The predictive value of current haemoglobin levels for incident tuberculosis and/or mortality during long-term antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: a cohort study
Abstract
Background
Low haemoglobin concentrations may be predictive of incident tuberculosis (TB) and death in HIV-infected patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART), but data are limited and inconsistent. We examined these relationships retrospectively in a long-term South African ART cohort with multiple time-updated haemoglobin measurements.
Methods
Prospectively collected
clinical data on patients receiving ART for up to 8 years in a
community-based cohort were analysed. Time-updated haemoglobin
concentrations, CD4 counts and HIV viral loads were recorded,
and TB diagnoses and deaths from all causes were ascertained.
Anaemia severity was classified using World Health Organization
criteria. TB incidence and mortality rates were calculated and
Poisson regression models were used to identify independent
predictors of incident TB and mortality, respectively.
Results
During a median follow-up of
5.0 years (IQR, 2.5-5.8) of 1,521 patients, 476 cases of
incident TB and 192 deaths occurred during 6,459 person-years
(PYs) of follow-up. TB incidence rates were strongly associated
with time-updated anaemia severity; those without anaemia had a
rate of 4.4 (95%CI, 3.8-5.1) cases/100 PYs compared to 10.0
(95%CI, 8.3-12.1), 26.6 (95%CI, 22.5-31.7) and 87.8 (95%CI,
57.0-138.2) cases/100 PYs in those with mild, moderate and
severe anaemia, respectively. Similarly, mortality rates in
those with no anaemia or mild, moderate and severe time-updated
anaemia were 1.1 (95%CI, 0.8-1.5), 3.5 (95%CI, 2.7-4.8), 11.8
(95%CI, 9.5-14.8) and 28.2 (95%CI, 16.5-51.5) cases/100 PYs,
respectively. Moderate and severe anaemia (time-updated) during
ART were the strongest independent predictors for incident TB
(adjusted IRR = 3.8 [95%CI, 3.0-4.8] and 8.2
[95%CI, 5.3-12.7], respectively) and for mortality (adjusted
IRR = 6.0 [95%CI, 3.9-9.2] and adjusted
IRR = 8.0 [95%CI, 3.9-16.4], respectively).
Conclusions
Increasing severity of
anaemia was associated with exceptionally high rates of both
incident TB and mortality during long-term ART. Patients
receiving ART who have moderate or severe anaemia should be
prioritized for TB screening using microbiological assays and
may require adjunctive clinical interventions.
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Source:
BMC Medicine