Tuberculosis in HIV-Associated Cryptococcal Meningitis is Associated with an Increased Risk of Death
View/ Open
Date
2020Author
Rutakingirwa, Morris K.
Cresswell, Fiona V.
Kwizera, Richard
Ssebambulidde, Kenneth
Kagimu, Enock
Nuwagira, Edwin
Tugume, Lillian
Mpoza, Edward
Dobbin, Joanna
Williams, Darlisha A.
Muzoora, Conrad
Meya, David B.
Boulware, David R.
Hullsiek, Kathy H.
Rhein, Joshua
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Tuberculosis (TB) and cryptococcal meningitis are leading causes of morbidity and mortality
in advanced HIV disease. Data are limited on TB co-infection among individuals with cryptococcal meningitis. We performed a retrospective analysis of HIV-infected participants with cryptococcal meningitis from 2010–2017. Baseline demographics were compared between three groups: ‘prevalent TB’ if TB treated >14 days prior to cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis, ‘concurrent TB’ if TB treated_ 14 days from diagnosis, or ‘No TB at baseline’. We used to time-update proportional-hazards regression models to assess TB diagnosis as a risk for death. Of 870 participants with cryptococcal meningitis, 50 (6%) had prevalent TB, 67 (8%) had concurrent TB, and 753 (86%) had no baseline TB. Among participants without baseline TB, 67 (9%) were diagnosed with incident TB (after >14 days), with a median time to TB incidence of 41 days (IQR, 22–69). The 18-week mortality was 50% (25/50) in prevalent TB, 46% (31/67) in concurrent TB, and 45% (341/753) in the no TB group (p = 0.81). However, TB co-infection was associated with an increased hazard of death (HR = 1.75; 95% CI, 1.33–2.32; p < 0.001) in a time-updated model. TB is commonly diagnosed in cryptococcal meningitis, and the increased mortality associated with co-infection is a public health concern
Collections
- Research Articles [256]