Alvarez-Uria Gerardo, Midde Manoranjan, Naik Praveen K
Department of Infectious Diseases, Rural Development Trust , Bathalapalli, AP , India.
PeerJ. 2016 May 17;4:e2053. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2053. eCollection 2016.
Background. Despite the dramatic scale-up of antiretroviral therapy in low- and middle-income countries, tuberculosis (TB) is still the main cause of death among HIV-infected patients in resource-limited settings. Previous studies in patients with TB meningitis suggest that the use of higher doses of common anti-TB drugs could reduce mortality. Methods. Using clinical data from an HIV cohort study in India, we compared the mortality among HIV-infected patients diagnosed with TB according to the regimen received during the first two weeks of treatment: standard anti-tuberculosis therapy (ATT) (N = 847), intensified ATT (N = 322), and intensified ATT with streptomycin (N = 446). The intensified ATT comprised double dose of rifampicin and substitution of ethambutol with levofloxacin. Multivariate analysis was performed using Cox proportional hazard models and inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) based on propensity scores. Patients with TB meningitis were excluded. Results. The use of intensified ATT alone did not improve survival. However, when streptomycin was added, the use intensified ATT was associated with reduced mortality in Cox models (adjusted hazard ratio 0.72, 95% CI [0.57-0.91]) and after IPTW (hazard ratio 0.77, 95% CI [0.67-0.96]). Other factors associated with improved survival were high serum albumin concentration, high CD4 lymphocyte cell-counts, and high glomerular filtration rates. Factors associated with increased mortality were high urea concentrations, being on antiretroviral therapy at the time of ATT initiation and high BUN/creatinine ratio. In an effect modification analysis, the survival benefits of the intensified ATT with streptomycin disappeared in patients with severe hypoalbuminemia. Conclusion. The results of this study are in accordance with a previous study from our cohort involving patients with TB meningitis, and suggest that an intensified 2-week ATT with streptomycin could reduce mortality in HIV infected patients with TB. As this is an observational study, we should be cautious about our conclusions, but given the high mortality of HIV-related TB, our findings deserve further research.
背景。尽管低收入和中等收入国家大幅扩大了抗逆转录病毒治疗的规模,但在资源有限的环境中,结核病仍然是艾滋病毒感染患者的主要死因。先前对结核性脑膜炎患者的研究表明,使用更高剂量的常见抗结核药物可以降低死亡率。方法。利用印度一项艾滋病毒队列研究的临床数据,我们比较了根据治疗前两周接受的治疗方案诊断为结核病的艾滋病毒感染患者的死亡率:标准抗结核治疗(ATT)(N = 847)、强化ATT(N = 322)和强化ATT联合链霉素(N = 446)。强化ATT包括双倍剂量的利福平并用左氧氟沙星替代乙胺丁醇。使用Cox比例风险模型和基于倾向评分的治疗加权逆概率(IPTW)进行多变量分析。排除结核性脑膜炎患者。结果。单独使用强化ATT并不能提高生存率。然而,当添加链霉素时,强化ATT的使用在Cox模型中与死亡率降低相关(调整后的风险比为0.72,95%置信区间[0.57 - 0.91]),在IPTW后(风险比为0.77,95%置信区间[0.67 - 0.96])。与生存率提高相关的其他因素包括高血清白蛋白浓度、高CD4淋巴细胞计数和高肾小球滤过率。与死亡率增加相关的因素包括高尿素浓度、在开始ATT时接受抗逆转录病毒治疗以及高尿素氮/肌酐比值。在效应修饰分析中,强化ATT联合链霉素的生存益处在严重低白蛋白血症患者中消失。结论。本研究结果与我们队列中先前一项涉及结核性脑膜炎患者的研究一致,并表明强化2周的ATT联合链霉素可以降低艾滋病毒感染的结核病患者的死亡率。由于这是一项观察性研究,我们对我们的结论应持谨慎态度,但鉴于艾滋病毒相关结核病的高死亡率,我们的发现值得进一步研究。