Tuberculosis-Preventive Antibiotics-Reduce Deaths Among
People With HIV Disease
Preventive Antibiotics for
Tuberculosis Reduce Deaths Among People With HIV Disease
Aug. 15, 2013 — As part of the largest international
research effort ever made to combat tuberculosis, a team of Johns Hopkins and
Brazilian experts has found that preventive antibiotic therapy for people with
HIV lowers this group's chances of developing TB or dying. Specifically, they
found in men and women already infected with HIV that taking isoniazid reduced
deaths and new cases of active TB disease by 31 percent, while new cases of TB
alone decline by 13 percent.
The research team's findings, to be published in the journal
Lancet Infectious Diseases online Aug. 16, stem from what is believed to be the
largest expansion of a clinic-based, community health program designed to curb
the spread of TB, and the first evidence that such a community-wide effort can
be highly effective at preventing people who are co-infected from developing
active TB disease.
According to senior study investigator and Johns Hopkins
infectious disease specialists Richard Chaisson, M.D., his team's latest study
results firmly support broad use of preventive isoniazid therapy for millions
of people infected with HIV in Latin American, Asian, and Eastern European
countries heavily burdened by TB.
Chaisson says TB disease remains the leading cause of death
worldwide among those with HIV/AIDS and is epidemic in developing countries
with the highest HIV-infection rates. Isoniazid treatment, which costs less
than $1 for a full course of therapy, is already recommended by the World
Health Organization to prevent TB in people with HIV disease. The policy,
however, has not been widely adopted and its broad impact on the HIV-infected
community never shown until the Johns Hopkins and Brazilian team's latest
study.
All of the 12,816 study participants were eligible for
screening for TB infection or active TB disease. Some 1,186 tested positive for
TB infection, but did not have symptoms of TB sickness and could start taking 300 milligrams of isoniazid
daily for six months. All received routine follow-up care for as little
as a few weeks to as long as four years
after initially seeking treatment at any of 29 HIV clinics
across Brazil, a country hit hard by both infectious diseases. Some 838 deaths
occurred during the study, which took four years to complete, and 475 developed
TB. Symptoms of active TB disease, indicating the disease has progressed from
latent infection, include persistent cough, chest pain, chills, fever, muscle
weakness and fatigue.
"Our study results show that routine testing for TB and
preventive isoniazid therapy works well at the community level in people with
HIV disease in curbing the spread of
TB and lowering the number who die," says Chaisson, a
professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and founding
director of its Center for Tuberculosis Research.
"People with HIV disease living in all countries with
rampant TB should be asking their physicians if they are good candidates for
preventive isoniazid therapy," says Chaisson, who leads the overall global
research effort, in support of this study and others, called the Consortium to
Respond Effectively to the AIDS/TB Epidemic. CREATE, as it is known, is funded
by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
When researchers restricted their analysis to 12,196 study
participants who kept at least one annual check-up appointment, the overall death
rate and number of new TB cases was even lower, at 55 percent. The number of
active TB cases decreased by 58 percent. Among study participants who received
isoniazid, commonly marketed under the brand names Niazid, Laniazid and
Nydrazid, 85 percent took a full course of drugs for six months, as prescribed.
Another important finding, researchers say, was that initial
TB screening of those seeking HIV care led to diagnosis of over a third (34 percent,
or 250) of the total 725 new clinic patients found to have active TB. All were
offered treatment for their disease but were excluded from the study analysis.
Lead study investigator and Johns Hopkins epidemiologist
Jonathan Golub, Ph.D., M.P.H., says the study was, on its own, an effective screening
tool, and affirms how unknown TB cases can be found when public health
officials focus on community health programs in local clinics that service
people more likely to become infected. In Brazil, an estimated 10 percent of
people diagnosed with TB sickness are co-infected with HIV.
Golub says further research is needed to determine how long
lasting are isoniazid's protective effects are and whether the single course of
treatment used in the latest study is sufficient, or if repeat or lifelong
antibiotic therapy is needed to suppress TB.
"Our efforts highlight the importance of continuous
training in diagnosing TB, and our immediate priority is to train community
doctors and nurses in HIV clinics to make TB testing part of routine HIV
care," says Golub, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins. Golub points
out that in Brazil, TB screening policies have been in place since 1995, but
simply not followed. Golub says that once clinics involved in the study began
more rigorous screening, the number of initial TB skin tests performed jumped threefold,
and the number of patients taking isoniazid went up fourfold.
For the study, clinic staff were rigorously trained in
correct procedures for screening all patients with HIV for possible TB
infection and signs of active TB disease. Patients who tested positive for
active TB disease were offered treatment, but were not included in study
monitoring. Those who met study criteria were offered preventive isoniazid
therapy. To detect TB, a simple skin test is initially performed, which if
positive for signs of an immune response, can lead to further, confirmatory lab
and X-ray testing.
Intensive training at all 29 clinics was randomly staggered
every two months, allowing staff at all clinics to eventually benefit from the
enhanced study effort. The staggered timeline also gave researchers a long
period to assess isoniazid's effects pre- and post-training. Study participants
were 61 percent male, and on average 37 years old. Sixty percent were receiving
antiretroviral therapy for HIV.
Chaisson says the team next plans to evaluate faster
diagnostic tests for TB, other than the initial skin test, which takes only
minutes to administer, but requires a 48-hour waiting period to show any
reaction. He says the ideal test would be a blood test that could be performed
at the same time as routine anti-HIV tests for blood levels of CD4 immune
cells.
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