Aibana Omowunmi, Franke Molly F, Huang Chuan-Chin, Galea Jerome T, Calderon Roger, Zhang Zibiao, Becerra Mercedes C, Smith Emily R, Ronnenberg Alayne G, Contreras Carmen, Yataco Rosa, Lecca Leonid, Murray Megan B
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, McGovern Medical School.
Division of Infectious Diseases, The Miriam Hospital, Warren Alpert School of Medicine at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.
Clin Infect Dis. 2017 Sep 15;65(6):900-909. doi: 10.1093/cid/cix476.
Low and deficient levels of vitamin A are common in low- and middle-income countries where tuberculosis burden is high. We assessed the impact of baseline levels of vitamin A and carotenoids on tuberculosis disease risk.
We conducted a case-control study nested within a longitudinal cohort of household contacts (HHCs) of pulmonary tuberculosis case patients in Lima, Peru. We defined case patients as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative HHCs with blood samples in whom tuberculosis disease developed ≥15 days after enrollment of the index patient. For each case patient, we randomly selected 4 controls from among contacts in whom tuberculosis disease did not develop, matching for sex and year of age. We used conditional logistic regression to estimate odds ratios for incident tuberculosis disease by vitamin A and carotenoids levels, controlling for other nutritional and socioeconomic factors.
Among 6751 HIV-negative HHCs with baseline blood samples, 192 had secondary tuberculosis disease during follow-up. We analyzed 180 case patients with viable samples and 709 matched controls. After controlling for possible confounders, we found that baseline vitamin A deficiency was associated with a 10-fold increase in risk of tuberculosis disease among HHCs (adjusted odds ratio, 10.53; 95% confidence interval, 3.73-29.70; P < .001). This association was dose dependent, with stepwise increases in tuberculosis disease risk with each decreasing quartile of vitamin A level.
Vitamin A deficiency strongly predicted the risk of incident tuberculosis disease among HHCs of patients with tuberculosis. Vitamin A supplementation among individuals at high risk of tuberculosis may provide an effective means of preventing tuberculosis disease.
在结核病负担较重的低收入和中等收入国家,维生素A水平低和缺乏的情况很常见。我们评估了维生素A和类胡萝卜素的基线水平对结核病发病风险的影响。
我们在秘鲁利马的肺结核病例患者家庭接触者(HHCs)的纵向队列中开展了一项病例对照研究。我们将病例患者定义为感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)阴性的HHCs,他们在索引患者入组后≥15天出现结核病且有血样。对于每例病例患者,我们从未发生结核病的接触者中随机选取4名对照,按性别和年龄进行匹配。我们使用条件逻辑回归来估计按维生素A和类胡萝卜素水平划分的新发结核病的比值比,并控制其他营养和社会经济因素。
在6751名有基线血样的HIV阴性HHCs中,192人在随访期间发生了继发性结核病。我们分析了180例有可用样本的病例患者和709名匹配对照。在控制了可能的混杂因素后,我们发现基线维生素A缺乏与HHCs中结核病发病风险增加10倍相关(调整后的比值比为10.53;95%置信区间为3.73 - 29.70;P <.001)。这种关联是剂量依赖性的,随着维生素A水平每降低一个四分位数,结核病发病风险逐步增加。
维生素A缺乏强烈预示着结核病患者的HHCs中发生新发结核病的风险。对结核病高危个体补充维生素A可能是预防结核病的一种有效手段。