联(p<0.0001)。这与研究设计或诊断质量无关。地理区域、人口年龄、研究环境和研究年份也与 PCP 的风险有关。合并感染很常见(444 例/1425 例 PCP 病例),通常与毒力较强的病原体合并感染。在 LMIC 环境中,症状、体征或简单测试对 PCP 诊断的预测价值较低。病死率>30%;治疗基本上是合适的。预防似乎降低了发生 PCP 的风险,然而,24%的 PCP 患儿正在接受预防治疗。PCP 就诊时的 CD4 计数通常<200×10(3/)ml。
国内生产总值与 PCP 诊断风险之间存在正相关关系。尽管在较贫穷国家未能诊断出感染可能导致这种情况,但我们还假设,贫困使高危患者暴露于广泛的感染中,而相对非致病性的卡氏肺孢子虫因此代表性不足。随着 LMIC 经济发展,它们消除了传播毒力感染的基础条件:无处不在的卡氏肺孢子虫,然后成为更大的相对威胁。