Jurnal Reading I
Jurnal Reading I
Jurnal Reading I
Abstract
Background: Antiretroviral therapy (ART) decreases mortality risk in HIV-infected tuberculosis patients, but the
effect of the duration of anti-tuberculosis therapy and timing of anti-tuberculosis therapy initiation in relation to ART
initiation on mortality, is unclear.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational multi-center cohort study among HIV-infected persons
concomitantly treated with Rifamycin-based anti-tuberculosis therapy and ART in Latin America. The study
population included persons for whom 6 months of anti-tuberculosis therapy is recommended.
Results: Of 253 patients who met inclusion criteria, median CD4+ lymphocyte count at ART initiation was 64
cells/mm3, 171 (68%) received >180 days of anti-tuberculosis therapy, 168 (66%) initiated anti-tuberculosis therapy
before ART, and 43 (17%) died. In a multivariate Cox proportional hazards model that adjusted for CD4+
lymphocytes and HIV-1 RNA, tuberculosis diagnosed after ART initiation was associated with an increased risk of
death compared to tuberculosis diagnosis before ART initiation (HR 2.40; 95% CI 1.15, 5.02; P = 0.02). In a separate
model among patients surviving >6 months after tuberculosis diagnosis, after adjusting for CD4+ lymphocytes, HIV-1
RNA, and timing of ART initiation relative to tuberculosis diagnosis, receipt of >6 months of anti-tuberculosis therapy
was associated with a decreased risk of death (HR 0.23; 95% CI 0.08, 0.66; P=0.007).
Conclusions: The increased risk of death among persons diagnosed with tuberculosis after ART initiation highlights
the importance of screening for tuberculosis before ART initiation. The decreased risk of death among persons
receiving > 6 months of anti-tuberculosis therapy suggests that current anti-tuberculosis treatment duration
guidelines should be re-evaluated.
Citation: Cortes CP, Wehbe FH, McGowan CC, Shepherd BE, Duda SN, et al. (2013) Duration of Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy and Timing of Antiretroviral
Therapy Initiation: Association with Mortality in HIV-Related Tuberculosis. PLoS ONE 8(9): e74057. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0074057
Editor: Sean Emery, University of New South Wales, Australia
Received April 18, 2013; Accepted July 29, 2013; Published September 16, 2013
Copyright: 2013 Cortes et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH): grant number NIH 1 UO1 AI069923 (to CCASAnet); NIH 1 UL1 RR024975
(REDCap); and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) K24 AI 65298 (to TRS). The funders had no role in study design, data
collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: TRS received research grants from Pfizer, BMS, and Virco. He is a data safety monitoring board member for a study conducted by
Otsuka. This does not alter the authors' adherence to all the PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
* E-mail: timothy.sterling@vanderbilt.edu
Membership of the Caribbean, Central American, South American network for HIV research (CCASA-net) of the International Epidemiologic Databases to
Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA) is provided in the Acknowledgments.
Introduction
Study definitions
ART was defined as regimens that included three or more
antiretroviral drugs. For this study, the sentinel episode of
tuberculosis was the participants first tuberculosis episode
during which they concomitantly received ART. Tuberculosis
diagnoses were established by each study site, based on
smear, culture, clinical and radiographic criteria, as well as
response to anti-tuberculosis therapy. The date of tuberculosis
diagnosis was defined as the date of anti-tuberculosis therapy
initiation. Tuberculosis recurrence was defined as development
of a new tuberculosis case after completing treatment of the
sentinel episode. All tuberculosis cases were validated by
review of the participants medical records and primary source
documentation by local site investigators; independent quality
control and TB case validation were performed at each study
site (CCM, SND). Baseline CD4+ lymphocyte and HIV-1 RNA
measurements were defined as at the time of ART initiation;
measurements prior to tuberculosis diagnosis were also
utilized. Baseline CD4+ lymphocyte count was defined as the
measurement closest to ART initiation but not more than 6
months prior to, or 7 days after, the date of ART start. Baseline
HIV-1 RNA was defined as the pre-ART measurement closest
to, but not more than 6 months prior to ART initiation. The
same window periods were used for measurements prior to
tuberculosis diagnosis. Episodes of immune reconstitution
inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) were captured, as defined by
local site investigators.
Statistical analysis
Groups were defined according to timing of ART initiation in
relation to anti-tuberculosis therapy initiation. Continuous
variables were compared with the Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
Categorical variables were compared with the Pearson chisquare test. For the evaluation of risk factors for death after
tuberculosis diagnosis, univariate and multivariate Cox
proportional hazards models stratified by site were constructed.
Variables in the multivariate models were determined a priori
based on their clinical relevance regarding survival. Missing
CD4+ lymphocyte and HIV-1 RNA values were imputed via
multiple imputation for multivariable models. For the evaluation
of anti-tuberculosis treatment duration and mortality, the
analysis was performed among a) all persons with known antituberculosis therapy duration regardless of duration, b) limited
to persons with known therapy duration who survived at least 6
months from initiation of treatment for the sentinel TB episode,
and c) limited to persons with known therapy duration who
survived at least seven months to compare persons who
received 5-7 months vs. > 7 months of therapy. Deaths
occurring before or after one year of follow-up from time of
Methods
We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study
within the Caribbean, Central and South America Network for
HIV Research (CCASAnet) of the International Epidemiologic
Databases to Evaluate AIDS (IeDEA; www.iedea.org) [21]. The
core dataset was composed of observational databases from
six participating HIV clinics in Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Honduras, Mexico, and Peru. Additional tuberculosis data were
collected using REDCap, a secure, web-based, electronic case
report form system hosted at Vanderbilt University. Institutional
review board approval for the study was obtained at each site
and at the CCASAnet data coordinating center at Vanderbilt.
The cohort included HIV-infected adults (> 18 years old) who
initiated ART between 1997 and 2007 and were followed for up
to one year or more after ART initiation. Patients were included
if they received ART at any time while concomitantly receiving
rifamycin-based (i.e., rifampin or rifabutin) anti- tuberculosis
therapy. ART could have been started before or after anti-
Results
Of the 3,539 HIV- infected persons who initiated ART during
the study period, 533 (15%) received a diagnosis of
tuberculosis. We excluded 219 patients who did not receive
concomitant anti-tuberculosis therapy and ART, 20 patients
who did not receive rifamycin-based anti-tuberculosis therapy,
40 patients who required extended TB treatment (e.g., due to
tuberculosis of the central nervous system, bone / joint, or
pericardium), and 1 patient with 0 days of follow-up. The final
TB dataset included 253 patients who met all inclusion criteria.
The clinical and demographic characteristics of the study
population are in Table 1. Persons diagnosed with tuberculosis
were younger, more likely to be from Peru, have heterosexual
sex as their HIV risk factor, have lower CD4+ lymphocyte count
and higher HIV-1 RNA at ART initiation, and more likely to die
than persons not diagnosed with tuberculosis. Tuberculosis
patients also tended to more likely be male.
Characteristics of the 253 tuberculosis cases are listed in
Table 2 according to length of follow-up/survival and duration of
anti-tuberculosis therapy. Most patients had pulmonary disease
as well as extrapulmonary disease. Approximately one-quarter
were culture-confirmed and less than half were acid fast
smear-positive. There were 168 (66%) tuberculosis cases
diagnosed before ART was initiated, and approximately 90% of
the patients received NNRTI-based ART. There were 171
(68%) patients treated for 180 days, and almost all received
daily therapy during the first two months of treatment. Of the
253 sentinel tuberculosis cases, 15 (6%) subsequently had
recurrent disease. Of the 20 tuberculosis cases in Chile, 1 (5%)
developed recurrence, and of the 133 tuberculosis cases in
Peru, 14 (11%) developed recurrence; there were no
recurrences reported at the other study sites.
There were no statistically significant differences in age, sex,
HIV risk factor, CD4+ lymphocyte count at ART initiation or
before tuberculosis diagnosis, HIV-1 RNA at ART initiation or
before tuberculosis diagnosis, or death between those who did
vs. did not develop recurrent tuberculosis (data not shown).
Compared to persons with tuberculosis who survived, those
who died had lower median CD4+ lymphocyte count at ART
initiation (45 vs. 66 cells/mm3; P=0.02) and before tuberculosis
diagnosis (59 vs. 85 cells/mm3; P=0.01). They also tended to
more likely be female and from Peru. There was no statistically
significant difference in age, smear-negative disease, HIV risk
factor, or HIV-1 RNA at ART initiation or before tuberculosis
diagnosis.
In univariate Cox proportional hazards models of time from
tuberculosis diagnosis to death among all tuberculosis patients,
being diagnosed with tuberculosis after ART initiation tended to
be associated with an increased risk of death compared to
persons diagnosed with tuberculosis before ART initiation
(Table 3). The findings were similar (but achieved statistical
significance) in the multivariable model: patients on ART when
tuberculosis was diagnosed had a higher rate of death than
those diagnosed with tuberculosis prior to ART initiation, after
Characteristic
No TB N = 3,006
TB N = 253
P-value
36 (30-43)
35 (28-40)
0.002
Male sex
2,195 (73)
198 (78)
0.07
Argentina
769 (26)
22 (9)
Brazil
468 (16)
34 (13)
Chile
518 (17)
20 (8)
Honduras
286 (10)
28 (11)
Mexico
397 (13)
16 (6)
Peru
568 (19)
133 (53)
Heterosexual
1,433 (48)
146 (58)
MSM
1,098 (37)
80 (32)
IDU
80 (3)
6 (2)
Other
25 (1)
1 (0.4)
Unknown
370 (12%)
20 (8)
Study site*
<0.001
0.03
<0.001
199 (7)
43 (17)
<0.001
HIV-infected persons who initiated antiretroviral therapy (ART), received rifamycinbased anti-tuberculosis therapy while on ART, and did not have tuberculosis at a
site of disease that required extended therapy (e g, central nervous system, bone/
joint, or pericardium).
Parentheses include percentages unless otherwise noted.
TB: tuberculosis
Baseline CD4+ lymphocyte and HIV-1 RNA measurements were at the time of
ART initiation.
* The proportions of all persons at each study site with TB (the row percentages)
were as follows:
Argentina: 3%; Brazil: 7%; Chile: 4%; Honduras: 9%; Mexico: 4%; Peru: 16%
^ Median (IQR) values before tuberculosis diagnosis: 74 (34-191)
# Median (IQR values before tuberculosis diagnosis: 4.4 log10 (2.6-5.2)
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074057.t001
21 (84)
Male sex
MSM
IDU
Other/unknown
10 (42)
8 (32)
9 (36)
Extrapulmonary
Culture-positive
Smear-positive
4
16 (64)
0 (0)
History of Prior TB
22 (88)
11 (44)
11 (44)
0 (0)
46 (18, 104)
NNRTI-based
Efavirenz
Nevirapine
Triple NRTI
0 (0)
0 (0)
Intermittent TB Rx
Unknown
1 (11)
5 (55)
1 (11)
Three times/week
Two times/week
Unknown
0 (0)
18 (86)
Yes
No
Post-treatment INH+
2 (22)
Continuation phase#
23 (100)
Daily TB treatment
3 (12)
PI-based
Type of ART
9 (36)
Time of TB Diagnosis
20 (80)
Pulmonary
Site of disease
14 (56)
Heterosexual
35 (31, 39)
N=25
duration unknown
19 (76)
1 (4)
2 (7)
2 (10)
11 (52)
4 (19)
4 (19)
1 (4)
0 (0)
25 (96)
0 (0)
14 (48)
14 (48)
28 (97)
1 (3)
2 (7)
11 (38)
18 (62)
9 (31)
9 (31)
17 (59)
22 (76)
78 (44, 189)
1 (3)
0 (0)
11 (38)
17 (59)
22 (76)
31 (27, 38)
133 (82)
5 (3)
0 (0)
3 (2)
34 (26)
40 (31)
53 (41)
0 (0)
1 (1)
151 (99)
2 (1)
58 (34)
90 (53)
148 (87)
21 (12)
6 (4)
44 (26)
127 (74)
76 (44)
46 (27)
85 (50)
132 (77)
62 (23, 142)
18 (11)
6 (4)
50 (29)
97 (57)
133 (78)
35 (28, 41)
7 (35)
0 (0)
9 (5)
7 (64)
1 (9)
2 (18)
1 (9)
0 (0)
0 (0)
21 (100)
0 (0)
11 (39)
17 (61)
28 (100)
0 (0)
3 (11)
14 (50)
14 (50)
15 (54)
4 (14)
10 (37)
24 (86)
85 (38, 128)
1 (4)
0 (0)
9 (32)
18 (64)
22 (79)
36 (26, 38)
Characteristic
<0.001*
0.34
<0.001
0.24
<0.001
0.47
0.20
<0.001*
0.31
0.41
0.48
0.62
0.20
0.78
0.81
0.90
0.83
P-value
Table 2. Baseline and Treatment Characteristics of the 253 Tuberculosis Patients Included in the Study, According to Length of Follow-up/Survival and Duration of
Anti-tuberculosis Therapy.
TB recurrence
6 (21)
5 (17)
5 (20)
13 (8)
7 (4)
24 (15)
5 (18)
3 (11)
13 (65)
duration unknown
<0.001
0.02
<0.001
P-value
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074057.t002
b median time between ART start and TB diagnosis: 142 days (IQR: 30, 568)
a median time between TB diagnosis and ART start: 95 days (IQR: 53, 142)
* the comparison limited to persons with > 6 months of follow-up and known TB treatment duration (the two inner columns) was not statistically significant. If not noted by * the statistical significance of the comparison
P-values are for the comparison of all 4 groups, using the chi-squared test.
3 (14)
N=25
Unknown
Characteristic
Table 2 (continued).
Characteristic
Univariate
HR
95% CI
Multivariate
P-valueHR
95% CI
>60 days
>90days
P-value
HR
Days from
TB
0.33
diagnosis
CD4 before
0.45
>120 days
P-
P-
95% CI value HR
95% CI value HR
95% CI value
0.13,
0.11,
0.13,
0.83
0.17,
0.02
0.29
0.10
0.51
0.83
0.22,
P-
0.01
0.38
0.13
0.53
1.09
0.22,
0.07
Cox proportional hazards models of time to death. The models are stratified by
TB (per 100
study site. Follow-up is from the time of tuberculosis diagnosis. For the
multivariable models, missing CD4+ lymphocyte and HIV-1 RNA values were
1.15
1.15
1.28
0.16
imputed via multiple imputation. Of the 222 subjects, 44 had missing CD4+
within the specific timeframe (< 60, 90, or 120 days from TB diagnosis). Missing
Of the 153 persons who started ART after tuberculosis diagnosis, 41 started with
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074057.t003
60 days, 71 started within 90 days, and 98 started within 120 days of TB diagnosis.
Of the 153 persons, 31 had missing CD4+ lymphocytes.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074057.t005
Characteristic
Univariate
HR
95% CI
Multivariate
P-valueHR
95% CI
P-value
Discussion
There were several important findings of this study, related to
the duration and timing of tuberculosis treatment in HIVinfected persons. First, patients who received more than six
months of tuberculosis treatment had a significantly decreased
risk of death compared to persons receiving less than six
months. We are unaware of other studies that have assessed
the effect of anti-tuberculosis therapy duration on mortality
among HIV-infected tuberculosis patients who concomitantly
received antiretroviral therapy. However, there have been
several studies and a meta-analysis suggesting that more than
six months of anti-tuberculosis therapy is associated with lower
rates of tuberculosis treatment failure and relapse
[17,22,19,20,16]. There has been one randomized, controlled
trial of 6 vs. 9 months of anti-tuberculosis therapy in HIVinfected persons, and there was no significant difference in the
risk of death [18]. However, only one-fifth of the study
population had access to ART, and all patients received
intermittent anti-tuberculosis therapy.
Although our study suggests that more than six months of
anti-tuberculosis therapy is associated with improved survival,
our analysis has limitations. To minimize bias, we performed
analyses including only persons who survived at least 6
months after tuberculosis diagnosis, However, in clinical
practice, not all persons assigned to at least 6 months of
treatment would survive six months. Among persons who
survived at least 6 months, the clinical and demographic
characteristics of those treated for < 6 months vs. > 6 months
were generally similar. However, those treated for < 6 months
were also more likely to receive twice-weekly therapy in the
Cox proportional hazards models of time to death. The models are stratified by
study site. Follow-up is from the time of tuberculosis diagnosis. For the
multivariable models, missing CD4+ lymphocyte and HIV-1 RNA values were
imputed via multiple imputation.
* Compared to persons starting ART after TB diagnosis
There were 200 persons who survived at least 6 months, of whom 19 died.
Of the 200 persons, 40 had missing CD4+ lymphocytes and 53 had missing HIV-1
RNA.
The median duration of anti-tuberculosis treatment among persons surviving at
least 6 months was 258 days (IQR: 193, 333)
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074057.t004
Acknowledgements
Composition of the Caribbean, Central American, South
American network for HIV research (CCASA-net) of the
International Epidemiologic Databases to Evaluate AIDS
(IeDEA):
University of Chile and Fundacin Arriarn, Santiago, Chile
Claudia P. Cortes, M.D., Marcello Wolff, M.D., Jos Miguel
Arancibia M.D., Felipe Saavedra, Carolina Salinas.
Instituto de Medicina Tropical Alexander von Humboldt,
Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Per
Elsa Gonzalez, M.D., Gabriela Carriquiry, M.D., Erick Mayer,
Patricia Condorhuaman, Eduardo Gotuzzo, M.D.
Universidad Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Mauro Schechter, M.D. Ph.D, Suely H. Tuboi, M.D., Ph.D.
Instituto Hondureo de Seguro Social y Hospital Escuela,
Tegucigalpa, Honduras
Denis Padgett, M.D.
Fundacin Huesped, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Carina Cesar, M.D., Valeria Fink, M.D., Omar Sued, M.D.,
Pedro Cahn, M.D., Ph.D
Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Medicas y Nutricin Salvador
Zubirn, Mexico City, Mexico
Brenda Crabtree, M.D., Juan Sierra Madero, M.D.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
Melanie Bacon, R.N., M.P.H., Carolyn Williams, Ph.D
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States
Firas H. Wehbe, Ph.D., Bryan E. Shepherd, Ph.D., Cathy A.
Jenkins, M.S., Stephany N. Duda, Ph.D., Daniel R. Masys,
M.D., Catherine C. McGowan, M.D., Timothy R. Sterling, M.D.
Author Contributions
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