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The
Risk of Acquiring Tuberculosis (TB) Increases Rapidly After Infection
with HIV
Infection
with HIV increases the risk of tuberculosis (TB), but no study has assessed
how this risk changes with time since HIV
seroconversion.
In
the present study, the incidence of pulmonary TB was
estimated in miners with and those without
HIV infection in a retrospective cohort study. HIV
test results were linked to routinely collected
TB, demographic, and occupational data. The rate
ratio (RR) for the association between HIV
status and TB was estimated by time since
HIV
seroconversion, calendar period, and age.
Of
the 23,874 miners in the cohort, 17,766 were
HIV negative on entry, 3371 were HIV positive
on entry, and 2737 seroconverted during follow-up
(1962 had a seroconversion interval of 2 years).
A total of 740 cases of TB were analyzed.
The
incidence of TB increased with time since seroconversion,
calendar period, and age. TB incidence was 2.90
cases/100 person-years at risk (pyar) in HIV-positive
miners and was 0.80 cases/100 pyar in HIV-negative
miners.
TB
incidence doubled within the first year of
HIV infection (adjusted RR, 2.1 [95% CI, 1.4 3.1]), with a further
slight increase in HIV-positive miners for longer
periods, up to 7 years.
In
conclusion, the authors write, “The increase in the risk
of TB so soon after infection with HIV was
unexpected. Current predictive models of TB incidence
underestimate the effect of HIV infection in areas
where TB is endemic.”
See the editorial commentary
by Srikantiah and others.
Reference
P Sonnenberg
and others. How Soon after Infection
with HIV Does the Risk
of Tuberculosis Start to
Increase? A Retrospective Cohort
Study in South African
Gold Miners. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 191(2):
150-158. January 15, 2005.
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